User talk:Dthomsen8/Draft articles/names
Appearance
Statement
[edit]Statement. [1]
- Completed North Carolina Highway 13 299
- Completed Wade Dump 5482
- Working Harco, Illinois 6153 --Diannaa (Talk) 19:39, 4 March 2011 (UTC)
- Completed Fusion Technology Center 3393
- Working Hampson (surname)
- Working Turtle Creek
Further Reading
[edit]Valby, Karen (2010). Welcome to Utopia: Notes from a Small Town. New York: Spiegel & Grau. ISBN 978-0385522861.
References
[edit]- ^ Valby, Karen (2010). Welcome to Utopia: Notes from a Small Town. New York: Spiegel & Grau. ISBN 978-0385522861.
ABSCAM
[edit]5 IN ABSCAM SENTENCED TO PRISON
- ERRICHETTI DRAWS STIFFEST PENALTY: 6 YEARS PLUS FINE
Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA)-August 14, 1981 Author: JANE EISNER
By Jane Eisner Inquirer Staff Writer NEW YORK - Three former congressmen, the former mayor of Camden and a Philadelphia city councilman yesterday became the first defendants sentenced to prison as a result of the FBI's Abscam investigation. U.S. District Judge George C. Pratt set the stiffest punishment - six years in prison and a $40,000 fine - for former Camden Mayor Angelo J. Errichetti, whom he had singled out as a ringleader in the political corruption cases. Pratt handed out sentences of three years' imprisonment and fines of $20,000 to the three former congressmen, Raymond F. Lederer and Michael J. " Ozzie" Myers, both Philadelphia Democrats, and John M. Murphy, a New York Democrat, and to Philadelphia City Councilman Louis C. Johanson. The sentences were stayed until appeals in the cases are heard. All of the men said they would appeal to the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan. Pratt postponed sentencing former Rep. Frank Thompson, Jr., a New Jersey Democrat, until the potential effect of a prison term on his heart condition could be fully assessed. Thompson's lawyer read a medical report compiled earlier this year that contended that imprisonment " might well kill" Thompson, 63, who underwent heart surgery in 1965. Pratt, who had presided at the defendants' jury trials, spoke very little before he announced the sentences, although in the past he has been sharply critical of the defendants' arguments that they had been entrapped by the FBI's undercover investigation of political corruption. " Sitting where I do, I always consider it a privilege to hear a case, " Pratt told the hushed, crowded courtroom. " Only when I come to a day like today do I consider it a misfortune." The two-hour proceeding took place in the same Brooklyn federal courthouse in which the first Abscam trial was held nearly a year ago. Afterward, the defendants again maintained that they would eventually be vindicated of any wrongdoing. " I'm glad that Phase One is over. Now it's on to Phase Two," a somber- looking Myers, 38, said as he left the courtroom. " I can't be happy that I was given a term. I'm not happy, I'm not sad." Errichetti, 52, who also is a New Jersey state senator, sat impassively even as the judge handed him a sentence twice as severe as that given to the other defendants in the courtroom. " I feel fine," said Errichetti, who now must give up his seat in the Senate. " I wasn't surprised. I've never been surprised in my life." Errichetti had no comment when asked why he thought his sentence was longer than the others, but his attorney, Raymond Brown, pointed out that the judge had written after an earlier proceeding that Errichetti " was the center of a cesspool of corruption." Thomas P. Puccio, the government prosecutor, had requested that each defendant be sentenced to " substantial periods of imprisonment." Five of the defendants had been convicted of bribery and conspiracy and could have been sentenced to 15 years in prison. Murphy was acquitted of bribery, the more serious charge, and faced a maximum five- year sentence for his conspiracy conviction. As he left the courtroom, Puccio said he was satisfied. " They are fair and just sentences," the prosecutor said. " In my view, that's a substantial period of incarceration." When asked what he planned to do now, Puccio replied: " Go back to Martha's Vineyard." The future for the defendants is not as definite. Their appeals to the circuit court and, possibly, the U.S. Supreme Court, could take a year or two. They have left public office and have few other sources of income. In speeches before Pratt yesterday, some of the defense attorneys sought to dramatize the plight of their clients. As the defendants crowded around a long table, Brown denounced the hearing as " a mass condemnation proceeding" and described Errichetti as " a creature of abject shame." " If a man has ever been pilloried and flogged in the public mind, if a man has ever been demeaned in spirit, then this man has suffered. Give him a sentence that would allow him to walk the streets of Camden," Brown implored. Myers' attorney, Neil E. Jokelson, was equally dramatic. " He has lived in a fishbowl, he has been expelled from Congress, he has been disgraced and embarrassed," Jokelson said. " It seems to me, your honor, that a sentence of years in this case doesn't add to the public good." Some of the defendants simply expressed their repentance. " Mr. Lederer asked me to tell the court that he is deeply contrite. He has nothing further to say and neither do I," said his attorney, James J. Binns. The only Abscam defendant to win re-election after his conviction, Lederer, 42, resigned his Third District seat rather than face expulsion from Congress. John J. Duffy, the attorney representing Johanson, 52, said he had been instructed to express his client's remorse. " He wants to say that he's sorry to his constituents in Philadelphia, his brothers and sisters on the City Council and to his dear friends Ozzie Myers and Ray Lederer. He believes in retrospect that he acted the fool," Duffy said. Thompson's attorney, Stephen Kaufman, read excerpts from several letters of praise written by colleagues of the 26-year congressional veteran, including one from former President Gerald R. Ford. Murphy, 55, who did not testify at his trial in December, was the only defendant to speak before the judge yesterday. He lashed out at " criminal excesses of Abscam" and contended that the videotapes used at his trial showed him denying that he took any bribe money. Murphy, who represented a district in Staten Island for 18 years, said he was confident that he would be absolved. Philadelphia lawyer Howard L. Criden, who was tried with Myers, Erichetti and Johanson last August, was supposed to have been sentenced yesterday, but Pratt delayed sentencing until Oct. 2 because Criden is recovering from a heart attack. extortion united states Edition: FASection: LOCALPage: A01
Record Number: 8102040962Copyright (c) 1981 The Philadelphia Inquirer