How Democrats Can Destroy A City

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[h=1]Angela Spaccia convicted in Bell corruption scandal[/h] [h=2]Robert Rizzo's deputy is convicted of misappropriation of public funds, conflict of interest and other charges. She is expected to be sentenced to 10 to 12 years in prison.[/h]
Angela Spaccia, the $564,000-a-year deputy to the disgraced former city manager of Bell, was found guilty Monday of 11 felony counts related to her role in the corruption scandal, becoming the seventh official convicted of enriching themselves at the expensive of the working-class residents.


Spaccia, the last figure in the Bell scandal to be convicted or enter a plea, was taken away in handcuffs after a jury rendered the verdicts in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom.

Though she wept several times during her testimony, Spaccia showed no emotion when the verdicts were read, pronouncing her guilty of multiple counts of misappropriation of public funds, conflict of interest and secretion of public documents. The verdicts came on the 10th day of deliberations.

Spaccia probably faces a sentence similar to the 10 years to 12 years in prison that her former boss, Robert Rizzo, is expected to receive, prosecutors said. Rizzo pleaded no contest to 69 corruption charges in October.

Spaccia and her attorney argued that Rizzo was behind the corruption scheme and that she was not even at City Hall when much of the wrongdoing took place. She admitted that it was unethical to take such large salaries but said she did nothing illegal.

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey said that what Bell officials had engaged in was "grand theft paycheck." "I am pleased the jury viewed this extremely complex case for precisely what it was — greed," said Lacey, who described Spaccia as being part of a pack of city leaders who were "crooks masquerading as public servants."

The verdict comes more than three years after the city in southeast Los Angeles County was engulfed in scandal, with revelations of extraordinary salaries, illegal taxes, the lending of city money, and documents that lied about the real salaries of city leaders.

Spaccia's attorney, Harland Braun, argued that his client was victimized by Rizzo and then exploited by then-Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley as he ran for state attorney general.

Before she was ousted from her job as assistant chief administrative officer in 2010 when The Times revealed the huge paychecks Bell officials were receiving, Spaccia was accumulating sick and vacation days at such an accelerated rate that when she cashed them out each year, it amounted to a 50% pay increase.

Prosecutors painted her as an architect of the wrongdoing in Bell, saying that she wrote her own contract as well as those for other ranking city employees, including Rizzo, who was earning $1.18 million a year when he was forced out.

Rizzo's attorney said Spaccia was the "mastermind" of the corruption and that his client would cooperate with prosecutors. But he was never called to testify. Rizzo and Spaccia are expected to face federal charges of conspiracy to commit tax fraud, according to Rizzo's attorney, James Spertus.

Five former council members charged in the corruption case were convicted of misappropriation of public funds earlier this year and are expected to be retried on counts in which the jury deadlocked. A sixth council member, a pastor in the Los Angeles County city, was acquitted.

Spaccia was convicted of a spectrum of crimes — writing illegal contracts, receiving more than $200,000 in illegal loans from the city, hiding an agreement that allowed the police chief to retire with a medical disability and helping create a special pension plan for Rizzo and herself that would have cost the city $15.5 million had it been funded.

http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-1210-angela-spaccia-20131210,0,135677,full.story


I laugh everytime I hear how democrats are for the little people, yet they continue to get caught stealing from those very same people that can least afford it.
 
Look at every big city run by democrats. No thanks. I left Minneapolis many years ago and it's full of gangs and trash who vote dem.
Hell, we have not had a Republican Mayor since 1965. And the only reason Buffalo didn't circle the toilet the way Detroit did was because of Conservative governance from 1978-1993.
 
To be bribed and to bribe someone else should be punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years. All public officials should be subjected to random bribery stings, preferably with the cooperation of known contacts, which should carry said 20 year mandatory minimum sentence if failed.
 
Look at every big city run by democrats. No thanks. I left Minneapolis many years ago and it's full of gangs and trash who vote dem.

Virtually big city is run by Democrats. There are big cities that are nice to live in, like San Fransisco, and those that aren't, like Detroit. You're cherry picking the bad ones, when they're all basically run by Democrats.
 
To be bribed and to bribe someone else should be punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years. All public officials should be subjected to random bribery stings, preferably with the cooperation of known contacts, which should carry said 20 year mandatory minimum sentence if failed.

Corruption should carry the death penalty, and a requirement for the family to pay back all benefits used by the dead traitor.
 
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