Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Prosecutor charged with taking $100,000 in gifts, trips

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PHILADELPH­IA >> The city’s top prosecutor accepted more than $100,000 in luxury gifts, Caribbean trips and cash, often in exchange for official favors including help with a court case, according to a bribery and extortion indictment unsealed Tuesday.

The indictment caps a nearly two-year investigat­ion into District Attorney Seth Williams’ financial affairs. Williams, a Democrat and career prosecutor who makes $175,000 a year, has said he ran into financial trouble after a divorce and while paying private-school tuition for his daughters.

However, defense lawyer Michael Diamondste­in said Williams “vehemently denies that he ever compromise­d any investigat­ion, case or law enforcemen­t function.”

The 23-count indictment describes gifts from one business owner that included trips Williams took with his then-girlfriend to a Dominican Republic resort, where they stayed in a presidenti­al suite; a custom $3,400 sofa; and $9,000 in cash or checks.

In exchange, authoritie­s said, Williams offered to help the businessma­n’s friend seek reduced jail time in a criminal case his office handled. He also had the businessma­n meet with an airport police official in an attempt to avoid enhanced screening when returning to the U.S. from abroad, they said.

Williams, known to frequent cigar bars and dine at the city’s ritzy Union League private club, also spent $20,000 in funds earmarked for a relative’s nursing home care, the indictment said. He was spending Tuesday huddled with family, a spokesman said, and was expected to surrender and be arraigned Wednesday.

Williams, the city’s first black district attorney, announced last month he would not run for a third term this year. The 50-yearold said he showed poor judgment and regretted “mistakes in my personal life and in my personal financial life.” Eight people, seven of them Democrats, are running for his seat in the predominan­tly Democratic city.

As recently as January, Williams had hoped to weather the scandal, vowing to earn back the “trust and respect” of his staff and the public. However, questions about the investigat­ion dogged him as he tried to carry out his duties. The charges announced Tuesday included honest-services fraud.

Special agents with the FBI, the IRS and the Department of Homeland Security declined to elaborate on the charges. They would not explain, for instance, why the foreign traveler sought quicker screenings, but New Jersey acting U.S. Attorney William Fitzpatric­k said no security measures had been thwarted. His office supervised the case given Williams’ work ties to Department of Justice officials in Philadelph­ia.

The indictment also offered no evidence that Williams intervened in the criminal case, although texts show Williams suggested the defendant delay his plea so he could get the file and “see what can be done” to get him a lower jail sentence.

“There is very little I can do the day before without it looking extremely suspicious,” Williams texted the defendant’s friend.

The charges come as former Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Kathleen Kane, the first woman and first Democrat elected as the state’s top prosecutor, appeals her conviction and 10- to 23-month sentence in a 2016 perjury and obstructio­n case.

Williams failed to disclose income sources and 89 gifts on financial statements from 2010 through 2015 and omitted 10 more on a belated filing, authoritie­s said. Those gifts, not all of them mentioned in the indictment, ranged from sideline passes for Philadelph­ia Eagles games for several years to $21,000 in airfare to a free roof on his house and a $6,500 Rolex watch from a girlfriend.

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