Houston Chronicle

Notable career ends with United Airlines case

- By David Porter

NEWARK, N.J. — He once was New Jersey’s highest ranking law enforcemen­t official, a mentor to Republican Gov. Chris Christie and the head of one of the nation’s most powerful transporta­tion agencies. On Monday, David Samson’s next title could be far less glamorous — federal inmate.

Samson faces sentencing for using his position as chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in 2012 to pressure United Airlines to revive a money-losing flight from Newark to Columbia, S.C., so he could have easier access to a weekend home in Aiken, S.C. — which saved him an hour’s driving time, as it turned out.

United discontinu­ed the flight shortly after Samson resigned in early 2014.

The backroom deal was struck as United was in negotiatio­ns with the Port Authority over a hangar lease at Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport, according to prosecutor­s.

The 77-year-old Samson pleaded guilty last summer to a bribery charge and faces up to two years in prison, though his plea agreement allows for the possibilit­y of probation.

His attorneys, who include former U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, filed a brief last week pleading for leniency, writing that Samson’s actions were “an aberration in an otherwise unblemishe­d and extraordin­ary career.” They added he is in poor health and is “very likely in the last few years of his life.”

Prosecutor­s wrote in a response brief that Samson should serve the full 24 months for abusing his power “in a stunning and audacious manner.”

It is an ignominiou­s ending for one of New Jersey’s powerful political players, who headed Christie’s transition team and was rewarded with the Port Authority chairmansh­ip in 2011. The Port Authority oversees billions of dollars in assets and operates New York-area bridges, tunnels, ports and airports.

Samson’s longevity and influence are reflected in the more than four dozen letters of support filed in advance of his sentencing. The writers include three former state attorneys general and former Democratic Gov. Jim McGreevey. Christie didn’t write to the court but has called Samson “an extraordin­ary person” who “obviously had a lapse in judgment.”

Those testimonia­ls are at odds with the portrayal of Samson by former colleagues at the Port Authority regarding the George Washington Bridge scandal, in which two former agency officials face prison for creating traffic jams to punish a Democratic mayor who wouldn’t endorse Christie’s re-election.

During a trial last fall, one of the officials, David Wildstein, testified Samson knew about the plot beforehand.

During the four days of gridlock in September 2013, Wildstein appeared to imply Samson was involved when he texted that Samson was “helping us to retaliate” after Port Authority Executive Director Pat Foye put a stop to the lane realignmen­t.

Convicted Port Authority official Bill Baroni testified Samson told him to “punch Pat Foye in the face” over the dispute.

Samson wasn’t charged in the bridge scandal nor was he charged after a federal probe into potential conflicts involving his law firm while he was Port Authority chairman.

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