A friend has been predicting for a year or so that more than a few members of the current political class will wind up hot-footing it to Israel when the heat gets too intense. Today comes word from The Hill that a couple of small fish in one of the many burgeoning scandals have gotten out of the kitchen:
Two former  associates of Jack Abramoff, the embattled lobbyist, left the country Monday  night en route to a new life in Israel. The relocation comes as a Justice  Department taskforce presses forward with an investigation into potential  criminal wrongdoing stemming from Abramoff’s business dealings.
Sam Hook and his wife Shana Tesler both worked with Abramoff at the law firm,  Greenberg Traurig. Hook served as the registered agent for Grassroots  Interactive, a lobbying venture tied to Abramoff that has reportedly been  subpoenaed by the Justice Department taskforce.
Tesler, a lawyer, worked with Abramoff at Greenberg Traurig and then followed  him to the lobbying firm, Cassidy & Associates, after he was ousted from  Greenberg following news reports of his questionable dealings with Indian gaming  tribes.
Abramoff and public affairs consultant Michael Scanlon are the target of the  Justice Department probe and two Senate investigations into allegations that  they bilked tribes out of more than $60 million. A federal grand jury has been  convened to consider possible criminal charges in the matter.
Like Abramoff, Hook and Tesler are both Orthodox Jews. They have been planning  for some time to move their family to Israel, said their attorney Alyza Lewin at  Lewin & Lewin.
“Pursuant to longstanding plans that predate any investigation, Shana Tesler  and Sam Hook have relocated to Israel…One thing had nothing to do with the  other,” Lewin said.
Former White House counsel Lanny Davis said that the pair’s relocation could  hamper the Justice Department investigation because it would be harder to  enforce subpoenas abroad.
“Whether you are able to enforce a subpoena in a foreign country depends upon  specific treaty commitments,” Davis said, “but in general the answer is no…  Even if you could try to enforce it through a treaty, it would be extremely  difficult.”  [More]
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