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Last week, the billionaire industrialist Koch brothers held their latest get-together with wealthy conservative political donors. At these meetings, held twice a year under a veil of secrecy, Republican all-stars discuss election strategy and vet potential presidential candidates like New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. Last September, Mother Jones obtained exclusive audio recordings from a Koch seminar held outside Vail, Colorado, where Charles Koch had declared that the 2012 election would be “the mother of all wars” and thanked dozens of million-dollar donors who’d pledged to the cause.

According to a Huffington Post source, 250 to 300 guests attended the most recent event, which was held in Palm Springs, California. They included Citadel CEO Ken Griffin and casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who along with his wife has given a staggering $10 million to a pro-Newt Gingrich super-PAC. Guests reportedly pledged a total of $40 million to the effort to oust Obama, with Charles and David Koch promising an additional $60 million. But it wasn’t all fun and games, the source said, as guests complained that recent meetings had focused more on “alpha male” anti-Obama chest-pounding than the strategy sessions for which they’d been known.

Former ThinkProgress.org blogger Lee Fang also got a peek at the Palm Springs event, which was dubbed “Defending Free Enterprise.” Fang, who first reported on the Koch seminars before the 2010 midterms, caught wind that someone had booked all 560 rooms at the Rennaisance Esmeralda Resort & Spa for three nights in late January and decided to investigate. “I arrived at the hotel the night before the event,” Fang wrote, “but was followed closely by security and asked to leave the next morning before the Koch meeting guests arrived.” During the seminar, “helicopters, private security, and police officers from neighboring cities patrolled the area constantly.”

Fang wasn’t able to get inside, but he did manage to identify several additional guests by scoping out their private jets at the Palm Springs International Airport. They included billionaire investor Phil Anschutz and Kenny Troutt, a Dallas investor who’s given $700,000 to conservative super-PACs. Fang also noticed jets belonging to Harold Hamm, an Oklahoma oil tycoon, and Foster Friess, a Wyoming investor who’s helped keep Rick Santorum afloat by pumping $381,000 into two super-PACs supporting the candidate. At last year’s Vail seminar, Charles Koch thanked both Friess and Hamm (and Griffin) for their million-dollar contributions.

At the airport, Fang also spotted Phil Kerpen, vice president of the Koch-affiliated tea party group Americans for Prosperity, which recently spent $5 million on anti-Obama attack ads. Kerpen admitted that he hopes the 2012 election will result in “aggressive cuts to government spending and to regulation to allow robust economic growth,” but not before complaining to Fang that “I thought they had stopped all leaks” concerning the whereabouts of the Koch seminars.