New York Post

Skelos’ blues & booze

Att’y bares corrupt pol’s struggles

- By PRISCILLA DeGREGORY

Disgraced former state Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos is struggling with depression and a drinking problem after a rift with his son and separation from his grandsons, new court documents claim.

The Long Island Republican and his son, Adam, were convicted on corruption charges at a retrial in July, and each will face as much as 110 years in prison at their Oct. 24 sentencing — although they are expected to receive much less time due to sentencing guidelines.

A lawyer for Dean Skelos, 70, asked for leniency from a judge in new Manhattan federal court papers.

“The disintegra­tion of Dean’s relationsh­ip with Adam and of the close-knit bonds of his family have had a negative impact on Dean both emotionall­y and physically,” the attorney, G. Robert Gage, said in the papers.

“His struggles with depression have deepened,” Gage wrote.

“It is an unfortunat­e reality that the strain of this trial has caused a rift between father and son.”

Unlike at his 2015 trial, the elder Skelos took the stand in the July retrial, and threw his sonn under the bus by claiming thatt he thought it was “improper”” and was unaware that Adam ac-cepted money for no-show jobs.

Dean admitted during the tes-timony that he asked companiess that were lobbying before him too give his son work, but he said he didn’t do it in exchange for passing legislatio­n favorable to those companies.

The bills that passed would have passed either way as they weren’t controvers­ial, Dean explained to the jury.

“Adam had a lot of issues,” Dean testified of his adopted son, telling the jury that Adam struggled with substance abuse and anger management.

Now Dean himself has developed his own substance-abuse problem, his lawyer says.

“Dean has come to struggle with alcohol issues,” Gage wrote, explaining it began after the former lawmaker’s two autistic grandsons moved to Florida with Adam’s ex-wife.

Gage said Dean took the boys under his wing when Adam di- vorced their mother in the aftermath of the trial.

“He began to consume at least one martini and a couple of glasses of wine daily,” Gage said of Dean.

In fact, Dean’s probation officer recommende­d he receive alcohol treatment both in prison and after release, Gage wrote.

“Mr. Skelos is a 70-year-old man whose two special-needs grandchild­ren would suffer by his incarcerat­ion, and who is very favorably positioned to provide positive contributi­ons to his community,” the court documents say.

In May 2016, Manhattan federal Judge Kimba Wood sentenced Dean to five years and Adam to six and a half in prison. She will hand down their sentences this time around, as well.

The father and son had their conviction­s overturned in 2017 after the Supreme Court narrowed the definition of corruption.

 ??  ?? PAIN: Ex-Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos’ struggles with depression “deepened” after his and his son’s conviction­s created a rift in his family, his attorney argues.
PAIN: Ex-Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos’ struggles with depression “deepened” after his and his son’s conviction­s created a rift in his family, his attorney argues.

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