Los Angeles Times

So, who’s going to jail in the DWP scandal?

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Re “Ex-DWP chief agrees to plead guilty to bribery,” and “Woman in pandemic scam gets 10-year term,” Dec. 7

Iam struck by the juxtaposit­ion of two articles in The Times. The first reports that former Los Angeles Department of Water and Power chief David H. Wright pleaded guilty to a bribery charge in connection with his official duties. The second reports that a local real estate broker was sentenced to 10 years in prison for leading a scheme to defraud the federal government of pandemic loan money.

In both cases, crimes against the public were committed. In the DWP case, the crime was against the ratepayers in Los Angeles; in the federal case, the crime was against U.S. taxpayers (both are groups that include me).

I can only hope that our system of justice will mete out to Wright a punishment that is similar to that received by the real estate broker. I write to express this hope since too often the white-collar criminal is treated so much more leniently than others. Here, these are both whitecolla­r crimes.

I’m a retired attorney, and I find that the system of justice in this country is severely distorted. Comparing the punishment outcomes of these two cases should be very interestin­g.

Larry Ivanjack, Woodland Hills

As a retired 30-year waterworks engineer for the DWP, I am distressed reading accounts of malfeasanc­e at the department.

In any large organizati­on one is likely to find people who are greedy and corruptibl­e. But I would like to speak up for the vast majority of DWP employees who have performed, over nearly 120 years now, their jobs honestly and with their customers foremost in mind.

The rank-and-file employees I knew all did their jobs profession­ally, and I am honored to have worked alongside them.

If Wright, who joined the DWP in 2015, had been as honest and public-minded as my co-workers, the whole corruption case and the besmirchme­nt of the utility would have been averted.

Fred Barker Burbank

This scandal is another reason my daughter doesn’t bother to read newspapers, watch TV news or listen to any political informatio­n. She’s felt hopeless and unable to effect change even at the city level for years. I don’t know when she last voted.

Is it any wonder young people feel alienated from their government when they see corruption and the flouting of laws by top officials? Instead of leading in the political arena, many younger people have dropped out.

We have lost our moral compass. Where do we go from here? Suzanne Brugman

La Habra Heights

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? FBI AGENTS leave DWP headquarte­rs in downtown Los Angeles on July 22, 2019, after serving a search warrant of the public utility.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times FBI AGENTS leave DWP headquarte­rs in downtown Los Angeles on July 22, 2019, after serving a search warrant of the public utility.

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