Chattanooga Times Free Press

NYC mayor says he did nothing wrong

- BY DAVID B. CARUSO

NEW YORK — Harendra Singh was in a losing battle with New York City over millions of dollars in rent on his waterfront restaurant. So, by his own admission, he opened his wallet and bribed his way out of the problem.

He donated thousands of dollars to the mayor’s election campaign and, as a result, got a meeting with top city officials in which he hammered out a more favorable lease.

Singh ultimately pleaded guilty to a federal bribery charge. The man he admitted to bribing, Mayor Bill de Blasio, was not prosecuted.

That incongruit­y dogged de Blasio anew over the past week after Singh’s guilty plea, made in secret in 2016, became public for the first time. Reporters peppered the Democrat with questions about how someone could be guilty of giving him a bribe, but him not being guilty of accepting it.

“Everything we did on that matter and everything else we’ve done in this administra­tion was legal, was appropriat­e. We hold ourselves to high ethical standards,” the mayor said. “The federal government looked at this exhaustive­ly. I’ve got nothing else to say about it. We handled things in the appropriat­e manner.”

The mayor also suggested Singh pleaded guilty only because he was in trouble for a variety of corrupt acts, many related to his dealings with political figures on Long Island.

“This man did a lot of bad things in a lot of places,” de Blasio told WNYC radio host Brian Lehrer. “This guy, to save his own skin, struck a plea deal with the federal prosecutor­s. … He agreed to certain charges for his own self-preservati­on. But I’ve been 100 percent consistent. What he said happened did not happen, period.”

Legal experts said there are pragmatic reasons prosecutor­s might go after someone who tried to pay a bribe without charging the person who allegedly received it.

“In practice, the bribe payer is almost always the easy case,” said Kelly Kramer, a Washington lawyer who leads the white collar criminal defense practice at Mayer Brown. “The bribe payer has a very clear motive. Often times, you’ll have internal email or text that makes clear what their objective is. The recipient, you tend to have less evidence about their intent. You might have a recording. Lots of other times it’s more ambiguous.”

“Bribery is not just about the payment,” he added. “Proving intent is always the trick.”

The former acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan, Joon Kim, announced last March that prosecutor­s had concluded there wasn’t enough evidence to charge de Blasio with a federal crime.

Investigat­ors had examined both the mayor’s dealings with Singh and with another businessma­n, Jona Rechnitz, who admitted buying himself political access with campaign contributi­ons.

Like Singh, Rechnitz pleaded guilty to honest services fraud in a complex case involving a wide array of illegal acts. But one of them, prosecutor­s said, was buying access to city officials by contributi­ng more than $100,000 to certain political committees. After making the donations, Rechnitz said he got a variety of special favors, including help with a dispute with the city over allegation­s that an illegal hotel was operating in one of his buildings

De Blasio has also denied that Rechnitz got special treatment and called him a liar.

The Supreme Court made it more difficult to prosecute elected officials in 2016, ruling they had to take an “official act” in exchange for a bribe for it to be illegal. Simply setting up meetings or organizing events for someone wasn’t enough.

Failure to prove corrupt intent led to the collapse this week of the federal prosecutio­n of U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez in New Jersey. Prosecutor­s said they wouldn’t retry the Democrat on charges that he traded influence for gifts and campaign contributi­ons from Florida eye doctor after a judge ruled they had failed to show an explicit quid-pro-quo agreement.

One loud objection over prosecutor­s’ handling of the de Blasio investigat­ion came from lawyers for former Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano, a Republican awaiting trial on charges he also accepted bribes from Singh.

Mangano’s lawyer filed a legal motion Tuesday demanding the case be thrown out on the grounds the government had engaged in “selective prosecutio­n.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Treinis Gatz said in a court filing Tuesday that the claim of selective prosecutio­n was baseless.

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