Corrupt Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin Guilty

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Corrupt Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin Guilty
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Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was convicted Wednesday for accepting bribe and free trips from contractors in exchange for helping them secure million dollar government contracts in New Orleans. Corruption Details: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/13/us/...
 
so he is in jail for being a capitalist.

like he the only politician that takes

kick backs....

po ray ray,

he thought the same rules for them, applied to him as well..
 
Don't do the crime if you can't do the time.

I don't like seeing these black mayors go down but what the hell?
 
so he is in jail for being a capitalist.

like he the only politician that takes

kick backs....

po ray ray,

he thought the same rules for them, applied to him as well..

They can't give speeches for a million dollars a piece, lucrative consulting projects on disaster preparedness, or a million dollar a year position.

Why do they always have to get the cash? Bank it for favors later.

There is rampant corruption that the government does nothing to crack down in the form of illegal surveillance. It is a form of tyranny that I refuse to accept and will take whatever measures are necessary to stop it. It is worse than political corruption, however, no money is exchanged. It has turned the US into an intolerable dictatorship.

It warrants public executions of these individuals or groups with their heads severed and posted on YouTube.

Who empower these individuals to engage in these nefarious activities? why do they get these special powers that gives all kinds of advantages and I don't.
 
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Judge cuts ex-New Orleans mayor slack
with 10-year sentence



McClatchy Washington Bureau
By Greg Gordon
July 9, 2014


Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was sentenced Tuesday to serve 10 years in prison, winning leniency from federal sentencing guidelines months after a jury found him guilty of 20 of 21 felony counts, including bribery, wire fraud, tax evasion and fraud that deprived the city’s citizens of his honest services.

Under the sentencing guidelines, the 58-year-old Nagin was facing up to 20 years behind bars.

U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan found that Nagin wasn’t a leader of the criminal conspiracy in which he took payoffs, concluding that all of the defendants were “equally culpable” and it was just to depart from the guidelines, according to accounts of his sentencing before a packed courtroom in New Orleans.

She said that his crimes “were motivated in part by a deeply misguided desire to provide for those closest to him” and that sentencing should “reflect Nagin’s ability to harm the public again,” WWL-TV in New Orleans reported.

Prosecutors immediately objected to the sentence, the station said.

Nagin, a former businessman who now lives in Frisco, Texas, was the face of the embattled city after it was ravaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 with winds and flooding that overwhelmed a faulty levee system, damage eventually blamed for nearly 1,500 fatalities. As the casualties mounted and looters swept through the abandoned city, Nagin and his fellow Democrat, Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco, decried the sluggish response of the Bush administration’s Federal Emergency Management Agency.

However, another portrait of Nagin emerged in recent years as word of a criminal investigation spread. It grew from an evaluation of the city’s Crime Camera System in 2009 by New Orleans’ inspector general, Ed Quatreveaux, that turned up financial discrepancies.

Quatreveaux said that a joint investigation between his office and the FBI found that Nagin, who served as mayor from 2002 to 2010, led to the convictions of the former mayor, his chief technology officer and others.

The New Orleans Times-Picayune reported that Nagin got a shorter term than the 17-year sentence imposed on Frank Fradella, the former chief executive of disaster management firm Home Solutions of America, who was convicted of conspiring to bribe Nagin with trips, cash and truckloads of granite. A different judge handled Fradella’s case.

In late May, the judge signed a preliminary order requiring Nagin to forfeit assets in the amount of $501,200.26.

Nagin, who thanked the judge and her staff for their “professionalism,” wore a brightly colored necktie and managed a broad smile as he strode outside the courthouse.

Following the sentencing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Coman said outside the courthouse that “what Ray Nagin did was sell his office over and over and over again,” further staining the reputation of a city with a history of public corruption.

His sentence matched the 10-year term handed to former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards, who was convicted of corruption in 2000.


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/07/...eans-mayor.html?sp=/99/200/365/#storylink=cpy




 
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