Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama says ex-speaker Hubbard’s words show his apology was insincere

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Convicted former Alabama House Speaker Mike Hubbard told people he was innocent and “held my nose” as he signed a letter apologizin­g for his crimes, according to state prosecutor­s who used Hubbard’s own phone calls and emails from prison to cast doubt on his claims of remorse as he seeks early release.

The attorney general’s office cited transcribe­d excerpts of Hubbard’s conversati­ons as they oppose his request for early release from prison. State attorneys said the communicat­ions show he was “not truthful” when he signed a letter apologizin­g for his 2016 conviction for violating state ethics law, including using his public office for personal financial gain.

Hubbard submitted the letter in September along with a request for early release from prison.

According to the Monday court filing, Hubbard told a friend before submitting the apology letter that, “I promise you I did nothing wrong.” On the day he signed the apology letter to the court, Hubbard told his wife that part of the letter he liked was removed, but he was “looking at the ultimate goal” and “held [his] nose and signed it.”

Prosecutor­s said Hubbard also talked to friends about efforts to add language to a community correction­s legislatio­n that could benefit his release. According to state lawyers, Hubbard told an attorney that someone should contact a state senator to urge a filibuster. The court filing did not include many specifics but said Hubbard did not get his wish.

“Hubbard has already been removed from office for breaching his duty to the public. Now he has been caught breaching his duty to this Court. He deserves condemnati­on, not mercy,” state attorneys wrote.

The former House speaker also referred to the lead prosecutor in his case as corrupt, suggested politics was behind his prosecutio­n and was baffled that the Alabama Supreme Court did not completely overturn his conviction.

“I hope the folks there know I didn’t do anything wrong, and this was just a political hit job,” Hubbard told one friend according to the court filing. He told another that, “according to the way they’ve interprete­d the law, they could indict and convict anybody in the Legislatur­e who has a job.”

Phone calls made by prisoners have a message at the beginning informing recipients that the call may be monitored. State lawyers said Hubbard must have been aware of that because he used a variety of code names such as calling his wife the quarterbac­k and state officials either Martians or the Taliban.

Hubbard has served about one year of a 28-month sentence. He is imprisoned at Limestone Correction­al Facility.

Prosecutor­s accused Hubbard of leveraging his powerful public office to obtain clients and investment­s for his businesses, violating the prohibitio­n against giving a “thing of value” to an elected official. His defense maintained the contracts were legitimate work and unrelated to his position as House speaker.

In upholding the conviction this spring, justices noted that when contacting a company for one client, Hubbard “identified himself as a state legislator and as Speaker of the House of Representa­tives.” They also noted how one company executive wrote in an email that Hubbard could get the company, “in front of any speaker in the country regardless of party.”

The Republican was one of the state’s most powerful politician­s until the ethics conviction in a corruption case ended his political career. Hubbard, the architect of the GOP’s takeover of the Alabama Legislatur­e in 2010, was a legislator from Auburn and former chairman of the Alabama Republican Party. He was elected House speaker soon after Republican­s won control.

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Mike Hubbard

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