The Record (Troy, NY)

Silver found guilty again

- By TomHays

NEWYORK mer Sheldon New Silver York » A jury Assembly of public convicted Speaker corrup- fortion 74-year-old charges Democrat’s Friday, dashing second the attempt ter a decades-long to avoid years career in prison as one afof in state the most government. powerful politician­s

first The full-day verdict, of which deliberati­ons, came on was the a first repeat trial of in the 2015. outcome in Silver’s

prison That sentence conviction were and tossed a 12-year out by an appeals court as a result of a recent Supreme Court ruling that tweaked the legal boundaries of what constitute­d corruption.

Silver could again be facing a long prison term when he is sentenced on June 13.

After the verdict, Silver emerged from the courthouse and said he would launch another appeal.

“I feel disappoint­ed at this point,” he said. “I am very confident that the judicial process will play out in may favor,” he said.

Prosecutor­s said Silver broke the law by collecting nearly $4 million in fees from a cancer researcher and real estate developers who in turn benefited from his clout in state government. He made another $1 million investing that money.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tatiana Martins had urged a conviction, saying there was a “mountain of evidence” that Silver was making millions of dollars by utilizing a form of extortion that stemmed from his enormous power over legislatio­n during his time in of-fice. During closing arguments, defense attorney Michael Feldberg said fees Silver received were lawful and were “common, standard and accepted” among legislator­s who were permitted to work other jobs. The trial was twice as fast as Silver’s first trial as attorneys knew what they could draw from the 26 witnesses and the evidence that accompanie­d them. For a second time, Silver chose not to testify. The gray-haired, bespectacl­ed Silver was first elected in 1976 and served as speaker for 21 years, becoming the classic Albany insider with the power to control bills and

bills and state spending singlehand­edly in behindthe- scenes negotiatio­ns. Known for his often inscrutabl­e comments and wary, phlegmatic demeanor, Silver gained the nickname “the Sphinx.”

The verdict came several weeks before the scheduled start of a retrial of New York’s former Senate majority leader, Dean Skelos, and his son. Skelos, a Republican, also had his public corruption conviction overturned as a result of a Supreme Court ruling that reversed the public corrup- tion conviction of former Virginia Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell.

Over 30 New York state lawmakers have left office under a cloud of crimi- nal or ethical allegation­s since 2000. More than a dozen have been convicted of charges including authorizin­g bribes to get on a ballot, diverting money meant for community programs into a campaign and skimming funds from contributi­ons to a Little League baseball program.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo has proposed changes to New York’s anti- corruption laws after Silver’s and Skelos’ conviction­s. But the Republican-led Senate and Democratic Assembly are deadlocked on proposed reforms.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver leaves court in New York.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver leaves court in New York.

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