Monday, November 05, 2007

REPUBLICAN CONTRACTOR BRENT WILKES CONVICTED ON ALL 13 COUNTS

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The case was so solid and one of the GOP contractors who was bribing Randy "Duke" Cunningham and at least half a dozen other Republican members of Congress was convicted today on all 13 charges. He could wind up in prison for 2 decades but that seems unlikely since he has the goods on so many lawmakers. During the trial, for example, he testified that he got far more out of crooked GOP congressman Jerry Lewis than he ever did out of Cunningham. And he has another trial coming up for bribing CIA Executive Director (procurement maven) Dusty Foggo.
Following the verdict, jury forewoman Tyheshia Smith-Kruck, the only jury member to speak to reporters, said the jury had no doubts about Wilkes' guilt.

“The evidence was enough to convict him of all charges,” she said.

...Wilkes was tried on 13 charges of conspiracy, bribery, money laundering and honest services wire fraud.

Prosecutors contended that from 1997 to 2004 he showered Cunningham with gifts small and large. In all, they alleged, he leveraged $625,000 in cash bribes and tens of thousands more in gifts ranging from meals to computers in exchange for Cunningham's influence in appropriating money and pressuring bureaucrats to award contracts to ADCS Inc., Wilkes' company.

Wilkes forcefully denied bribing Cunningham. He testified that his interactions with the congressman were legitimate and legal, and his activity was simply “business as usual” in the lobbying and appropriations culture in Washington, D.C.

A central part of that culture is the process of earmarks-- where representatives insert money into budgets for programs with no oversight. That was a key component of the trial, with the government alleging Wilkes plied Cunningham to get earmarks into the Pentagon budget and then lean on bureaucrats to steer contracts to his company.

In addition to meals, there were flights in private jets, computers and software purchased for the congressman, and two small jet boats and a dock.

The big-ticket items in the case involved a $100,000 payment Wilkes made to Cunningham in 2000. Prosecutors said it was a bribe. Wilkes, however, maintained he was buying Cunningham's boat, the Kelly C. But the deal was never completed, according to Wilkes, because congressional staffers objected, saying that it was wrong for someone with business before Cunningham to pay him for the boat.

So when does the Jerry Lewis trial start? Denny Hastert? Virgil Goode? Katherine Harris?

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2 Comments:

At 9:14 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

While I would enjoy seeing Katherine Harris in jail seperated from her daddy's inherited $$(and not invested in her failed campaign) somehow I think she has been punished enuf just being Katherine Harris.
HOWEVER, there is STILL time to invest in the Denny Hastert IL14 REAL estate investment before it goes public. Best returns are anonymous through his wife's trust. Woulda-coulda-shoulda?

 
At 10:09 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

FROGWALK...frogwalk...#@%&^_)_(*

....mission accomplished....

 

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