Corrupt City of Detroit officials

Ruff Ryder

Robotix
Registered
Monica Conyers Pleads Guilty

Conyers Facing Up To 5 Years In Prison

18431840_240X135.jpg


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, 44, was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit bribery for allegedly accepting two payments from a Synagro Technologies official in late 2007, including one in a McDonald's parking lot.

She entered her plea before Judge Avern Cohn at 10 a.m. with her attorney Steven Fishman.

Conyers was solemn in court, having to be asked three times by the judge to speak up.

Conyers is facing three to five years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines. No sentencing date has been set.

Conyers' husband chairs the House Judiciary Committee in Congress. He has no role in the case. The couple has two sons.

"This has been a trying time for the Conyers family and, with hope and prayer, they will make it through this as a family," said a spokesman for John Conyers. "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 city recover from this serious matter."

Sources said Conyers has been identified as "Council Person A" in previous charging documents and accused of taking bribes to approve a $47 million sludge-handling contract for the city.

Conyers was the deciding voice in the 5-4 vote to approve the deal in November 2007.

The charge is outlined in a legal document called a "criminal information," which only can be filed with the defendant's consent and typically signals a plea deal.

The document reads, "Beginning on a date unknown and continuing until in or about December 2007, in the Eastern District of Michigan of Michigan, Monica Ann Conyers did knowingly and voluntarily conspire and agree with an aide and others to corruptly solicit and demand for the benefit of herself and others, and to accept and agree to accept, things of value from persons while an agent of the City of Detroit."

The document states that on Nov. 20, 2007, Conyers "met an individual sent by Rayford Jackson in the parking lot of the Butzel Family Center in Detroit and received an envelope containing cash."

It also states that on Dec. 4, 2007, Conyers and her aide also accepted an "envelope containing cash" in a Detroit McDonald's parking lot.

Sources have identified her former aide as Detroit political consultant Sam Riddle.

"I don't have a clue to what's happening," Riddle said outside the Detroit YMCA. He said he had heard rumors that Conyers was going to plead guilty to "something" but said he didn't know anything else.

"All I know is that I am an independent contractor, consultant, the same as I was when I worked with Conyers on the Detroit City Council," Riddle said. "My status remains unchanged in terms of my frame of mind."

When asked if during his time with Conyers he had ever seen her doing anything illegal, Riddle said, "There have been times when she's not been the model of decorum ... but in terms of illegality, I would really have to reflect on that."

Riddle said he's not here to "beat up on Monica Conyers."

"If Monica Conyers is pleading guilty to something, that thing will have to speak for itself."

Riddle said any investigation involving himself "remains to be seen."

Two people who worked for Synagro have already pleaded guilty: Rayford Jackson and James Rosendall Jr.

Jackson pleaded guilty June 15 to arranging four bribes in 2007 that totaled more than $6,000.

Rosendall pleaded guilty last year, accused of trying to influence city officials by chartering private planes to take them to Las Vegas and Mackinac Island, donating about $200,000 to campaign entities of a city official and paying $25,000 to an unidentified city official's relative.

The city of Detroit and Synagro Technologies called off the million-dollar contract after the corruption investigation began.

http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/19867343/detail.html#


Colleague says Rep. Conyers shaken

bilde


Washington -- Rep. John Conyers, D-Detroit, spent Friday casting a long series of votes and avoiding reporters' questions as news spread at the Capitol about his city councilwoman wife's guilty plea.

"I have no comment," the Detroit Democrat who chairs the Judiciary Committee said as he left one vote on the House floor and headed down a marble stairwell. One colleague described him as seeming shaken.

Having served nearly a half-century in the House, Conyers has survived periodic controversy, and his colleagues believe this time won't be any different. But back home in his Detroit-area district, political hopefuls see an opportunity to unseat a congressman who hasn't had a close election in years.

"This has been a trying time for the Conyers family and, with hope and prayer, they will make it through this as a family," Conyers' office said in a statement. "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 city recover from this serious matter."

Michigan colleagues expressed sympathy for the 80-year-old Conyers, who, according to several people interviewed, isn't expected to suffer any fallout affecting his powerful chairmanship as a result as of his wife's difficulties.

Conyers, who assumed the Judiciary Committee chairmanship after Democrats regained control of the House in the 2006 elections, has not been implicated. And last week, a spokesman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Conyers had her "full support."

When he runs again for re-election in 2010, some Republicans said he might face a strong Democratic primary challenge. That happened when the text message scandal involving former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick led to a tough primary battle for his mother, Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, D-Detroit.

"She was not the person who had the problem, her son was," said Ed Haroutunian, the founding chairman of the Wayne County Republican Committee, who lives in Congressman Conyers' district. "However, what you found was there were people who ran against her. I think that could very well be something that happens. There are going to be folks who think about it."

Conyers, who was elected in 1964 and is the second-longest-serving member in the current House, is popular with Republicans as well as Democrats.

Rep. John Dingell, D-Dearborn, said Conyers "seemed to be very shaken" during voting Friday.

"It's a matter of sorrow. You have to feel sorry for him," Dingell said.

"He will hang in there," said Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Flint, who brushed off the thought that the emotional wear and tear of the family ordeal might make Conyers decide to retire. "I've know him a very long time, and he'll survive just fine, professionally and politically."

Conyers spent Thursday night at a luau at the White House. His wife, who friends says rarely socializes with him in Washington, was not at the event for members of Congress and their families.

Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Holland, said that Conyers waved him over to his table at the luau for pleasant small talk.

"John and I have traveled together," Hoekstra said. "He's done things in my district. I am just very sad."

Rep. Thad McCotter of Livonia, who is part of the Republican leadership team, said no one would hold Conyers responsible for a relative's actions.

Rep. Mike Mike Rogers, R-Brighton, said, "It's always a stain on democracy when a public official uses their office for personal gain. Detroit has enough troubles already without having its public officials sticking their hands out to personally benefit from work that needs to be done for the city."

Given that no suggestion has been made that Conyers is implicated in his wife's troubles, several Democrats back home predicted he'll not suffer political repercussions.

"He was a pretty established politician before they were married," Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano said. "If there's no connection to him being involved in it, I don't think it has an impact on him at this point."

Thelma Murrell, immediate past president of the Southgate Democratic Club, called Conyers "too valuable a person for us to lose."

But Susan Chmielewski the chairwoman of the Wayne County Republican Committee, sees possible political trouble ahead for Conyers.

"If I was him, I wouldn't even run again. If his wife does do jail time, I think she's probably been quite helpful to him (at home and in his political life), and he'll be going it alone," she said.

http://www.detnews.com/article/20090627/METRO/906270354/Colleague-says-Rep.-Conyers-shaken
 
Last edited:
'Not the end' of City Hall corruption probe

Detroit -- Monica Conyers' guilty plea marks a major milestone in a long-running investigation of Detroit City Hall corruption, but officials say there is more to come.

"This is not the beginning, and this is certainly not the end," Andrew Arena, special agent in charge of the FBI in Detroit said Friday. "This is a battle against public corruption. It's a battle that we're going to continue to wage until we eradicate it."

Interim U.S. Attorney Terrence Berg said that no other City Council members would be charged in connection with the $1.2 billion sludge hauling and treatment contract the city awarded to Synagro Technologies Inc. of Texas in 2007.

Conyers pleaded guilty to accepting bribes Friday in connection with the contract.

The FBI is investigating others linked with the Synagro investigation and other aspects of city contracting. Those instances include:

• John Clark, a former aide to Detroit City Councilman Kenneth Cockrel, Jr. was videotaped accepting payment from former Synagro official James R. Rosendall Jr., but has not been charged.

• Sam Riddle, a former Conyers aide, allegedly served as a conduit for illegal payments to Conyers, according to those familiar with the probe. Riddle has denied wrongdoing. His attorney, David Steingold, said he's been in plea talks with federal prosecutors.

• Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is the "City Official A" referenced in Rosendall's plea agreement who allegedly received hundreds of thousands of dollars in contributions to his campaign and nonprofit funds, free plane rides and a case of champagne, persons familiar with the investigation said.

Money was also allegedly paid by Rosendall to Kilpatrick's father, Bernard N. Kilpatrick, the "Relative of City Official A" identified in Rosendall's plea.

One of Kwame Kilpatrick's lawyers said he believes the Synagro investigation is entirely centered on the actions of City Council and the company. Michael Alan Schwartz said he has received no indication that his client has any connection to the allegations involving Conyers.

Bernard Kilpatrick has denied wrongdoing.

Berg countered criticism Friday that the investigation involving Conyers, which took less than two years, lasted too long.

"The citizens of Detroit and all of the eastern district of Michigan deserved a fair and thorough investigation that would lead to a successful outcome," he said.

In other areas, the FBI is investigating former Kilpatrick aide Derrick A. Miller in connection with a security contract and the failed Asian Village development, federal records show.

And agents from the FBI and other federal agencies raided the offices of city contractor Bobby Ferguson in January. Larry Dubin, professor at University of Detroit Mercy Law School, said there's every indication more people will be charged. "The statement by Mr. Arena and his sense of outrage toward public officials breaching the public trust is perhaps an indication that there are more indictments to be issued," Dubin said.

http://www.detnews.com/article/2009...0/-Not-the-end--of-City-Hall-corruption-probe
 
bilde

Monica Conyers' booking shot from Friday, June 26,
2009


Convicted Detroit City Council President Pro Tem
Monica Conyers has resigned
effective July 6. Conyers’
memorandum to Janice M. Winfrey, City Clerk reads:
“Effective, Monday, July 6, 2009, I hereby
resign from my position as Council
President Pro-Tempore of the Detroit
City Council. My staff will be available
until December 31, 2009 to assist in
the offices of my colleagues.”
 
bilde


http://www.freep.com/article/20100910/NEWS01/100910043/Monica-Conyers-starts-life-as-prisoner

Monica Conyers starts life
as prisoner


By TRESA BALDAS
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

The ever-defiant Monica Conyers is waking up in
a bunk bed Saturday as federal inmate No.
43693-039, ready to serve her time, but still
clinging to the hope of withdrawing her guilty
plea one day.

After months of fighting to remain free, Conyers
surrendered herself at roughly 1:40 p.m. Friday
at the Alderson Federal Prison Camp in West
Virginia. The facility, a college-like campus
nicknamed Camp Cupcake for its setting among
rolling hills, has housed celebrity convicts
such as Martha Stewart and Billie Holiday.

The former Detroit councilwoman, who pleaded
guilty in 2009 to taking bribes to vote for a
$1.2-billion sludge disposal deal, was under a
judge’s order to report to prison by 2 p.m.
Friday. Her last-ditch effort to stay out of prison
was shot down Thursday when a federal
appellate court denied her request to remain free
on bond until it considers her appeal.

Conyers is trying to withdraw her guilty plea. A
federal judge already refused her request, but the
appeals court has not yet considered it.

Meanwhile, Conyers is starting her new life in
khaki pants and a khaki shirt at the prison camp,
where, judging by the orientation handbook, life
shouldn’t be too uncomfortable. Each living
quarter has washers, dryers, microwaves, hair
dryers and curling irons. Pedicures and
manicures are allowed, but only in the
Cosmetology Department.

There’s a volleyball court, TV room, chapel and
health care — with a $2 co-pay per sick visit.

As for the food? The Federal Bureau of Prisons
has uniform menus in all of its prisons so
Conyers will be eating the same thing as
everyone else. Saturday’s breakfast, for example,
consists of an orange, dry cereal and breakfast
cake. Lunch is sloppy joes and hamburgers.
Dinner features chicken enchiladas, beans and
rice.

Camp Cupcake, despite its reputation, is not as
posh as people think, Alderson spokesman Sam
Adams said.

“There’s a large misconception of how things
can be titled. It’s a typical prison camp,” he said,
noting the key difference at Alderson is there is
no fence.

According to Adams, Conyers’ room is a
standard cubicle with a bunk bed, no lock on the
door, and no bars. Over the next two weeks, she
will get a job assignment that could include
plumbing, painting, food service, grounds-
keeping or orderly duties.

Conyers’ lawyer, Doug Mullkoff, did not return
calls seeking comment Friday.
 
'Not the end' of City Hall corruption probe

Detroit -- Monica Conyers' guilty plea marks a major milestone in a long-running investigation of Detroit City Hall corruption, but officials say there is more to come.

"This is not the beginning, and this is certainly not the end," Andrew Arena, special agent in charge of the FBI in Detroit said Friday. "


The FBI is investigating others linked with the Synagro investigation and other aspects of city contracting. Those instances include:

Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is the "City Official A" referenced in Rosendall's plea agreement who allegedly received hundreds of thousands of dollars in contributions to his campaign and nonprofit funds, free plane rides and a case of champagne, persons familiar with the investigation said.

Money was also allegedly paid by Rosendall to Kilpatrick's father, Bernard N. Kilpatrick, the "Relative of City Official A" identified in Rosendall's plea.


<font size="3">
Feds File Charges Against Kwame Kilpatrick, Dad

</font size>
dec16.pic1.article.JPG

In this Oct. 2008 photo, former Detroit
Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick (left) talks with
his father, Bernard. (AP)
 
Let's see...

in Detroit, a white cop murders a 7-year old girl in 2010.

Yet, magically,

you don't hear a peep out of the white supremacist media about it.

Very interesting.

You don't see the Feds filing charges against the white cop...

you don't see the prosecutor filing charges against the white cop...

you don't see the justice deparmtment pursuing civil rights charges against the white cop.

Interesting, indeed.
 
Let's see...

in Detroit, a white cop murders a 7-year old girl in 2010.

Yet, magically,

you don't hear a peep out of the white supremacist media about it.

Very interesting.

You don't see the Feds filing charges against the white cop...

<font size="3">you don't see the prosecutor filing charges against the white cop...</font size>


Interesting, indeed.

<font size="3">Interesting, indeed.

You made it all sound like the Great White Conspiracy".

Perhaps, it is.

But, your rant failed to mention that the 'Prosecutor',
the Wayne County District Attorney, is Black.

images


No pass for the Detroit Police Department or the Officer
Joseph Weekley who fired the fatal shot. But, no pass
for your distorted rants, either.

QueEx



<font size>
 
`

December 16, 2010

No consolation, but Arts & Entertainment Network sued over shooting death of the 7-year-old Detroit girl.
After an A&E film crew urged police to create "great video footage" for its show "The First 48 hours," officers conducted a "commando-style raid" on the wrong house and shot to death a 7-year-old girl, the girl's family says in Federal Court.​

In a separate July 2010 story, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said in published remarks that the investigation into Aiyana's killing is still “ongoing,” and would not comment on the possibility of charges being brought against Off. Weekley.



`
 
<font size="3">Interesting, indeed.

You made it all sound like the Great White Conspiracy".

Perhaps, it is.

But, your rant failed to mention that the 'Prosecutor',
the Wayne County District Attorney, is Black.

images


No pass for the Detroit Police Department or the Officer
Joseph Weekley who fired the fatal shot. But, no pass
for your distorted rants, either.

QueEx



<font size>

So, when whites repatedly put their version of the story out there, in your mind, it is not DISTORTED?

Is Kym Worthy supposed to be your ultimate rebuttal?

What further amazes me is you have no authority to speak on Detroit issues... absolutely none.

You don't know anyone in Detroit.
You don't know anyone in the prosecutor's office.
You don't live here.
You weren't born here.
You know almost nothing about the history of Detroit.
You don't know a DAMN thing about Detroit.

Yet, you get to decide what is and is not important to the people of Detroit?

Why do you think your opinion carries any weight at all?
 
Back
Top