Showing posts with label BHARARA PREET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BHARARA PREET. Show all posts

January 23, 2015

Sheldon Silver, Dem New York Assembly Speaker, Took Millions in Graft, U.S. Says


heldon Silver, a Democrat from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, has been the speaker of the State Assembly for more than two decades. CreditNathaniel Brooks for The New York Times


NY TIMES

Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York Assembly, exploited his position as one of the most powerful politicians in the state to obtain millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks, federal authorities said on Thursday as they announced his arrest on a sweeping series of corruption charges. [See below for graphic]
For years, Mr. Silver has earned a lucrative income outside government, asserting that he was a simple personal injury lawyer who represented ordinary people. But federal prosecutors said his purported law practice was a fiction, one he created to mask about $4 million in payoffs that he carefully and stealthily engineered for over a decade.
Mr. Silver, a Democrat from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, was accused of steering real estate developers to a law firm that paid him kickbacks. He was also accused of funneling state grants to a doctor who referred asbestos claims to a second law firm that employed Mr. Silver and paid him fees for referring clients.
“For many years, New Yorkers have asked the question: How could Speaker Silver, one of the most powerful men in all of New York, earn millions of dollars in outside income without deeply compromising his ability to honestly serve his constituents?” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, asked at a news conference with F.B.I. officials. “Today, we provide the answer: He didn’t.”
The United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, announces the charges against Sheldon Silver, the longtime Assembly speaker, who was arrested Thursday morning.
 Video by AP on Publish DateJanuary 22, 2015. Photo by Michael Appleton for The New York Times.
NY TIMES

His power unbending, his whims often unexplained, Sheldon Silver, in his two decades as speaker of the State Assembly, became a seemingly indestructible presence at the nucleus of the New York political world, a steady advocate for liberal causes and a master tactician in Albany’s closed and entrenched way of governance.
But Mr. Silver’s arrest on Thursday on corruption charges has thrown into question that arrangement, in which the governor and the leaders of the two chambers of the Legislature privately decide the most crucial policies of the state. It is a potentially seismic shift in power whose reverberations may be felt throughout the state, from the speaker’s home district on the Lower East Side of Manhattan to the grounds of the State Capitol.
Until now, Albany lawmakers accustomed to what prosecutors called a “show-me-the-money culture” have taken comfort in knowing that their most powerful figure was unassailable — untouched despite years of inquiries, suspicions and rumors of impropriety.
The events this week have shaken that sense of security and raised the possibility that Mr. Silver, the quintessential capital insider, could reveal his own colleagues’ misdeeds to federal prosecutors in exchange for leniency.
For the state’s orbit of lobbyists, advocates, elected officials and industry executives with a stake in the productivity and product of the Legislature, Mr. Silver’s potential diminution, if not exit, carries enormous consequences.
“It’s chaos,” said Richard L. Brodsky, a former Democratic assemblyman from Westchester County.
Labor unions and big industries like real estate depended on Mr. Silver to defend their interests in back-room negotiations, where he, governors and Senate leaders determined the fate of new legislation each year.
“Any interest group whose political strategy depends on the strength of the Assembly, they have to be concerned,” said Blair Horner, the legislative director for the New York Public Interest Research Group.
Recently, Mr. Silver has emerged as an important adviser to Mayor Bill de Blasio.CreditNathaniel Brooks for The New York Times

Mr. Silver has long been the key representative of New York City in a legislative body that could be notoriously unfriendly to the city’s interests. Recently, he also emerged as an important adviser to Mayor Bill de Blasio, who may now be forced to navigate Albany’s machinery without a like-minded friend in the negotiating room.
Questions were already being raised on Thursday about Mr. de Blasio’s legislative agenda, which includes immigration reform efforts backed by Mr. Silver. Mr. de Blasio spearheaded a campaign last year to unseat the Republican majority in the State Senate; that effort fell short, and Dean G. Skelos, a Long Island Republican who is the Senate majority leader, has signaled that he is disinclined to aid the mayor.
Mr. de Blasio, who had a win-a-few, lose-a-few legislative session last year, is also wary of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s efforts to expand charter schools and weaken teachers’ unions. Mr. Silver was a bulwark against those efforts, and a waning of his influence could hurt the mayor’s leverage.
Mr. Cuomo, for his part, may also need to recalculate rapidly. Before Mr. Silver was taken into custody, Mr. Cuomo, a fellow Democrat, unreeled an ambitious social justice agenda in his State of the State address, a headline-grabbing turn for a governor who prides himself on centrism.
It was a signal moment for Mr. Cuomo, who was embracing the start of a new four-year term and eager to put the troubles of last year, including a bumpy re-election campaign and a string of ethics concerns, behind him.
Instead, the speech was mostly forgotten by Thursday morning, with Mr. Silver’s arrest plunging the governor back into the ethical morass from which he had hoped to escape.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, shown on March 20, announced the demise of his ethics commission on Saturday with little fanfare. CreditMike Groll/Associated Press

N.Y. TIMES

Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York Assembly and one of the most powerful politicians in Albany, did all he could to derail and undermine ananticorruption panel established by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.
With his arrest on federal corruption charges on Thursday, there may now be an answer to the question of why.
Investigators from the panel, which was known as the Moreland Commission, were seeking records about Mr. Silver’s sources of income outside of his work as a lawmaker — the same sources of income that would form the basis of the case brought against Mr. Silver by the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York.
Even before Mr. Cuomo abruptly shut down the commission in March — and before it became clear that the governor himself had interfered with its investigations — Mr. Silver, who like the governor is a Democrat, attacked the work it was doing.
“The commission, we believe, has exceeded its mandate and has been engaged in a fishing expedition to intimidate legislators,” Mr. Silver told reporters in February.



N.Y. TIMES

Al Smith, the storied governor of New York in the 1920s who laid the groundwork for the New Deal, has been credited with making a famously cynical remark as he walked through a law school library. He spotted a student, bent over books and reading.
“There,” Smith supposedly said, “is a young man studying how to take a bribe and call it a fee.”
On Thursday, we learned that federal prosecutors believe that Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York State Assembly, collected $4 million in payments from two law firms for essentially no legal work.
The prosecutors have said that these were nothing but bribes, dolled up with feathers, wigs and lipstick to make them look like legal fees. 

Prosecutors said a doctor at a university hospital in New York City began sending lung patients to a law firm associated with Mr. Silver for possible civil suits over asbestos exposure. Two months later, Mr. Silver invited the doctor to apply for state grants that he controlled. The doctor got $500,000 for a research center on lung disease. And Mr. Silver — who did no legal work whatsoever on the asbestos cases — got referral fees for the suits amounting to more than $3 million, according to a criminal complaint made public on Thursday.
In his official communications, Mr. Silver said the grant money would support research on Sept. 11 illnesses. He told the doctor not to tell a mutual friend that he was sending cases to Mr. Silver’s firm, the complaint said.
For years, Mr. Silver proclaimed himself a champion of disclosure. Somehow, the Assembly never got around to passing rules that would have revealed the relationships now laid bare. Asked by an investigating commission for “a description of the services you provide or have provided in exchange for compensation,” Mr. Silver did not answer the straightforward question. Instead, the Assembly hired a law firm to fight the subpoena. The panel, known as the Moreland Commission, “was engaged in a fishing expedition to intimidate legislators,” Mr. Silver said. It was disbanded by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.
So the commission never found out that Mr. Silver had allegedly been secretly paid a total of $685,513.63 in “referral fees” by a two-person law firm that specialized in an arcane area of law. Nor did the commission learn, as the prosecutors say they did, that Mr. Silver got the referral money after he sent two big real estate developers to the little law firm — developers who needed legislative favors from Mr. Silver.
For years, there was mystery about what exactly Mr. Silver did to earn so much from his main source of income, the law firm Weitz & Luxenberg, which handled the asbestos cases. A grand jury subpoena asked.
“That request resulted in production of records related to a single property dispute in which Silver, along with other Weitz & Luxenberg attorneys, represented an individual,” according to the complaint.



August 4, 2014

Dept of Justice Accuses Rikers Is. Officials of Not Protecting Inmates From Beatings By Other Inmates or By Guards. 'Rikers Is Broken'


EDS NOTE: FACES OF GUARDS MUST REMAIN UNRECOGNIZEABLE.
Julie Jacobson (Photo)      APOfficers on Rikers Island 'violate the constitutional rights of adolescent inmates,' says Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara following a two-year investigation by his office.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/rikers-island-cycle-violence-violates-teen-inmates-constitutional-rights-doj-article-1.1891302#ixzz39UeWCg1A

N.Y. DAILY NEWS

 A Department of Justice attorney says that Rikers Island is a "broken" place, where teenage inmates undergo "serious physical harm from the rampant use of unnecessary and excessive force by DOC staff." According to U.S. Attorney in Manhattan Preet Bharara, a two-year investigation found that 16- to 18-year-old inmates are brutally treated, and prison guards lie or make evidence disappear to protect themselves. His findings will be sent to various New York departments with a list of 70 recommendations. Attorney General Eric Holder called the situation "unacceptable."

There is a pattern and practice of conduct at Rikers that violates the constitutional rights of adolescent inmates," Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said, announcing the findings of a two-year investigation by his office into the treatment of inmates ages 16 through 18, "most of whom have not yet been convicted of crime, and about half of whom have been diagnosed with a mental illness."
Those teens are being subjected to "a place where brute force is the first impulse rather than the last resort."

Web Graphic for rikers5n

The report calls for more than 70 immediate reforms, including the installation of more security cameras, the addition of more experienced officers, and better training.

A JUNE 20, 2014 AERIAL PHOTO

Teen inmates suffered 22 jaw fractures during the first five and half months of 2012, and suffered 239 head injuries between June of 2012 and July of 2013, the report says.
 It also notes that many of the officers who claimed to have been attacked showed no sign of any injuries.

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily NewsU.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara speaks at a press conference on Monday.
Inmate-on-inmate violence in adolescent housing is rampant and commonplace. In fiscal year 2013, "there were 845 reported inmate-on-inmate fights," the report says.
Inmates also spend an inordinate amount of time in solitary confinement, even though half of them are struggling with mental illness, Bharara said.
They're in for "weeks, and sometimes months at a time," for rule violations, "including non-violent infractions," Bharara said.
He said that isolation can be psychologically devastating for troubled teens — but the report notes that some of the inmates are so scared of the violence in the general population that they welcome solitary.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/rikers-island-cycle-violence-violates-teen-inmates-constitutional-rights-doj-article-1.1891302#ixzz3AofeiLlv


 

August 2, 2014

CEASE FIRE IN GAZA, CIA HACKS SENATE COMPUTERS IN DC, POSSIBLE CUOMO INVESTIGATION IN NY


Baz Ratner/Reuters

Israel and Hamas have agreed to a 72-hour ceasefire, according to an announcement from Secretary of State John Kerry. “The United Nations representative in Jerusalem, Special Coordinator Robert Serry, has received assurances that all parties have agreed to an unconditional humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza,” Kerry said in a joint statement with United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-Moon.

The ceasefire will begin at 8 a.m. Friday and allow humanitarian aid to reach those in need in Gaza. Ground forces will remain in place for the duration of the ceasefire and Israeli and Palestinian delegations will depart to Cairo for negotiations aimed at reaching a “durable cease-fire,” according to the statement. “This cease-fire is critical to giving innocent civilians a much-needed reprieve from violence,” the statement said. “During this period, civilians in Gaza will receive urgently needed humanitarian relief, and the opportunity to carry out vital functions, including burying the dead, taking care of the injured, and restocking food supplies. Overdue repairs on essential water and energy infrastructure could also continue during this period.” -

Read it at The New York Times

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

After repeated denials from the head of the CIA that his agents hacked into Senate computers, the spy agency’s Inspector General’s Office found that they did in fact do it. The report says CIA personnel improperly accessed Senate Intelligence Committee computers when they were being used to put together a report on the agency’s detention and interrogation program.

“As far as the allegations of, you know, CIA hacking into, you know, Senate computers, nothing could be further from the truth,” John Brennan said in March. “I mean, we wouldn’t do that. I mean, that’s—that’s just beyond the—you know, the scope of reason in terms of what we would do.” On Thursday, Brennan briefed and apologized to Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein and Vice Chairman Saxby Chambliss. The Senate report, which is expected to be released soon, was investigating the CIA’s use of interrogation methods that some deemed torture in secret overseas prisons during the Bush administration. When asked in the spring if he would resign if CIA hacking turned out to be true, Brennan said he would leave that to President Obama. “If I did something wrong, I will go to the president, and I will explain to him exactly what I did, and what the findings were. And he is the one who can ask me to stay or to go.” The White House said today that Obama has “great confidence” in Brennan. Senator Mark Udall, who sits on the Intelligence Committee, says the revelation "shatters" his confidence in Brennan.

Read it at McClatchy

Reuters
Things are heating up in New York as the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, Preet Bharara, has threatened Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo with an investigation for possible obstruction of justice or witness tampering over the governor's cancellation of his own anticorruption commission. The written warning from Bharara's office came in response to public statements by former members of the commission that were in support of Cuomo—but were made as a result of calls from the governor or his emissaries. "We have reason to believe a number of commissioners recently have been contacted about the commission’s work, and some commissioners have been asked to issue public statements characterizing events and facts regarding the commission’s operation," the letter said.

Read it at the New York Times