Albuquerque Journal

Stakes high in trial of ex-senator

$50K commission at issue in Griego case

- BY MORGAN LEE

SANTA FE — A former New Mexico state senator goes on trial Monday on corruption charges in a high-stakes showdown with state prosecutor­s.

The case comes to a head as scandal-weary voters consider creating an independen­t state ethics commission to shore up oversight of elected officials.

Phil Griego, a Democrat, is accused of using his former position as a lawmaker and his acumen as a real estate broker to profit from the sale of a state-owned building in downtown Santa Fe via complex interactio­ns with a state agency, allied lawmakers and a public buildings commission.

Griego, 69, is charged with eight criminal counts, including bribery, fraud and perjury.

He has said he broke no laws while earning a $50,000 commission from owners of an upscale inn who bought the building located a block from the state Capitol.

Griego’s attorney, Thomas Clark, has said evidence and testimony will show that Griego never voted in 2014 on the sale as a lawmaker and was not promised a commission until after the Legislatur­e adjourned.

Griego was ordered to stand trial last year after a weeklong preliminar­y hearing explored detailed evidence against him. Witnesses are likely to include members of a prominent Santa Fe real estate dynasty, leading state lawmakers, legislativ­e staff, campaign finance regulators and an investigat­ive journalist.

Griego’s case is the latest in a string of high-profile corruption cases in New Mexico involving public officials.

Republican Dianna Duran resigned as secretary of state in 2015 amid revelation­s she used campaign funds to fuel a gambling addiction. That led to her conviction on felony counts of embezzleme­nt and money laundering.

A district court judge threw out a plea bargain and sentenced Duran to a month in jail and years of community service obligation­s, including speaking engagement­s before students and community groups aimed at repairing lost confidence in public officials. Duran is still in the process of fulfilling those obligation­s, her attorney said.

New Mexico voters will decide in November 2018 whether to create an independen­t state ethics commission to evaluate initial accusation­s of misconduct against public officials — though local and state prosecutor­s would still handle criminal cases.

Political ethics complaints are now largely handled by the elected secretary of state and attorney general, both currently Democrats.

Griego resigned from the Legislatur­e in 2015 at the conclusion of a Senate Ethics Commission investigat­ion — before the commission considered recommendi­ng his censure or expulsion.

New Mexico is one of eight states concentrat­ed in the Rocky Mountain region without an independen­t ethics body.

Griego’s trial date was preceded by terse exchanges between the office of Attorney General Hector Balderas and Griego’s attorney, who unsuccessf­ully attempted to call Balderas as a witness.

A law school graduate and real estate broker who lives in San Jose, Griego for decades ran a Santa Fe-based title insurance company and represente­d a sprawling rural Senate district.

 ??  ?? Former State Senator Phil Griego
Former State Senator Phil Griego
 ?? MORGAN LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former state Sen. Phil Griego, left, and his attorney Tom Clark, center, walk out of an arraignmen­t in Santa Fe District Court in Santa Fe on April 4, 2016. Griego, a Democrat who is accused of using his former position as a lawmaker and his acumen as...
MORGAN LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Former state Sen. Phil Griego, left, and his attorney Tom Clark, center, walk out of an arraignmen­t in Santa Fe District Court in Santa Fe on April 4, 2016. Griego, a Democrat who is accused of using his former position as a lawmaker and his acumen as...

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