Pubdate: Wed, 31 Jul 2002 Source: Reuters (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Reuters Limited Author: Jeff Franks DRUG MONEY CHARGES HEAT UP TEXAS GOVERNOR RACE HOUSTON (Reuters) - A potentially historic governor's duel has turned into a Texas shootout amid charges by incumbent Republican Gov. Rick Perry that wealthy Democratic opponent Tony Sanchez helped drug traffickers launder money through his savings and loan association. The charge, unusual even in the rough-and-tumble world of Texas politics, prompted an angry response on Wednesday from Sanchez, who said Perry was lying in a desperate bid to keep the job he inherited from President Bush (news - web sites). "Perry, because of your continuous lies, your credibility has been destroyed," Sanchez said in a news conference at the Houston offices of his Sanchez Oil & Gas Corp. "You need to apologize to the people of Texas for lying," added Sanchez, bidding to become the first Hispanic governor in modern Texas. Perry, who was lieutenant governor when he succeeded George W. Bush when then-Gov. Bush won the presidency in 2000, said in a newly released television ad that Sanchez' Tesoro Savings and Loan laundered $25 million in drug money in the mid-1980s. The ad says the money was flown to Texas in suitcases, deposited in Tesoro and eventually wired to "Manuel Noriega's Panama" against the wishes of federal drug agents. "Can Texans really trust Tony Sanchez?" the ad asks. Sanchez said Tesoro did not knowingly take in money linked to drug dealers, but fully cooperated with authorities once it became aware of a possible connection. Money was sent to Panama at the request of depositors, he said, and the association was bound by law at that time to do so. "Perry knows that, not one, but two federal judges held that the savings and loan had followed the law in its handling of the deposits," he said. "This is a low point in the history of Texas politics," he added. KEY DEMOCRATIC HOPEFUL Sanchez, a political novice, is bankrolling his campaign for the November election with an oil and banking fortune worth an estimated $1 billion and is the anchor of Democratic hopes of recapturing a state that has become solidly Republican in the last 10 years. The party is betting his money and Hispanic heritage can overcome the political power of the Christian right that has propelled the GOP to power in Texas. Perry, in a statement issued on Wednesday, accused Sanchez of "hiding behind legal technicalities" and said the issue was less about law than morality. "The truth is that Mr. Sanchez, a man who wants to be governor, had a moral and ethical duty to help stop the drug cartel. Instead, his bank helped the drug-money launderers wire their tainted funds to Panama." The drug money allegations were only the latest mud to be slung in what has been a nasty campaign from the start. Sanchez ads have linked Perry to the bankrupt Enron Corp. and accused him of being bought and sold by big business interests. At the same time, both men have promoted their links to Bush, who governed Texas for five years and remains popular here. Democrat Sanchez gave campaign money to Bush, who in turn appointed him to the University of Texas board of regents. Sanchez supposedly has spent more than $30 million on his campaign. The drug money ads show that the race is close and Perry is scared, he said. "He's frantic, he is panicking ... the old saying is true: desperate men do desperate things," Sanchez said. A poll released earlier this month by the University of Houston Center for Public Policy showed Perry leading by a margin of 46 to 32 percent, with 25 percent undecided. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh