Grand corruption/ U.S.
He
was hardly a household name, and he owed his authority to the votes of a few
thousand people on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. But for more than two
decades, Sheldon Silver was one of the most powerful people in New York
politics. He held up budgets, cut deals, blocked projects he didn’t like and
doled out public dollars with little accountability. Governors came and went,
but Silver seemingly was speaker of the New York State Assembly for life —
beyond the reach of good-government critics, investigative journalists and
ethics watchdogs. Until last week.
On Jan. 22, Silver was arrested, handcuffed,
fingerprinted and brought before a judge, accused of an array of corruption charges. (Silver
did not have to enter a plea, but he has denied the accusations.)
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