The Sentinel-Record

EDITORIAL ROUNDUP

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March 11 Toledo Blade Victim is Ohio

The stain upon Ohio government created by the conduct of Larry Householde­r and Matt Borges will not be soon or easily erased.

The scheme that victimized all Ohioans and made an untold number of Ohio government officials knowing or accidental participan­ts in a massive fraud deserves a punishment that will deter future corruption at this scale.

A step in that direction can be taken by Judge Timothy Black, who will sentence the two for racketeeri­ng activity including wire fraud, bribery, and money laundering, following their conviction­s Thursday in federal court in Cincinnati.

The United States Sentencing Commission reports a 23-month prison sentence as the average for 156 bribery conviction­s in 2021.

The crime that was meticulous­ly investigat­ed and prosecuted is far from the “average” bribery case. Former Councilman Bob McCloskey took $5,000 in bribes in an FBI sting — well below the median bribe of $52,328 in 2021. In 2006, he received a sentence of 27 months and served 20.

The sentencing guidelines allow a judge to escalate a sentence based on the impact on victims.

All Ohio citizens are victims of this tragedy. The goal of this crime was to raise $1.3 billion from ratepayers and transfer that money to FirstEnerg­y. That’s a lot more than the harm done by McCloskey.

Also to be taken into account is the harm done to Ohioans’ faith in their government.

The federal criminal code allows a 20year maximum sentence for racketeeri­ng. The penalty should be commensura­te with the level of damage done.

There are precedents for sentences well beyond the average.

• Jeffrey Skilling, CEO of Enron, was sentenced in 2006 to 24 years in prison for selling $60 million worth of shares based on insider knowledge.

• James Traficant, former Eastern Ohio congressma­n, was sentenced to seven years for bribery, racketeeri­ng, and tax evasion.

• Former FBI agent Babak Broumand of Los Angeles in 2016 got six years in federal prison for conspiring to accept at least $150,000 in cash bribes and other items of value.

• Fred Buenrostro, the former CEO of the California Public Employee Retirement System, was sentenced to four and a half years for conspiracy to trade official acts for some $250,000 in cash and benefits — much less than the $514,000 Householde­r took and the $366,000 that Borges took. And that excludes the rest of the $61 million that was spread around as campaign contributi­ons and who knows what other expenditur­es, or the $1.3 billion impact on Ohio electrical ratepayers. …

The Blade Editorial Board believes Householde­r and Borges should serve a stiff sentence that expresses the magnitude of the crime, if that takes every day of the 20-year maximum.

The “nothingbur­ger” case as framed by former Ohio House Speaker Householde­r’s attorneys portrayed this $61 million bribery scheme as “politics as usual” at the Statehouse. Sadly politics as practiced at the Ohio Statehouse has been correctly judged by a federal trial jury as criminal racketeeri­ng.

Householde­r and former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Borges were both found guilty for their roles in a conspiracy to trade $61 million in campaign contributi­ons from FirstEnerg­y for the bailout of two financiall­y failing nuclear power plants.

Federal prosecutor­s Emily Glatfelter, Megan Gaffney Painter, and Mathew Singer, and FBI Agent Blane Wetzel presented an intricate case in painstakin­g detail. The government showed how the social welfare political nonprofit Generation Now was created at the direction of Householde­r to convert FirstEnerg­y cash to campaign funds for Ohio House candidates loyal to Householde­r.

Once those Householde­r loyalists voted to make him speaker, Householde­r went to work on the FirstEnerg­y bailout. When the controvers­ial legislatio­n that forced residents and businesses throughout Ohio to pay higher utility rates was threatened with repeal by voter referendum, Borges joined the conspiracy to derail that option.

Prosecutor­s documented that all of the FirstEnerg­y conspirato­rs dipped into the Generation Now political money for personal use. Judge Black instructed jurors that it was a bribe to take money for political action, even if the bribe-taker agreed with the policy. …

Historical­ly Ohio has not been blemished by blatant political corruption associated with some other states. With the federal conviction­s Ohio has entered a new era.

The toughest possible sentences will hold Householde­r and Borges accountabl­e for conduct that victimized all of Ohio to enrich themselves.

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