Stamford Advocate

Richard Foley, a GOP chief who taunted the FBI, dies at 71

- By Mark Pazniokas Ken Dixon of Hearst Connecticu­t Media contribute­d to this report.

On his way to prison in January 1994, the 44-year Richard Foley said he knew how his obituary would begin: There would be a mention of his service as a state lawmaker and Republican state chairman, followed by the fact he was convicted of taking a bribe.

Dick Foley wasn’t known for flinching. He was the blue-collar guy who led the state GOP from 1989 to 1992, when Connecticu­t was a presidenti­al swing state and the party struggled to decide if its future was in Fairfield County or the post-industrial Naugatuck Valley.

When it became clear in late 1992 that he was in the crosshairs of the FBI, Foley called a press conference to call the feds bumblers and bureaucrat­s. “We’re going on offense. Put up or shut up,” Foley said. “They picked on the wrong mick.”

The quote ended up on the wall of a semi-secret office the FBI kept for a time in Waterbury, a corruption target. Two years later, Foley was convicted of four felonies in connection with $25,000 he accepted from two corrupt businessme­n, a developer and a banker.

When asked for an interview before he left for prison, Foley said, “Yeah, why not?”

Foley, 71, was found dead at his condominiu­m in Danbury on Saturday. His friend, Ben F. Proto, said Foley’s daughter called with news of his death.

No cause was immediatel­y evident.

Foley came head-on at pretty much everything, from politics to prison. He had an Irish memory, forever rememberin­g friends and foes. He was a state representa­tive, a salesman and a student of human behavior.

His conviction was overturned on appeal, and Foley managed a second act in political life as a lobbyist and campaign consultant. He attempted a comeback last year, challengin­g J.R. Romano for state chair of the GOP.

He won and lost plenty of political bets. In 1991, he was convinced that passage of the income tax by a Democratic legislatur­e and an independen­t governor, Lowell P. Weicker Jr., would be the GOP’s ticket to the majority. It wasn’t.

“I talked with him earlier in the week,” said Ben Proto, a Republican insider who joined Foley in the 2018 floor fight at the GOP state convention that led to Steve Obsitnik of Westport obtaining enough delegate support to join the party primary for governor. “We were going to have lunch next week. He was a dear friend. He was the kind of guy you wanted to have as a friend.”

Proto said that Foley was steeped in Connecticu­t’s political history and was among the very young Republican­s who, in the early 1970s, made up Gov. Thomas Meskill’s “kiddie corps.”

Chris Healy, a former GOP state chairman, said Foley prized — and exuded — loyalty.

“He was the most-loyal, steadfast person you could find,” Healy said Saturday. “I am grief-stricken because I lost one of my best friends. You either loved him or hated him, and those of us who loved him, we would have done anything for him. He loved to have fun, and he loved to laugh at the absurdity of things. You always ended up laughing during a conversati­on with Dick Foley, at some point.”

Foley was blunt, often coarse. He had no patience for the timid or cautious. To them, he would say, “If you want a guarantee, then buy a f— refrigerat­or.”

He could be flippant, but his advice to candidates seeking counsel on issues of morality was not: figure out where you stand; don’t be cute; your constituen­ts will tolerate a principled difference.

He offered himself as an example. For 10 years, he represente­d a conservati­ve and largely Catholic district, but he was more pro-choice than pro-life in his voting.

“He was the most-loyal, steadfast person you could find. I am grief-stricken because I lost one of my best friends.” Chris Healy, a former GOP state chairman

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