Ex-Florida GOP chair gets 1½ years for stealing
Source: AP
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) The former chairman of the Republican Party of Florida was sentenced Wednesday to one-and-a-half years for stealing $125,000 in party funds, completing the fall of a man who once was one of the most powerful political figures in the state.
Jim Greer was sentenced in Orlando, more than a month after he pleaded guilty to four counts of theft and a single county of money laundering. The guilty pleas ended Greer's trial before it even started.
SNIP...
The trial had threatened to expose the underbelly of Florida's dominant political party and its formerly high-spending ways. Some of Florida's most powerful politicians were scheduled as witnesses, including former Gov. Charlie Crist, former U.S. Sen. George LeMieux, former Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum and several state House and state Senate leaders.
Topics covered in pretrial depositions included allegations of prostitutes at a state GOP fundraiser in the Bahamas, the drinking habits of Crist and intraparty strife.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Ex-Florida-GOP-chair-gets-1-years-for-stealing-4388999.php
Crook took one for the team -- too many GOP secrets for a trial.
dballance
(5,756 posts)I hope he's counting on serving the full time. Rick Scott is not about to issue a pardon on commute his sentence with a tough election coming up.
On Edit: He shouldn't even waste his money (or whoever's money he's spending) on attorney fees to prepare an application for pardon/commutation.
drgonzosghost
(233 posts)Seriously? A "normal" person gets more than that just for having a hemp seed in their car ashtray in Texastan.
Earth_First
(14,910 posts)Kelvin Mace
(17,469 posts)8 times what he stole to take a plea deal.
UnrepentantLiberal
(11,700 posts)to read those depositions?
Mojorabbit
(16,020 posts)given a sweet deal. I was in the doctor's office today when the film of him smiling ear to ear after the sentencing was shown. Everyone was just shaking their heads.
Judi Lynn
(160,516 posts)Friday, Jul 27, 2012 09:34 AM CDT
Fla. Republican: We wanted to suppress black votes
Florida's disgraced former GOP chairman says the party had meetings about "keeping blacks from voting"
By Alex Seitz-Wald
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In the debate over new laws meant to curb voter fraud in places like Florida, Democrats always charge that Republicans are trying to suppress the vote of liberal voting blocs like blacks and young people, while Republicans just laugh at such ludicrous and offensive accusations. That is, every Republican except for Floridas former Republican Party chairman Jim Greer, who, scorned by his party and in deep legal trouble, blew the lid off what he claims was a systemic effort to suppress the black vote. In a 630-page deposition recorded over two days in late May, Greer, who is on trial for corruption charges, unloaded a litany of charges against the whack-a-do, right-wing crazies in his party, including the effort to suppress the black vote.
In the deposition, released to the press yesterday, Greer mentioned a December 2009 meeting with party officials. I was upset because the political consultants and staff were talking about voter suppression and keeping blacks from voting, he said, according to the Tampa Bay Times. He also said party officials discussed how minority outreach programs were not fit for the Republican Party, according to the AP.
The comments, if true (he is facing felony corruption charges and has an interest in scorning his party), would confirm what critics have long suspected. Florida Gov. Rick Scott is currently facing inquiries from the Justice Department and pressure from civil rights groups over his purging of voter rolls in the state, an effort that critics say has disproportionately targeted minorities and other Democratic voters. One group suing the state claims up to 87 percent of the voters purged from the rolls so far have been people of color, though other estimates place that number far lower. Scott has defended the purge, even though he was erroneously listed as dead himself on the rolls in 2006.
As Vanity Fair noted in a big 2004 story on the Sunshine States voting problems, Florida is a state with a history of disenfranchising blacks. In the states notoriously botched 2000 election, the state sent a list of 50,000 alleged ex-felons to the counties, instructing them to purge those names from their rolls. But it turned out that list included 20,000 innocent people, 54 percent of whom were black, the magazine reported. Just 15 percent of the states population is black. There were also reports that polling stations in black neighborhoods were understaffed, leading to long lines that kept some people from voting that year. The NAACP and ACLU sued the state over that purge. A Gallup poll in December of 2000 found that 68 percent of African-Americans nationally felt black voters were less likely to have their votes counted fairly in Florida.
More:
http://www.salon.com/2012/07/27/fla_republican_we_suppressed_black_votes/
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Did he try to take some of them down with him last year?[/center]