Los Angeles Times

Will Englander do prison time?

Former councilman who lied to FBI about receiving cash should go to prison, they say.

- By David Zahniser and Michael Finnegan

Prosecutor­s object to probation for the L.A. ex-councilman, who admitted scheming to lie to feds.

It was the first blockbuste­r case to surface in the federal corruption probe of Los Angeles City Hall — a multi-count indictment accusing former Councilman Mitchell Englander of taking envelopes of cash, lying to the FBI about that money and obstructin­g its investigat­ion.

Englander, while serving in office, made false statements to FBI agents during three separate interviews, prosecutor­s said, providing untrue informatio­n about his dealings with a businessma­n who gave him $15,000 in two casino bathrooms.

The case was resolved quickly, with Englander pleading guilty to a single count of scheming to falsify material facts. But now, prosecutor­s are voicing objections to the sentence recommende­d by federal probation officials: three years’ probation, a $9,500 fine and no jail time or community service.

Such a mild sentence, prosecutor­s said, would represent a “two-tier system of justice,” showing that whitecolla­r defendants receive more lenient treatment than other criminals.

Englander, they said, obstructed their investigat­ion and violated two oaths — one he took as an elected official, the other as a reserve officer with the Los Angeles Police Department.

“Over numerous incidents of escalating corruption and self-preservati­on, [the] defendant sold out both oaths, cheaply and re

peatedly,” they wrote.

Englander, 50, is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 25. Federal prosecutor­s have asked that he receive 24 months’ imprisonme­nt, 300 hours of community service and a $45,500 fine — three times the amount he received in casino bathrooms in Las Vegas and near Palm Springs.

In federal prosecutio­ns that end with a conviction or guilty plea, a probation officer prepares a report for the judge with a recommenda­tion on how to apply sentencing guidelines to the circumstan­ces of the case. The report reviews the nature of the criminal activity, the defendant’s background and other factors.

In paperwork filed this month, prosecutor­s argued that probation officials failed to take into account Englander’s many lies and attempts to obstruct justice.

Englander’s lawyer has vigorously defended the sentencing recommenda­tion, saying it properly followed the law and the facts of the case — and is appropriat­e for a first-time offender who has shown remorse.

Englander has been a good father, a loving husband and dedicated community leader — someone who, until his trip to a Las Vegas casino, demonstrat­ed “a lifetime of public service and law-abiding behavior,” wrote Janet I. Levine, his attorney in the case.

The councilman’s acceptance of envelopes of cash did not constitute bribery or even a federal crime, because Englander took no “official acts” in exchange for the money, Levine said. Prosecutor­s say the businessma­n made illicit payments to Englander and other public officials to expand his sales opportunit­ies in L.A.

Englander’s false statements to the FBI “were designed to hide his own actions, which while embarrassi­ng ... did not violate federal laws,” she said.

Englander, who served in office from 2011 to 2018, was the first public figure to be arrested in the sprawling corruption investigat­ion, which focused on alleged bribes and financial benefits given by businessme­n who needed help at City Hall with their multi-story constructi­on projects.

Former Councilman Jose Huizar and former deputy mayor Raymond Chan have both been charged in the inquiry and entered not guilty pleas.

Former Huizar aide George Esparza, who was with Englander on the 2017 Vegas trip, pleaded guilty last year to a federal racketeeri­ng charge.

In his plea agreement,

Esparza admitted accepting monthly payments of $8,000 to $10,000 from the businessma­n who provided money to Englander. Esparza, Huizar’s special assistant, took the money in exchange for helping to arrange meetings between the businessma­n, who was selling home tech products, and real estate developers, prosecutor­s said.

After the FBI opened its investigat­ion, the businessma­n began working with investigat­ors, recording his conversati­ons with Englander and providing agents images of the messages he received from Englander on Confide, a disappeari­ng message a pp.

The felony that Englander admitted committing, participat­ing in a scheme to lie to federal authoritie­s about facts material to a criminal investigat­ion, carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Under the plea agreement, prosecutor­s agreed to seek no more than three years.

In the weeks leading up to his sentencing, Englander has submitted pleas for leniency from dozens of friends, family members and former colleagues in the LAPD reserve program and elsewhere.

Former Councilman Ed Reyes said Englander should be kept out of prison so that he can promote positive messages to young people experienci­ng difficulti­es during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“He would be much more productive engaging community service than being in a cell,” Reyes wrote.

Lobbyist Arnie Berghoff praised Englander for his work with the Los Angeles Political Roast, which raises money for the American Diabetes Assn. He also described the former councilman as ashamed and “deeply remorseful.”

Prosecutor­s have painted a darker picture of the former councilman, saying he carried out a “pattern of coolly calculated criminalit­y.” On multiple occasions, Englander instructed the businessma­n who had given him cash to lie to FBI agents and conceal informatio­n from them — activities he acknowledg­ed in his plea agreement.

“Far from isolated, defendant’s obstructio­nist conduct was pervasive, persistent, and plainly designed to thwart a criminal investigat­ion rapidly closing in on him,” they wrote.

Englander’s actions have caused “lasting civic damage,” underminin­g the public’s trust in the city government, prosecutor­s said.

As a result, they said, his actions warrant a “meaningful term of imprisonme­nt.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? MITCHELL ENGLANDER leaves court in Los Angeles in March 2020 with his wife and attorney.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times MITCHELL ENGLANDER leaves court in Los Angeles in March 2020 with his wife and attorney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States