Reporter

Facing the Music

There's no question that record producer Michael Morales—Dan's brother—tried to blackmail the Tony Sanchez campaign. But was he really acting alone?

(Page 2 of 2)

According to Millsap, the decision left Michael frustrated and upset: "He kept articulating to me over and over that we needed to help this lady. He was haunted by the fact that this lady was out there by herself, and it's possible he could have managed to put himself into a position thinking he was responsible for getting her help."

If that really was the case, then Michael certainly came up with a bizarre plan to help the woman. He adopted the name Wendel Smith, made a copy of a typed narrative that the woman had written for her therapist and supposedly given him about the alleged crime, and in April, after his brother's primary defeat, mailed parts of that narrative to Perry's campaign manager, Delisi, along with his letter asking for a research fee. Delisi told me she had a telephone conversation with him—"Wendel was a persistent caller," she said—but that she quickly filed the information away, unwilling even to have one of her researchers try to find out if what Wendel was saying was true. "What you have to understand is that during the course of the campaign, we had lots of people coming out of the woodwork claiming all sorts of things," she said. "And there was already so much information about Sanchez on the public record that I knew we were going to pursue, so I made the decision that we were not going to spend time chasing down these other stories. And I wasn't going to purchase unsolicited information."

The rumor made its way around the Perry campaign headquarters; however, no campaign officials can recall whether Perry himself heard it. (Perry's press spokesperson did not return my phone call.) Delisi did say that when she was having coffee with Dan in late May to discuss his desire to help the Perry campaign, he mentioned the anonymous woman's allegation about Sanchez: "But he only mentioned it in passing. He didn't say, 'Hey, you should look at this, it's really serious.' And he never mentioned it again, at least not in my presence."

And that seemed to be the end of the matter, until Wendel Smith began calling Glenn Smith in October. Glenn told me that as soon as he realized Wendel was attempting to extort money from the campaign, he called a lawyer, who called the U.S. attorney's office, which brought in the FBI. The agents gave Glenn a recording device and told him to play along with Wendel to see what he would say. The transcripts are almost laughable.

"I'm very interested in finding a way to keep it [the woman's story] out of the paper," Glenn said during one of their first conversations. "Give me a ballpark on what you think it's gonna take."

Wendel finally said, "You know, I do not know. I do not know. But I can run down the hall and find out. I'd be glad to do that for you." (Stuart, Wendel had explained, worked down the hall from him.)

When Glenn asked what guarantee he was going to get that the woman would never speak publicly about the matter, Wendel said, "I would imagine that maybe, um, I'd get you a copy of [the woman's letter], um, um, maybe exchange a consulting fee, and then, um, when that is fulfilled, I guess give you the original or something like that? That's somewhat of a, um, you know, it's somewhat of a deal."

Meanwhile, after putting a trace on Glenn's phone, the FBI quickly learned that Wendel was calling and faxing his letters from the music studio of Michael Morales. The agents executed a search warrant on the studio just as Michael was preparing to re-fax a letter detailing his extortion demands. Apparently, Michael had thought that no one could figure out that he was Wendel Smith, because he was routing calls to the Sanchez headquarters through an Internet service that made the calls look as if they were coming from Colorado—a novice technique that failed to stump the FBI.

THERE ARE A FEW WELL-INFORMED political consultants who find it preposterous that Michael was not acting as a patsy for his older brother Dan, who had found Sanchez so distasteful that he eventually supported Perry in the general election. "Michael is a follower," said a senior consultant to Sanchez's campaign who knows the Morales brothers well. "He would never have done something so stupid unless Dan asked him to.

"But Dan told me, "I never had any idea that Michael approached the Perry and Sanchez campaigns." Nor, he added, did he know anything about FBI agents searching Michael's office in October—a search that happened to be conducted during the day in front of Studio M employees. The first time he heard about Michael's duplicitous activities, Dan said, was in early January of this year, when reporter Pete Slover, of the Dallas Morning News, which broke the story about Michael, called him just two days before the newspaper published his article. He said he didn't even know until January that Michael had initially retained Sam Millsap as his defense attorney, even though Millsap and Dan are close friends, and even though Millsap has represented Dan himself in the recent federal investigation of Dan's handling of lawyer fees from the $17.3 billion settlement paid to the state by the tobacco industry while he was attorney general. Although skeptics find it hard to imagine that the two men didn't talk about Michael's problems, Millsap insisted that he doesn't remember speaking to Dan about the extortion attempt until after the Dallas Morning News story appeared.

Dan's denials have hardly slowed the rumor mill. One of the most perplexing questions still lingering about the whole matter is Michael's decision to wait until October before approaching the Sanchez campaign. If he really did think his extortion plot was going to help this woman, then why didn't he approach the Sanchez campaign last spring? Was it mere coincidence that he went after Sanchez only a few weeks after Dan had publicly endorsed Rick Perry? Had Dan encouraged him to resurrect his extortion plot so Dan could show Perry he was serious about supporting him? "Ridiculous," Dan said with a laugh.

Glenn Smith, meanwhile, has his own theory. He told me that he thinks Dan was aware last fall about his brother's illegal behavior. "I ran into Dan in Dallas on October twenty-fourth for one of the Perry-Sanchez debates, and I turned and said to him, 'Tell your brother Michael that I said hello.' The color of his face changed." Dan disputes Smith's account, saying the two didn't speak about his brother at all that night.

But of all the theories now emerging, by far the wildest rumor is that some Perry people knew all along that Dan, who wanted to show his loyalty to Perry after endorsing him in the fall of 2002, had Michael revive his Wendel persona and approach the Sanchez camp to solicit a bribe—which would explain the puzzling six-month gap between Michael's attempts to get money. If Sanchez had paid the bribe, the theory goes, then Dan or the Republicans would have leaked the news to the press that he was paying out hush money. In fact, there is no evidence whatsoever that Dan Morales or Rick Perry was ever aware of Michael's activities, and both parties adamantly deny the allegation. What's more, even the Democrats who floated this rumor are unwilling to identify themselves on the record.

Such rampant innuendo and conspiracy theories only prove how nasty the game of politics can still be in Texas. And in the end, Michael's amateurish blunders suggest that, rather than being a pawn in a complex web of political deceit involving multiple high-ranking political figures, he has only himself to blame. If Dan, who had overseen many criminal investigations during his days as state attorney general, had been involved with Michael in the extortion scheme, wouldn't he have made sure Michael placed his phone calls from someplace other than his office? Wouldn't he also have made sure that Michael had his "Wendel Smith" story perfected so he wouldn't bumble around during his conversations with the various campaign managers?

Perhaps the only way this bizarre scandal will be resolved is if Michael sits down with a reporter someday to explain why he suddenly, after a lifetime of law-abiding behavior, tried to turn himself into a shakedown artist. Did he really do it for this anonymous woman who still cannot produce one iota of evidence to prove her allegation? After a court hearing on January 30 in which Michael formally pleaded guilty, his only statement to the news media was "Sometimes your heart just gets over your head, and in this case I didn't exercise extremely good judgment." Such a statement, of course, did not draw much sympathy. "Blackmail is always wrong," snapped U.S. attorney Johnny Sutton. "But it is particularly despicable when it has the potential to affect the election of the highest official in the state of Texas."

Michael will be sentenced in April. It is expected he will spend two years in federal prison. When he gets out, his friends hope he will return to the music business. "He's really got talent in music," said Bobby Flores, one of the mainstay musicians at Michael's Studio M. If only you could say the same about his talent in politics.

E-mail

Password

Remember me

Forgot your password?

X (close)

Registering gets you access to online content, allows you to comment on stories, add your own reviews of restaurants and events, and join in the discussions in our community areas such as the Recipe Swap and other forums.

In addition, current TEXAS MONTHLY magazine subscribers will get access to the feature stories from the two most recent issues. If you are a current subscriber, please enter your name and address exactly as it appears on your mailing label (except zip, 5 digits only). Not a subscriber? Subscribe online now.

E-mail

Re-enter your E-mail address

Choose a password

Re-enter your password

Name

 
 

Address

Address 2

City

State

Zip (5 digits only)

Country

What year were you born?

Are you...

Male Female

Remember me

X (close)