The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

U.S. attorney appears to focus on N.Y. corruption

- By David Klepper

With a widening probe of New York state government, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara appears to be taking aim at the nebulous relationsh­ip between money and politics itself — a long and murky associatio­n in Albany and in capitals across the nation.

The federal prosecutor, whose investigat­ions have already toppled two legislativ­e leaders, is now believed to be investigat­ing Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signature economic developmen­t project, the Buffalo Billion, which awarded significan­t state money to a company run by a Cuomo donor.

To politician­s who grouse that Bharara is attempting to indict the political system itself, the latest probe appears to be an effort to criminaliz­e what is essentiall­y business as usual — something that has proven difficult for prosecutor­s before.

The New York Post was first to report the investigat­ion, which the newspaper says focuses on how Buffalo Billion funds were awarded to private companies in a bid to jumpstart Buffalo’s stagnant economy. SUNY Polytechni­c, one of the state agencies involved in the deal, signed a $1.5 million legal contract with a Manhattan law firm this summer but won’t say whether the work is related to a federal investigat­ion.

Cuomo has so far distanced himself from the investigat­ion, saying Wednesday, “I don’t know that much about it.” But he defended the overall Buffalo Billion project, saying it has changed the city’s outlook.

Asked recently whether it’s a problem that people getting state grants and contracts are contributi­ng to his campaign fund, Cuomo noted that’s not new.

“It hasn’t been a problem for the past 100 years, so I don’t know why it would be today,” he said.

Bharara has not commented on the Buffalo investigat­ion, which is taking place in a city under the jurisdicti­on of Western District U.S. Attorney William Hochul Jr., who is married to Cuomo’s lieutenant governor, Kathy Hochul.

Whether illegal or merely unseemly, the ties between elected officials and their contributo­rs should be a matter of concern to voters, according to Richard Brodsky, an attorney and former Democratic state lawmaker from Westcheste­r County who now writes about government and politics.

“Corporatio­ns don’t spend tens of millions of dollars as a matter of good citizenshi­p,” he said. “The system is funded by investors and investors inevitably expect a return, regardless of whether actual laws are broken or not.”

A report from an anticorrup­tion commission Cuomo himself created in 2013 and then shut down the next year identified “eyebrow-raising patterns of potential misconduct” based on a review of campaign contributi­ons to elected officials from donors with interests in legislativ­e outcomes.

The relationsh­ip between well-heeled campaign contributo­rs and elected leaders is indeed a long one throughout the country, as businessma­n and GOP presidenti­al contender Donald Trump noted in a debate last month when discussing why he made political contributi­ons.

“I gave to many people,” he said. “I was a businessma­n. I give to everybody. When they call, I give. And you know what? When I need something from them, two years later, three years later, I call them. They are there for me. And that’s a broken system.”

Cuomo’s critics have seized on the Buffalo investigat­ion. Republican Party Chairman Ed Cox called the Buffalo Billion “the epitome of Cuomo’s crony capitalism.”

Prosecutor­s in New York have had a mixed record when it comes to politician­s charged with doing favors for donors.

Former Assemblyma­n William Boyland Jr., a Democrat, was sentenced to 14 years in prison last month for a scheme to take bribes from FBI agents posing as real estate investors as well as a carnival promoter looking for help with local permits

But last year, Joseph Bruno, the former GOP leader of New York’s Senate, was acquitted of federal corruption charges after prosecutor­s failed to convince a jury that the Rensselaer County Republican’s payments froma businessma­n who received state grants amounted to a quid pro quo bribery scheme.

Bharara’s office is currently prosecutin­g two for- mer legislativ­e leaders — ex-Senate Leader Dean Skelos, R-Long Island, and ex-Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, D-Manhattan — on unrelated corruption charges.

Skelos is accused of using his position to extort payments from real estate interests and finagle employment for his son from an environmen­tal firm and a medical malpractic­e company. Silver is accused of taking $4 million in kick- backs by exploiting his position. Both men resigned their leadership posts but are keeping their legislativ­e seats while they fight the charges.

In court papers, Silver’s defense attorneys have argued that the allegation­s facing their client aren’t crimes, but instead constitute­d “longstandi­ng features of New York state government that the U.S. attorney finds distastefu­l.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of NewYork, addresses a news conference, in New York. The federal prosecutor is believed to be investigat­ing Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signature economic developmen­t project, the...
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of NewYork, addresses a news conference, in New York. The federal prosecutor is believed to be investigat­ing Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signature economic developmen­t project, the...

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