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Thursday, March 04, 2010

Strike Three?

Apologies to the NY Post for the headline. The right-wing rag is particularly proud, since it was its own Frederic U. Dicker (credited by name in the Times today) who first broke this story. I'm busy today, but I'd certainly be remiss if I didn't post the Commission on Public Integrity's findings on Governor Paterson's receipt of World Series tickets from the Yankees last fall (and I certainly wouldn't want to be accused of bias!). In any event, the report speaks for itself. As is so often the case, it's the coverup - which in this case, according to the Commission, includes lying under oath (indeed, the Times, in its third consecutive front-page right-hand column on Paterson, notes that the commission had asked prosecutors to determine if criminal charges should be brought) - that is worse than the crime.

6 Comments:

Anonymous said...

http://www.yournabe.com/articles/2010/03/04/queens/queensercahia03032010.txt

Guv got advice from Aqueduct bidder lobbyist - Paterson denies conflict amid AEG probe

By Howard Koplowitz
Thursday, March 4, 2010 9:16 AM EST


Mark Holliday of SL Green talks about his company’s proposal for Aqueduct Race Track during a meeting with the Queens Chamber of Commerce last year. Photo by Christina Santucci
A high-profile Democratic operative and lobbyist was giving free campaign advice to Gov. David Paterson at the same time he was hired to lobby Paterson on behalf of one of the losing bidders of the Aqueduct video lottery terminal contract.

Bill Lynch’s firm, Bill Lynch Associates, was hired Nov. 1 by Aqueduct bidder SL Green for reasons of “assisting in the venture’s bid for a license to operate the video lottery facility at Aqueduct Race Track,” according to the copy of a contract signed between the two parties listed on the state Public Integrity Commission’s Web site.

While Lynch was hired by SL Green until he parted ways with the bidder last month, he also gave “informal advice” to Paterson, according to Richard Fife, Paterson’s campaign manager before the governor withdrew his election bid Friday.

Paterson, along with state Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver (D-Manhattan) and state Sen. John Sampson (D-Brooklyn), were responsible for picking the winning bidder for the VLT contract.

Fife disputed a report in the New York Post Monday that Lynch’s actions were an “apparent violation of the law.”

The Post cited a state ethics panel ruling in 2002 that said gifts of services given by a registered lobbyist to a person whom he or she is lobbying is illegal.

Fife said Lynch, who has a “longtime family friendship with the governor,” gave “informal advice” to Paterson “on occasion” and that the actions were “perfectly legal.”

“I talked to lawyers and it’s a non-issue,” Fife said.

Lynch’s Manhattan-based firm received $10,000 for consulting services from Paterson’s campaign committee in October — a month before he was hired by SL Green.

SL Green lost out on the VLT contract to Aqueduct Entertainment Group in a process that has been called into question due to the involvement of the politically powerful southeast Queens minister and former congressman the Rev. Floyd Flake in AEG’s bid.
Flake has a 0.6 percent stake in AEG.

Meanwhile, Flake and fellow AEG investor and rap mogul Jay-Z were expected to be subpoenaed Tuesday in the state inspector general’s probe of the AEG deal, according to the New York Post.

Rap mogul Russel Simmons, who was an adviser to losing VLT bidder Penn National Gaming, was also expected to be subpoenaed, the Post said.

The state inspector general’s office, which earlier confirmed it was investigating the AEG deal to TimesLedger Newspapers, could not be reached for comment.

Fife said Lynch was put back on the governor’s campaign payroll last month.

Lynch, who managed former Mayor David Dinkins’ successful campaign in 1990 and was deputy campaign manager for U.S. Sen. John Kerry’s (D-Mass.) presidential bid in 2004, could not be reached for comment. Lynch’s attorney, election lawyer Henry Berger, declined to comment.

Lynch also served as an adviser to South African leader Nelson Mandela when Mandela was running for president of South Africa and was appointed by then-President Bill Clinton to the Democratic National Committee in 1997.

He served as vice chairman of the body until Mayor Michael Bloomberg appointed him to the city Charter Revision Commission in 2003.

Reach reporter Howard Koplowitz by e-mail at hkoplowitz@cnglocal.com or by phone at 718-260-4573.

jk said...

Cairo sees job at OTB to grow revenues for Nassau

March 3, 2010 By CELESTE HADRICK celeste.hadrick@newsday.com

The Republican nominee for president of Nassau's Off-Track Betting agency sees his job as a "challenge" to grow revenues for the county.

Joseph Cairo, vice chairman of the Nassau Republican Party and second-in-command to chairman Joseph Mondello, also said he did not see his 1994 disbarment as disqualifying him from serving in the job that pays $198,000 a year

jk said...

Paterson's top spokesman quits; third key official to leave

2:00 PM, March 4, 2010 ι BRENDAN SCOTT

Gov. Paterson's top spokesman, Peter Kauffmann, has just resigned making him the third latest administration official to quit since last week's domestic violence bombshell.

jk said...

Judge rules to prevent GOP takeover of OTB

March 4, 2010 By CELESTE HADRICK celeste.hadrick@newsday.com

Democrats in charge of Nassau's Off-Track Betting Corp. Thursday won a temporary restraining order preventing Republicans from taking control of the agency and appointing Joseph Cairo as its president.

Schenectady Supreme Court Justice Vincent J. Reilly, a Republican, ruled that a new Republican-appointed board of directors could not take over Nassau's OTB

Anonymous said...

Looks like the Governor will stick it out to at least the end of the budget process given the support he received last night from the meeting of Black Leaders in Harlem.

Anonymous said...

Wow, the put their heads together and came up with the concept of due process. Amazing.

So now he is allowed to continue collecting a pay check because a bunch of guys in a back room meeting decided he could. Sort of like the way he got the Lt Gov position to begin with.

Politics as usual.