Another Detroit politician admits guilt in corruption case

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ProfJohn

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Jul 28, 2006
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I really wonder what the people of Detroit think about their leaders who continue to enrich themselves while the city goes to hell.

About the only noteworthy thing about this case is the fact that guilt person is the wife of John Conyers Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. (he is apparently innocent and knew nothing about the bribe.)

BTW this woman sounds like a total bitch.
DETROIT ? City Council member Monica Conyers, the wife of powerful Democratic congressman John Conyers, pleaded guilty Friday to accepting cash bribes in exchange for supporting a sludge contract with a Houston company.
Conyers, a political unknown who won her council seat in 2005 largely on her husband's name, admitted in federal court to a single count of conspiracy to commit bribery, responding quietly to questions from Judge Avern Cohn.
She faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine when she's sentenced.
The fiery 44-year-old Conyers left court without commenting.
Her lawyer, Steve Fishman, said he will ask Cohn to impose a sentence that does not include prison time.
Rep. John Conyers, the 80-year-old chairman of the House Judiciary Committee who prosecutors said knew nothing of the bribery, declined to answer a reporter's questions as he walked to the House floor for a vote Friday morning. "I have no comment whatever," he said.
His office issued the following statement:
"This has been a trying time for the Conyers family. With hope and prayer, they will make it through this as a family. Public officials must expect to be held to the highest ethical and legal standards. With this in mind, Mr. Conyers wants to work towards helping his family and the city recover from this serious matter."
City Council President Ken Cockrel Jr. said city lawyers were looking into whether Conyers' guilty plea will bring her automatic and swift expulsion from the board, or if that has to occur following sentencing.
U.S. Attorney Terrence Berg said Monica Conyers admitted to "a pattern of conduct of accepting bribes," but the plea agreement does not specify how much money was involved.
Prosecutors say Monica Conyers accepted two payments in late 2007 from a Synagro Technologies official, Rayford Jackson, in exchange for supporting a $47-million-a-year, contract that November to have Synagro recycle wastewater sludge and build a modern incinerator in a poor Detroit neighborhood.
The council voted 5-4 to approve the contract with Conyers' vote. It was rescinded in January amid the accusations of wrongdoing.
Monica Conyers is the most prominent person snagged in the Synagro corruption investigation. Jackson and the company's Michigan representative, Jim Rosendall, have also pleaded guilty to bribery charges in the case. Rosendall's plea agreement described how he distributed cash and other gifts to officials.
Berg said the Conyers plea doesn't end the Synagro investigation, but it does mark the conclusion of the probe into elected officials in the case. He called the plea deal an "appropriate and fair resolution to the matter," with a "high-level public figure pleading guilty" to bribery.
"It's a very sad day for Detroit," Cockrel said. "On the other hand, I think it's another step in clearing out some problems in city government. I don't necessarily think this is over. This may go beyond one council member and may involve non-elected officials."
Cockrel said he hoped investigators take long, hard looks at Synagro's involvement in the scandal.
"They need to follow the money trail," he said. "We know now that one council member did indeed get paid. We know two people who were paying. The real question is where did the money come from?"
Monica Conyers' plea is the latest blow to a city beset by political scandal in recent years. Former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and a top aide were jailed after admitting to lying under oath about their romantic involvement during a whistle-blowers' trial.
And a recent audit of the city's beleaguered public school system has uncovered theft and other wrongdoing by employees.
Like the brash and arrogant Kilpatrick, Monica Conyers took a defiant stance as the Synagro bribery accusations swirled around her, the council and city. She refused to address the accusations in recent weeks, and was often contentious with colleagues and the media.
Monica Conyers was a political unknown until her 2005 election ? largely on the name of her husband. She told The Associated Press in September that she would like others to see her as "someone who cares about the city, someone who wants to make sure all the citizens of Detroit have what they need to live" productive lives.
But it was another side of Conyers that gained the most attention.
She has called reporters seeking interviews "evil" and compared the local media to "paparazzi."
Last summer, Conyers was involved in a disturbance at a Denver hotel while attending the Democratic National Convention with her husband. She also has been accused of threatening to shoot a mayoral staffer, and she publicly called Cockrel "Shrek."
Source: Republicans are evil, Democrats are angels. Craig's favorite site.


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