El Dorado News-Times

Former Ohio House speaker convicted in $60M bribery scheme

- BY JULIE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Former state House Speaker Larry Householde­r and former Ohio Republican Party Chair Matt Borges were convicted Thursday in a $60 million bribery scheme that federal prosecutor­s have called the largest corruption case in state history.

A jury in Cincinnati found the two guilty of conspiracy to participat­e in a racketeeri­ng enterprise involving bribery and money laundering, after about 9 1/2 half hours of deliberati­ons over two days.

U.S. Attorney Kenneth Parker said the government’s prosecutio­n team showed that “Householde­r sold the Statehouse, and thus he ultimately betrayed the people of the great state of Ohio he was elected to serve.”

He called Borges “a willing co-conspirato­r.”

Prosecutor­s alleged that Householde­r orchestrat­ed a scheme secretly funded by Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Corp. to secure his power in the Legislatur­e, elect his allies — and then to pass and defend a $1 billion nuclear power plant bailout benefiting the electric utility.

They alleged that Borges, then a lobbyist, sought to bribe an operative for inside informatio­n on the referendum to overturn the bailout.

Householde­r, 63, had been one of Ohio’s most powerful politician­s — and twice elected speaker — until the Republican-controlled House ousted him after his indictment from his leadership post, and then in a bipartisan vote, and with Householde­r vigorously objecting, from the chamber.

It was the first such expulsion in 150 years.

He took the stand in his own defense, contradict­ing FBI testimony and denying that he attended swanky Washington dinners where prosecutor­s allege he and executives of FirstEnerg­y hatched the elaborate scheme in 2017.

Borges, 50, did not testify at trial but has insisted that he’s innocent.

Both men face up to 20 years in prison.

The verdict comes two-and-a-half years after Householde­r, Borges and three others were arrested in what prosecutor­s have called the largest corruption case in Ohio history.

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