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Monday, March 16, 2009

The full text of the comments of US Attorney Laurie Magid:

The guilty verdict in this case is a victory for good government and for the people of Pennsylvania.

A jury has spoken.

Justice has been served.

Vincent Fumo, a once powerful politician, will now face the consequences of spending other people’s money, taxpayers’ money, our money, to provide himself with the extraordinarily lavish lifestyle that he felt he was entitled to.

This is not, however, a time for rejoicing.

It should be a time for reflection, by those who have pledged to serve us.

Public officials must remember that public service is a privilege and an honor, not an opportunity for personal bias and gain.

Public officials must remember the arrogant rationalizations that juries in this case and others have emphatically rejected.

“I am worth it” is not a defense, is not an excuse, is not a basis, for spending at least ninety thousand dollars of charity money on tools and appliances, including almost seven thousand dollars just on high-end vacuum cleaners for your four homes.

“Everyone is doing this” is not a defense, is not an excuse, is not a basis, for taking the Seaport Museum’s luxury yacht for a cruise without paying for it, or giving no-work contracts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to your friends.

Moreover, Vince Fumo was wrong - everyone is not doing it.

There are legions of government workers who are both hard-working and honest.

“But I have worked so hard,” even if it were true, is not a defense, is not an excuse, is not a basis for spending, to borrow the Senator’s term, OPM - “other people’s money,” to pay for people to oversee the renovation of your 33-room mansion, to clean that mansion, to paint your home - and your girlfriend’s home - with hundred dollar a gallon paint, to follow your ex-girlfriend, spy on her, and try to get her arrested.

Hard work never, never, balances the scales against such abuse.

Vincent Fumo used his vast power to build an empire of senate employees, government paid contractors, and non-profit charity workers, to serve as personal servants and political operatives, to satisfy his many and utterly extravagant wants and needs, personal and political.

His actions claimed real victims – the State Senate, a chaity, a museum, the government, and most important, the taxpayers of Pennsylvania.

Vince Fumo did not just cross the line that divides proper and improper conduct.

He completely ignored the line, as if it could not be seen, as if it had been painted over.

And when Vince Fumo found himself so far on the wrong side of those lines that he felt there was no turning back, he did everything possible to erase the trail that led us to him.

When Thomas Jefferson left public service, he said:

“I have the consolation of having added nothing to my private fortune during my public service, and of retiring with hands clean as they are empty.”

Jefferson understood that public service is a serious commitment.

It calls on us to recognize that there is someone other than ourselves for whom we are working, that there is a cause beyond our own comfort that we are preserving.

The government and the people of Pennsylvania have prevailed in this case, due in no small part to several individuals, including:

FBI agents Kathy MacAfee and Vicki Humphries, who worked for years, often day and night; wonderful prosecutors, John Pease and Bob Zauzmer, who are dedicated to serving the cause of justice, and a former U. S. Attorney, Pat Meehan, who dedicated the resources necessary to find the truth.

And, we were fortunate, of course, to have a group of dedicated, thoughtful jurors who sacrificed a great deal in the interest of justice.

Corruption cases are not easy to bring, but we have an obligation to bring them.

When we know there is wrongdoing, it is our duty to pursue it, regardless of the obstacles we encounter.

There should never be another Fumo World, a world in which millions of dollars of taxpayer and charity money went to enrich and feed one man’s gluttony.

The public is weary of officials playing by their own rules and ignoring lines.

We hope that our investigation and prosecution, and the jury’s verdict of guilty, has served to restore some of the public’s confidence in the integrity of our system of government.

Posted by Inquirer Breaking News Team @ 2:36 PM  Permalink | 11 comments
Comments   
Posted 02:45 PM, 03/16/2009
wu wu whaaaat?
Who's the hottie holding the dirt balls right hand?
Posted 02:46 PM, 03/16/2009
swiggie
Harrisburg....the ultimate cesspool. Magid is wrong about one thing....everybody in Harrisburg IS doing it along with everone in Philly. How does the State Capitol and City Hall in Philly become crammed with friends and relatives in all of these do nothing jobs. That's also corruption whether on not anybody wants to believe it. I could go on and on but I'll simply finish with a curious note....What do the people of the commonwealth feel now about Fast Eddie's character testimony for his colleague the Fuminator. Don't drop the soap in the shower Vince.
Posted 02:49 PM, 03/16/2009
feudi
No more smoke and mirrors...
Posted 02:51 PM, 03/16/2009
ThomasWPaine4
Where do you get a typewriter that has "breakingnews" across the keys? Must be pretty convenient to have that around for such stories.
Posted 02:54 PM, 03/16/2009
CleanupPhilly
Great statement by Magid. Everyone in government is not "doing it" but there are still too many as Swiggie says. Let this be the warning shot across the bow -- theft and conspiracy to commit theft of public services however public services may be defined is a serious crime that could land you in the federal pen.
Posted 02:56 PM, 03/16/2009
CleanupPhilly
Will you people who are obsessed with Carolyn Zinni just please go visit her at her shop in South Philly? She's there on most days when she's not in court with her ex.
Posted 03:02 PM, 03/16/2009
Showtime620
How the hell is Fumo still getting all of these hot chicks?!?!?!?!
Posted 05:40 PM, 03/16/2009
EVA9601
Justice was served but not served properly. With that juror posting on Facebook about deliberations, at a minimum the Judge should have switched him and put another in his place. If he was told not to speak of deliberations, How do you justify posting on Facebook??
Posted 06:48 AM, 03/18/2009
ashley
caroly zinni, her store is not in south philly. It is in springfield you think you all no everything get the facts, And he is not her ex. there are some people in this world that are loyal. something you will never no.
Posted 03:27 PM, 03/20/2009
geminijlw
Blind loyalty, that is what got Fumo into trouble. Everyone trusted, believed in him, and all the time he was a user. I think we need to continue to put all of them behind bars, that take our tax money and use it as their own.
Posted 03:52 AM, 06/11/2009
BROTHER BEAR
SAD HE DID DO ALOT FOR THE COMMUNITY, HOWEVER, HE WAS STUPID TO THINK HE CAN GO ON FOREVER DOING WRONG. HE GAVE FRIENDS NO SHOW JOBS BUT THEY DID DO WORK FOR HIM PERSONALLY. WITH ALL HIS MONEY HE WAS A GREEDY PERSON AND THATS WHAT GOT HIM. SAD HE WAS IN SUCH A GOOD POSITION BUT HE BELIEVED HIM HE WAS UNTOUCHABLE,
11 comments
About Inquirer Breaking News
Live from the courtroom, the Inquirer is blogging the federal corruption trial of State Sen. Vincent J. Fumo and his longtime friend and associate Ruth Arnao.

Highlights of testimony, rulings and the courtroom scene will be posted here regularly. Fumo, a Democratic state senator since 1978, is accused in a 139-count indictment of conspiring to defraud the Senate, a South Philadelphia nonprofit, and the Independence Seaport Museum; obstruction of justice; and tax violations. The fraudulent activity totaled $3.5 million, prosecutors allege.

More information and background on the Fumo trial.