Antelope Valley Press

San Francisco official, businessma­n make court appearance

- By JANIE HAR

SAN FRANCISCO — A San Francisco official known around town as “Mr. Clean” and a charity-promoting restaurate­ur whom federal officials say conspired to line their own pockets at the expense of taxpayers’ trust appeared in court Thursday for the first time since their arrest last week.

The FBI arrested public works director Mohammed Nuru and restaurate­ur Nick Bovis on Jan. 27, saying the men schemed in 2018 to bribe a San Francisco airport commission­er for prime restaurant space at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport. The commission­er did not take the $5,000 bribe.

Nuru, 57, and Bovis, 56, appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Sallie Kim for bond hearings Thursday. They are each free on $2 million bail and have started paperwork to secure those bonds with personal property.

The men are longtime friends, but they did not speak to each other in court Thursday.

Nuru left the courtroom with his lawyer, Ismail Ramsey, who declined comment. Bovis and his lawyers huddled in the cafeteria after the hearing. They also declined comment.

Before the hearing, however, Michael Stepanian called his client, Bovis, a good man.

“He wants to get to the bottom and put this behind him. He understand­s what he did, but there’s legal aspects and fact aspects you have to put together to make a determinat­ion,” on criminalit­y, Stepanian said.

The U.S. attorney’s office for Northern California says the two participat­ed in a scheme “to defraud the public of its right to the honest services of a public official through bribery or kickbacks” in violation of their duty.

Nuru goes by the Twitter handle “MrCleanSF” because since 2012 he has overseen the city’s department of public works, which is responsibl­e for cleaning streets, and he was a deputy there before that. The department also handles the design and constructi­on of city facilities and has a project portfolio of more than $5.6 billion. He is on paid leave.

Mayors and other city leaders depended on Nuru’s crews to clean up streets before public events, which he did without being asked. Critics say his department was heavy-handed in sweeping up homeless camps. Also, sidewalks may have sparkled for photo ops, but they didn’t stay that way for long, they say.

Bovis runs a Christmas toy drive for needy children. He is the owner of several businesses, including Lefty O’ Doul’s, a popular sports bar forced out of its longtime Union Square spot in 2017. The grand re-opening of Lefty’s at Fisherman’s Wharf in 2018 was attended by Mayor London Breed, other elected leaders and Nuru.

The corruption allegation­s have upended San Francisco City Hall, with Breed and others professing outrage and ignorance that cozy, illegal back-scratching could happen in their city.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mohammed Nuru (center), director of San Francisco Public Works, gestures Thursday as he leaves a federal courthouse with attorney Ismail Ramsey (right) in San Francisco. The FBI arrested Nuru and restaurate­ur Nick Bovis last week, saying the men schemed in 2018 to bribe a San Francisco airport commission­er for prime restaurant space at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Mohammed Nuru (center), director of San Francisco Public Works, gestures Thursday as he leaves a federal courthouse with attorney Ismail Ramsey (right) in San Francisco. The FBI arrested Nuru and restaurate­ur Nick Bovis last week, saying the men schemed in 2018 to bribe a San Francisco airport commission­er for prime restaurant space at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport.

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