Friday, October 11, 2013

CHUCK KOLB 10/11/2013

JUSTICE served on one - Soetoro's pal Kwame sentenced to 28 years !!!

Detroit's ex-mayor gets 28 years in prison while
Soetoro antichrist continues his escapade ...
Prepare, as our Nation nears the mirror image of our beloved Detroit ...



Ye shall walk after the Lord your God, and fear him, and keep his commandments,
and obey his voice, and ye shall serve him, and cleave unto him.
Deuteronomy 13:4 KJV



JUSTICE served on one -
Soetoro's pal Kwame sentenced to 28 years !!!






excellent vid - must see expose
'Corruption no more': Judge sends a message with 28-year sentence for Kilpatrick



The rise and fall of former mayor Kwame Kilpatrick: In this video the Free Press presents the
rise and fall of former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, who once said God anointed him to run the city.
But the text scandal took his job and his freedom, and even more devastating charges await him
in federal court.

Kwame Kilpatrick can’t hurt Detroit anymore.

It’s time, the judge said, for the city to start healing.


“That way of business is over,” U.S. District Judge Nancy Edmunds said today in sentencing the former Detroit mayor to 28 years in prison in the historic public corruption case. “We’re done. We’re moving forward.”

In an emotional sentencing hearing that included scolding, apologizing and a rehashing of Detroit history during Kilpatrick’s tenure, Edmunds spent 25 minutes explaining not just what Kilpatrick did wrong — a long list that included taking bribes, steering contracts to his friend, extorting businessmen, deceiving donors to his nonprofit, living lavishly on the public’s dime and loading the city’s payroll with friends and family. She also stressed that Kilpatrick’s misdeeds taught Detroiters a lesson about honest government. And she hopes her sentence sends a message to future politicians.

“We’re demanding transparency and accountability in our government,” Edmunds said. “If there has been corruption in the past, there will be corruption no more.”

“One thing is certain,” she said of the costs of Kilpatrick’s corruption. “It was the citizens of Detroit who suffered.”

With good behavior Kilpatrick, 43, can be out of prison in 23 years. There is no possibility of parole, but he could earn credit for good behavior.

The massive public corruption investigation that spanned a decade and ensnared the former mayor also has resulted in convictions against 33 other people. Those include three others convicted in the same trial against the former mayor that started in September 2012 — longtime contractor friend Bobby Ferguson, his father Bernard Kilpatrick and former water department director Victor Mercado, who all await sentencing.

An expressionless Kilpatrick sat in his chair and listened to the judge. Not knowing yet what his punishment would be, he had just spent roughly 25 minutes himself apologizing for many of his actions. He said he was sorry about the affair with his top aide Christine Beatty and “mad at people for finding out.” He said what came off as arrogance was “false confidence,” and “this pride and ego” overtook him, even though all he ever wanted to do was become mayor of Detroit — a job he admitted to hating his first six months in office.

“I’ve been a tremendous problem for all the people who have felt that I let them down ... I say with every morsel in my being that I’m sorry,” Kilpatrick said, later adding: “I just hope that one day I can forgive myself.”

He also said: “I’m incredibly remorseful.”

Still, Kilpatrick didn’t admit to anything that he was convicted of in the federal public corruption trial and challenged the government’s main theme in the case — that if you wanted work in Detroit, you had to hire Ferguson.

“That’s just not true,” Kilpatrick said.

Stealing denied
That denouncement was not lost on U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade.

“I heard him apologize to the citizens of Detroit, but I also heard him deny stealing from the people of Detroit and deny stealing from the citizens of Detroit, which is in direct contradiction of what the jury found in this case,” said McQuade, who said she believes the sentence sends a strong message: “That the people of Detroit will not tolerate this abuse of power.”

In March, the jury convicted Kilpatrick on 24 counts that included racketeering conspiracy, bribery, extortion and fraud. During the six-month trial, the government argued that Kilpatrick helped steer lucrative water and sewer contracts to Ferguson, who scored roughly $127 million in city contracts while his friend was mayor. Of that, more than $70 million worth of deals were obtained illegally, the government said.

During trial, the government presented text messages and dozens of witnesses that bolstered allegations that Kilpatrick’s relationship with Ferguson was at the heart of the criminal activity.

Ferguson was convicted on nine counts, including racketeering, extortion and bribery. Federal prosecutors are seeking a maximum 28-year prison sentence for Ferguson when he is sentenced at 10 a.m. Friday.

“Bobby’s doing fine,” said Ferguson’s lawyer Mike Rataj, who attended Kilpatrick’s sentencing. He reiterated Kilpatrick’s argument: that Ferguson was successful before Kilpatrick was mayor, and he earned every penny he got.

“Bobby Ferguson just didn’t drop out of the sky. He dug Comerica Park. He dug Ford Field. He was responsible for a lot of the buildings in and around downtown even before Mr. Kilpatrick became mayor,” Rataj said. “He employed people. They contributed to the economy. He took care of people. He fed poor people. And we hope that the judge takes all that into consideration.”

City will move on
Detroit Mayor David Bing hopes the city will move on now.

“I’m glad that this negative chapter in Detroit’s history has finally come to an end for our citizens. Although I certainly feel for the Kilpatrick family and the impact this sentence will have on them, public service requires a higher standard of ethics and accountability,” Bing said in a statement. “Today’s sentencing sends a strong message to everyone in public office. As we move forward with Detroit’s transformation, honesty, transparency and integrity in city leadership will be paramount.”

During sentencing, Edmunds also mentioned the city’s bankruptcy filing, noting that while Kilpatrick cannot be blamed for decades worth of social and economic problems in Detroit, his actions hurt the city.

“Corruption has its own cost,” she said, noting some of those costs are hard to measure, like businesses getting elbowed out or staying away due to a pay-to-play culture fostered by Kilpatrick and the abuse of the public’s trust.

Edmunds said she will recommend Kilpatrick be sent to a prison in Texas, where his family lives, and told Kilpatrick he could appeal. He nodded his head from his seat.

Kilpatrick, whose wife and children were not in court, said he was sorry to those he let down, including his wife, children and parents. And like Edmunds, he said it’s time for the city to move on.

“I want the city to heal,” he said. “I want the city to prosper. I want the city to be great in the end. I want the city to have the same feeling it did in 2006, when the Super Bowl was here. ... Everybody felt like this was their town.”

Kilpatrick got choked up when talking about his father, Bernard Kilpatrick, who faces sentencing Oct. 17 on a single tax conviction.

Kilpatrick pleaded with Edmunds to show his father leniency so his children would have a father-figure in their lives.

“My father is a good man,” he said. “He’s a real good man.”

He said his father, talked “a lot of stuff ... but he’s not a criminal.”

A promise of appeal
Harold Gurewitz, Kilpatrick’s attorney, has vowed an appeal and plans to file a notice of appeal within two weeks.

“I think it was too much,” he said of the sentence. “It’s an extraordinary long time for someone to be incarcerated. ... I think less would have been sufficient.”

Before sentencing, Gurewitz highlighted other cases in which public officials got lesser sentences, including former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who was sentenced to 14 years in prison on corruption convictions in 2011.

Gurewitz also rattled off Kilpatrick’s accomplishments while he was mayor, saying he improved the quality of life for people in Detroit and wanted to see the city become more vibrant and viable.

He said his client’s accomplishments have been overlooked, including the development of the Riverfront walkway and refurbishment of sewer lines that led to sporting events like the Super Bowl and All-Star Game.

“There was no questions that all these things were accomplished,” Gurewitz said. “But they are now overshadowed by the events that we are here for today.”

As they should be, argued Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Chutkow, calling it “one of the significant cases of public corruption” across the country at a time when Detroit was vulnerable.

“Mr. Kilpatrick systematically exploited his public office,” Chutkow said.
“There has been no acceptance of any responsibility ... No contrition. No remorse.”
Free Press Staff Writers Tammy Stables Battaglia and Gina Damron contributed.

http://www.freep.com/article/20131010/NEWS0102/310100095/Kwame-Kilpatrick-sentencing

PDF - 30 pages: Read Kwame Kilpatrick’s allocution and sentence
http://www.freep.com/assets/freep/pdf/C42134101010.PDF

Related: Detroiters voice disappointment in Kwame Kilpatrick
http://www.freep.com/article/20131010/NEWS01/310100198/Kwame-Kilpatrick-residents-reaction-to-sentencing

Related: If Kwame Kilpatrick appeals, what are his chances?
http://www.freep.com/article/20131010/NEWS0102/310100153/kwame-kilpatrick-sentencing-appeals

Blog replay: Kwame Kilpatrick sentenced to 28 years for wide-ranging public corruption
http://live.freep.com/Event/Kwame_Kilpatrick_sentencing_live_blog 

Related: Kwame Kilpatrick public corruption scandal, 2001-2013 (interactive timeline)
http://www.freep.com/relart/20131003/NEWS01/310030149/Kwame-Kilpatrick-public-corruption-scandal-2001-2013-interactive-timeline



w vid Ex-Detroit Mayor Kilpatrick gets 28 years in prison
by Ross Levitt, CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/10/justice/detroit-kilpatrick-sentencing/

w vid Former Detroit mayor sentenced to 28 years for 'pay-to-play' bribery
by Ed White - The Associated Press

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/10/20895773-former-detroit-mayor-sentenced-to-28-years-for-pay-to-play-bribery

w vid Kwame Kilpatrick Sentenced, Former Detroit Mayor Gets 28 Years In Prison On Corruption Charges
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/10/kwame-kilpatrick-sentenced-prison-detroit-corruption_n_4066248.html

Detroit’s ex-mayor gets 28 years
by The Associated Press

http://www.bendbulletin.com/article/20131011/NEWS0107/310110393/1159
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-24485162
http://www.newser.com/story/175703/detroits-ex-mayor-gets-28-years.html
http://www.watchlistnews.com/2013/10/11/former-detroit-mayor-gets-28-years-in-prison-for-corruption/

No comments:

Post a Comment