© 2024 WSHU
NPR News & Classical Music
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Former N.Y. Assembly Speaker Silver Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison

Seth Wenig
/
AP

Former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver was sentenced to 12 years in prison and told by a federal judge that he must give back $5 million that he stole from the public, as well as pay another $1.75 million in fines.

Over 100 family members, constituents and lobbyists wrote letters on behalf of the disgraced former assembly speaker, Silver himself apologized in a letter and his lawyers pleaded for mercy. Despite that, the judge sentenced  Silver to a dozen years in federal prison and ordered that he pay back $5 million he gained from illegal kickback schemes, as well as pay a $1.75 million fine.  

Silver will be allowed to keep his public pension, along with an apartment and a house in the Catskills.

Silver was convicted late last year on multiple felony charges for engineering schemes involving a real estate company, tax firm and even a Columbia University doctor who recommended cancer cases to Silver’s law firm, netting the former Speaker $4 million. Prosecuting attorneys said Silver exploited his position of power to illegally gain the funds, and in the days leading up to the sentencing, revealed that the former legislative leader had two affairs, one with his former communications director, now a prominent lobbyist, and a former assemblywoman, who they say gained financially from the arrangement.

Dick Dadey, executive director of the reform group Citizens Union, waited outside the court room to hear the sentence. He said it’s a fair punishment, "a strong and appropriate sentence."

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, who brought the case, tweeted that the “stiff sentence is a just and fitting end to Sheldon Silver's long career of corruption.”  

Moments before Silver was sentenced, his successor in the assembly, Alice Cancel, who won a special election last month, was being seated for the first time.

Silver’s successor as assembly speaker, Carl Heastie, says it’s a sign that the assembly is moving on from a low point.

“It’s the ending of a sad chapter,” Heastie said. “We have to get on with life. We still have work to do before the end of the session.”

A Siena College poll released Tuesday shows that 97% of the public would like that work to include ethics reform, to reduce the frequent incidents of corruption among state lawmakers. Among the ideas: stripping pensions from lawmakers who are convicted felons, limiting outside income for lawmakers and closing campaign finance loopholes.  

Speaker Heastie says he’s not sure though that changing the rules can prevent bad actors from wrongdoing.

“Whether things are a deterrent or not, I’m just not sure,” said Heastie, who said he does want to restore public confidence in the legislature.

Silver is the first of two former legislative leaders to face a judge for sentencing. Former Senate Leader Dean Skelos, and his son, will be sentenced in the same federal court room on May, also for conviction on multiple corruption charges.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.
Related Content