yes... it was ruled that he used bad judgment
John McCain was one of 5 elected officials who accepted money directly or indirectly from Keating for (typically) their campaign coffers and subsequently actively tried to derail his prosecution. McCain's share was substantially over $100,000- typically reported as "about" $130,000. McCain was closer, on a personal level, to Keating than the other four senators involved in the scandal. Keating invested with Cindy McCain in a shopping center, and Keating allowed McCain to vacation at his retreat and use his private jet.
The Keating Five were five Senators accused of corruption in 1989 as part of the Savings and Loan Scandal. They were Alan Cranston, Dennis DeConcini, John Glenn, John McCain, and Donald W. Riegle, Jr.
No, Richard Nixon did not pardon John McCain. John McCain was a prisoner of war in Vietnam and was never charged with any crime that would require a pardon. Nixon, as President, did issue pardons for various individuals, most notably for those involved in the Watergate scandal, but McCain was not among them.
The "Keating Five" were a group of five U.S. senators—John McCain, Dennis DeConcini, John Glenn, Donald Riegle, and Alan Cranston—who were implicated in a scandal involving Charles Keating, a savings and loan executive. They were accused of improperly intervening on behalf of Keating’s failing institution during the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s. In 1990, the Senate Ethics Committee rebuked them for their actions, but ultimately none faced severe legal consequences. The incident raised significant questions about political ethics and the influence of campaign contributions.
Yes. Keep in mind, the legal standard for indicting someone for bribery, and knowing someone took a bribe, are two different things. While it's quite certain that John McCain took money from Keating and performed favors on his behalf, the legal standard of proving a quid pro quo is higher than the obvious exchange that took place. McCain took money and got away with it. He's still doing it today. He took money("campaign contributions") from the oil companies, and then changed his position on offshore drilling. Again, an obvious bribe, but difficult to prove in a court of law, as long as the transaction takes place without tangible evidence. Opposing opinion: The answer above is a biased smear. John McCain was investigated by the Senate Ethics committee. He was cleared of criminal wrongdoing but was admonished by the US Senate for poor judgment.
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John Keating Regan died in 1987.
John Keating Regan was born in 1911.
John Richard Keating was born in 1934.
John Richard Keating died in 1998.
John Keating - judge - died in 1691.