In past blog posts, I
have focused on the perjury charges against Baltimore mayor Sheila
Dixon that relate to her failure to disclose gifts from a developer who
was seeking tax breaks. But today, Dixon goes on trial for theft
involving gift cards allegedly given to the office of the city council
president, which she filled at the time, and used by her for personal
purchases.
This week saw the opening of the trial of former New York state senate
majority leader Joseph Bruno for honest services fraud. According to
the assistant U.S. attorney presenting the
case, as quoted
in the Albany Times-Union, although a
criminal trial, "this case is about conflicts of
interest. It's about failure to
disclose conflicts of interest, and it's about concealment of
information that...
It's been over three years since I wrote about the
conflict situation of San Diego's pension board. Its members were
selected by the city government labor unions and by the city, and they
worked for the city. When an increase in their retirement benefits was
explicitly tied to their approval of a reduction in contributions to
the pension plan, the pension board members acted in their personal
interest and against the interest of...
Is there any worse way to skirt government ethics rules and misuse
public money and position than via a charitable organization? And yet
it
happens again and again. This time it happened in Baltimore, according
to the results of an extensive investigation
by the Baltimore Sun.
Here are two interesting local government ethics case studies from
matters in the news this week.
A Job Can Effectively Be a Gift
According to an
article in the Spokesman-Review,
a Spokane council member requested an advisory opinion from the city's
ethics committee after his
successful push to change city regulations to allow bus bench...
Yesterday, according to an
article in the Dallas Observer, Don Hill, a former Dallas council
member, and four of his associates were found guilty of participating
in an incredible extortion plot relating to affordable housing in South
Dallas. The story, as produced by the prosecution with the help of a
major participant who pled guilty and a developer who was an FBI...