Joe Bruno, New York Senate Leader, Faces Corruption Trial

MICHAEL VIRTANEN   10/31/09 04:31 PM ET   AP

Joe Bruno

ALBANY, N.Y. — For more than a decade, state Senate Republican leader Joseph Bruno was a top power broker in New York. The backslapping former boxer had more bounce in his step than aides half his age and was gruffly unapologetic over the millions in pork projects that he grabbed for his upstate district.

On Monday, he faces trial on charges that could tarnish his legacy, send him to prison and serve as a de facto indictment of Albany's oft-criticized political culture.

Now 80, but still with the impeccable suits, thick silver hair perfectly groomed, and a boxer's body still toned by pounding the punching bag, Bruno is taking on the fight with characteristic defiance.

Federal prosecutors accuse him of collecting $3.2 million in commissions and gifts over 13 years in return for using his state influence to benefit a dozen labor unions and three private businessmen. He has pleaded not guilty and denounced the eight-count January indictment as a politically motivated fishing expedition.

The trial is expected to last weeks.

The charges against Bruno are the latest in a line of corruption cases against New York officials over the past two decades. Assembly Speaker Mel Miller was convicted of fraud in 1991 and Sen. Guy Velella went to jail for bribery conspiracy in 2004. Comptroller Alan Hevesi – re-elected while under indictment – was convicted of using state workers to chauffeur his wife in 2006. This year, former Health Commissioner Antonia Novello, a former U.S. surgeon general, was convicted of using state workers to help her with shopping and other personal business.

Critics blame the political culture in Albany.

Lawrence Norden, senior counsel at New York University Law School's Brennan Center for Justice, said oversight has been lacking for a long time, particularly by legislators and partly the result of the concentration of power in three offices: the governor, Senate majority leader and Assembly speaker. By 2008, the Senate Ethics Committee hadn't met in 10 years, he said. The committee held hearings again this year.

"What you've got is people see their jobs and keep their jobs by distributing pork. That's really what a lot of the work in the Legislature is, and unfortunately, elsewhere at the state level," Norden said. "Once it gets entrenched, it's very difficult to get out of it because there's so much self-reinforcing. Everybody's invested in the game."

Norden believes the trial will shed light on the "pay-to-play" culture that's still "very much a reality" in the state capital.

"I think that's what this prosecution is all about," he said.

Regardless of whether a conviction will affect the practice, Norden said there's no question that trial disclosures will add to the level of public disgust.

"All we can do at this point is hope that with enough shaming, the Legislature will start making the kind of necessary changes to affect the culture in Albany," he said.

Bruno thrived in the system, grabbing the New York Senate's Republican majority's leadership post in a 1994 overthrow. He doggedly courted high-tech projects for New York, often in his district, but in many ways, Bruno was an old-time pol: He was a guy who used phrases like "a man's man," occasionally cursed in news conferences, paused to chat with young female reporters and interns, and seethed when he felt a handshake deal was broken.

His name is carried on a sprawling minor league ballpark and a bust of him is prominently displayed at the revamped Albany International Airport.

Bruno resigned last summer only months after Democratic Gov. Eliot Spitzer – the political nemesis Bruno once dismissed as "fancy, dance-y, prance-y" – fell from power in a prostitution scandal. The three-year federal investigation of Bruno led to charges a few months after that.

Free until trial without having to post bail, Bruno declined requests for an interview. In court papers, he acknowledged running a sideline consulting business since 1993 but said he simply got paid for work he did.

"I'm looking forward to the justice system and I have a lot of confidence in that and that a jury will decide our innocence," Bruno said after a preliminary hearing Monday.

The ex-boxer, who still hits the speed bag, is now chief executive of a suburban Albany consulting company that flourished with state contracts during Bruno's legislative tenure.

Prosecutors allege Bruno sold his favorable influence to union officials, who put their pension funds with the investment company and stock brokerage that paid him commissions. They charge he also helped three private businessmen with state interests, getting large payments in return. The indictment didn't specify what they got, saying only that Bruno "did take discretionary official action on legislative, funding, contract, and regulatory issues" that benefited them. Prosecutors plan to detail that at trial.

Lobbyists, former state officials and union bosses are among more than 100 potential witnesses. Because of the statute of limitations, the charges stem from dealings only in the past five years. Prosecutors want restitution but haven't yet calculated the precise amount or the potential prison term. Authorities initially said he could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each count.

Bruno's lawyers noted he was never accused of soliciting bribes, taking kickbacks or extorting or misappropriating state or federal funds.

Bruno's defense team includes William Dreyer, a former federal prosecutor in Albany, and Abbe David Lowell, one of the nation's top white-collar defense lawyers from Washington, D.C., whose clients have included Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons, who was cleared by the Justice Department in a corruption investigation, and lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who pleaded guilty to fraud charges. They claim the law and theory under which Bruno is being prosecuted – that New Yorkers had a right to his "honest services," – is in a state of flux because of three cases pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.

U.S. District Judge Gary Sharpe, a former prosecutor of organized crime, rejected defense motions for delays and to dismiss charges.

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08:56 AM on 11/02/2009
Bruno is a crook and let's make an example of him,
Why is Spitzer out? I don't care if he was having sex with every prostitute in NY , DC and along the east coast. The whistle was blown on him,because he was getting close to Wallstreet and their shenanigans. We need him back to crack the whip on these people.
02:19 AM on 11/02/2009
NYS LEGISLATURE = MASSIVE CORRUPTION and
WASTE OF NY TAXPAYER MONEY!
All of those thieves must be voted out!
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telebob59
Unrepentant, unreconstructed Dharma Bum
11:24 AM on 11/01/2009
Oh, the tangled web of governance and politics in the Empire State! Funny how in sourcing and re-writing stories about Bruno from the AP in Albany and the Times-Union for a radio news gig I had and lost never had I heard the ex-boxer angle before. In this 'business full of knives', nowhere are they quite so numerous - or as sharp and pointy. Mario Cuomo was about as close as anyone came in my estimation to being above and beyond reproach, at least in his capacity as Governor. I could write volumes and reams about the labyrinth of power and special interests that has hamstrung NY state governance, to say nothing of the upstate/NYC, Dem/GOP biases and cross-fertilization. What I will say is that Albany is long overdue for sweeping reforms in the legislature, the Unified Court System and the bloated structure of government at the state and county levels that serves mostly to foster an antiquated culture of careerist entitlement by elected and appointed officials.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robjh1
That Job Just Isn't Into You!
10:29 AM on 11/01/2009
Aren't there any few good politicians?

"and we are not saved..."
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Sherrie714
You can't fix stupid.
10:04 AM on 11/01/2009
Bruno is a crook. Spitzer was closing in on him and was unfortunately doing something that got him "got". I think Bruno had everything to do with Spitzer's fall. Spitzer was not intimidated by the Albany Rethug machine, nor did he have tolerance for the gridlock and corruption. Say what you want about Spitzer, but his downfall was more then moving a few thousand dollars around a bank account. That is common for a multi-millionaire. I will take a guy who like hookers over the dude that takes bribes any day.
08:08 AM on 11/01/2009
How come New York Republican politicians, both in Washington, at Albany and at the county level, are extremely quiet about healthcare reform? We will have to remember that at the polls.
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longnow
OWS vs Citizens United
01:44 AM on 11/01/2009
Bruno can be expected to try and take everyone down with him,
MAD as in - mutually assured destruction.

His MAD time and money has finally run out at 80+ years of age, bout time.
Spitzer took down *Hank* Greenberg of AIG and he can now take some
satisfaction @ Bruno in the tank. Such a *fine* old fashion republican.
12:20 AM on 11/01/2009
It's a pretty long read, but here's the local take on the Bruno saga.

http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=860263
12:10 AM on 11/01/2009
There is some ridiculous fawning over this guy in this article...ex boxer, suits, etc...etc...

Real news about the GOP in Albany would make the Spitzer / Escort thing look like a Disney cartoon. The media in this state needs to get serious about State politics, and realize how it effects the rest of this countries discourse...
11:58 PM on 10/31/2009
I am a NY resident and the level corruption in Albany has a high price for taxpayers. We can't afford to live comfortably due to outrageous taxes ( caused by irresponsibility and greed) and many residents have moved to other states. People want you to spend money to stimulate the economy but you can't because you have no disposable income after the taxman comes. Bruno is an example of the problem, put him in prison for a signifcant period of time AND fine him!.
11:12 PM on 10/31/2009
Over 13 years

Isn't that a tad long
11:38 PM on 10/31/2009
Not 13 years. He was a State senator until June 2008. He passed around the pork, all right; I wish I had a dollar for everything around here that bears is name. Even at 80 years old, he's still "working" as a consultant/lobbyist. His whole family is corrupt. Check out two of his kids, Ken and Susan. The apple certainly didn't fall far from that tree.
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Bitsko
He of the smoldering eyes
02:58 PM on 11/01/2009
Yep.
11:10 PM on 10/31/2009
Isnt it a little too convenient that charges are brought AFTER he resigned. Who are we kidding here?
The horse is out of the barn. Let's move on to ongoing crimes...
07:09 AM on 11/01/2009
Charges were brought before he resigned and was already under indictment when he did!

Denial of facts does not change them.

Move on and excuse what could be serious crimes until the evidence is made public and the trial conducted is hardly the way our criminal justice system should work. If he is innocent then let a jury determine that, if not then ....
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10:01 AM on 11/01/2009
He murdered 6 women but whats done is done. We should be looking for the killers of today. Your rational doesn't work . Crime is crime Bush and Cheney for instance are a cancer eating at America. How is it that Republicans get the benefit of the doubt and the rest of us have to pay retail?
09:15 PM on 10/31/2009
Arrogant and greed.
He served the people but lined his pockets, the latter inexcusable.
Don't want to see the guy go to jail, but a stiff fine would not be enough to demonstrate that we expected integrity and deserve nothing less. Perhaps some trivial jail time in addition to a huge fine is what is necessary.