Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Justices worry that broad reading of federal bribery law could sweep in lobbyists
https://www.scotusblog.com/2022/11/justices-worry-that-broad-reading-of-federal-bribery-law-could-sweep-in-lobbyists/ARGUMENT ANALYSIS
Justices worry that broad reading of federal bribery law could sweep in lobbyists
By Amy Howe
on Nov 28, 2022 at 5:05 pm
The Supreme Court appears poised to reverse the conviction of a powerful New York political aide who took money in exchange for helping to facilitate a real estate development. Joseph Percoco was sentenced to six years in prison for violating a federal fraud law that makes it a crime to deprive members of the public of the intangible right to honest services. But justices of all ideological stripes were concerned on Monday that upholding the conviction of Percoco, who served as the manager of former Gov. Andrew Cuomos re-election campaign when he took the actions that led to his conviction, could have far-reaching effects for other private citizens most notably, lobbyists.
In 2014, a developer paid Percoco $35,000 for his help to avoid having to enter into a labor peace agreement with local unions. Percoco urged the head of a state agency to allow the development to go forward without the need for such an agreement which it did. A few days later, Percoco ended his job on Cuomos campaign and returned to his former role as a senior official in the governors office.
Representing Percoco, lawyer Yaakov Roth told the justices that when Percoco promoted the development he was a private citizen who did not receive a salary and possessed no legal authority to bind the state or make decisions for it. Although Percoco may have had influence within the state government because of his years of public service and his close relationship to the Cuomo family, that influence does not create any duty to the public and cannot be the basis for a bribery conviction, Roth said.
Instead, Roth continued, a bribery conviction requires a connection to actual power that is, someone is taking a bribe in exchange for exercising power that he officially has or expects to have soon. The power can come by virtue of the individuals position as a government official, Roth observed, or if he has been delegated that power as an agent of the government. And when someone has that kind of power, Roth explained, he has a duty to the public that can form the basis for a bribery conviction.
[...]
Justices worry that broad reading of federal bribery law could sweep in lobbyists
By Amy Howe
on Nov 28, 2022 at 5:05 pm
The Supreme Court appears poised to reverse the conviction of a powerful New York political aide who took money in exchange for helping to facilitate a real estate development. Joseph Percoco was sentenced to six years in prison for violating a federal fraud law that makes it a crime to deprive members of the public of the intangible right to honest services. But justices of all ideological stripes were concerned on Monday that upholding the conviction of Percoco, who served as the manager of former Gov. Andrew Cuomos re-election campaign when he took the actions that led to his conviction, could have far-reaching effects for other private citizens most notably, lobbyists.
In 2014, a developer paid Percoco $35,000 for his help to avoid having to enter into a labor peace agreement with local unions. Percoco urged the head of a state agency to allow the development to go forward without the need for such an agreement which it did. A few days later, Percoco ended his job on Cuomos campaign and returned to his former role as a senior official in the governors office.
Representing Percoco, lawyer Yaakov Roth told the justices that when Percoco promoted the development he was a private citizen who did not receive a salary and possessed no legal authority to bind the state or make decisions for it. Although Percoco may have had influence within the state government because of his years of public service and his close relationship to the Cuomo family, that influence does not create any duty to the public and cannot be the basis for a bribery conviction, Roth said.
Instead, Roth continued, a bribery conviction requires a connection to actual power that is, someone is taking a bribe in exchange for exercising power that he officially has or expects to have soon. The power can come by virtue of the individuals position as a government official, Roth observed, or if he has been delegated that power as an agent of the government. And when someone has that kind of power, Roth explained, he has a duty to the public that can form the basis for a bribery conviction.
[...]
4 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Justices worry that broad reading of federal bribery law could sweep in lobbyists (Original Post)
sl8
Nov 2022
OP
America Runs on Corruption, time to legalize it, say the judges ascended high by corruption!??
Alexander Of Assyria
Nov 2022
#4
2naSalit
(102,780 posts)1. It should...
Affect lobbyists.
Phoenix61
(18,828 posts)3. "... has or expects to have soon."
He was a government official who took a break to work on the campaign of the elected government official he worked for. Days after the deal quit working for the campaign and returned to working for the same elected government official. But he didnt know he was going to do that? Seriously?
Alexander Of Assyria
(7,839 posts)4. America Runs on Corruption, time to legalize it, say the judges ascended high by corruption!??