Silver writes ‘mea sorry’
Shel’s beg letter to sentencing judge
Now he’s sorry. Sheldon Silver, the disgraced former Albany kingmaker still awaiting sentencing despite twice being convicted of corruption, begged a judge for leniency in a selfserving, handwritten letter that pleaded, “I don’t want to die in prison” five years after he was first found guilty of abusing his office.
The longtime Assembly speaker — whom federal prosecutors want locked away for seven years but could get hit with up to 20 years — scrawled the more than 780-word note on letterhead bearing his name ahead of his sentencing, finally scheduled for next month.
“Your Honor, I do not want to die in prison,” Silver, 76, groveled to Manhattan federal court Judge Valerie Caproni in the letter dated Wednesday. “This case has been going on for more than five years, but I feel like I have aged 15 or 20 years. My fate is in your hands.”
Silver — who took $4 million in bribes in exchange for supporting a real-estate developer’s position on rent regulations — also lamented ruining his legacy “by using my office for personal financial benefit.”
“I say, without hesitation, that regardless of how complicated and nuanced legal questions are answered, which are frankly beyond me, my use of my office for personal gain was improper, selfish and ethically indefensible, and it undermined the trust of the people of New York,” he continued. “What I did was wrong.”
Silver, who enjoyed his powerful status as one of Albany’s so-called “three men in a room” along with the governor and Senate majority leader for more than 20 years, was first convicted on federal corruption charges way back in 2015 and sentenced to seven years.
That conviction was thrown out on a technicality — but Silver was found guilty on all seven counts a second time in 2018.
An appeals court vacated some of those convictions, including that he funneled state funds to a cancer-research firm in return for patient referrals to the law firm where he was counsel.
At his last sentencing, Caproni asked Silver what message he’d send to current Assembly members.
“It is this: Beware of any sense of entitlement,” Silver wrote in his letter. “I developed a sense of entitlement, and it seemed normal. I think that sense of entitlement was easier to justify because I thought I was keeping the best interests of the state and my constituents at heart. Many will now doubt that, and that is my own doing.”
Prosecutors want Silver to get another seven years when he is finally sentenced on July 20.
But his lawyers have asked for a “substantial term of home confinement” and community service, according to court filings.
Silver wrapped up his letter with an apology to the judge, prosecutors and his family. “And above all, I apologize to the people of New York,” he wrote. “I am sorry.”
Silver has remained out on bail since his arrest in 2015.