Abramoff gets 5 years, 10 months in fraud case
Lobbyist in latest Washington corruption scandal sentenced in
Miami
By Associated Press
03/29/06 "AP"
-- -- MIAMI - Assuring the judge he is working to
become “a new man,” disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff was
sentenced Wednesday to nearly six years in prison for committing
fraud in the purchase of a fleet of gambling boats.
He will remain free while helping prosecutors with a vast
bribery investigation involving members of Congress.
Abramoff, 47, and former business partner Adam Kidan, 41,
received the minimum under federal guidelines: five years and 10
months.
The two pleaded guilty earlier to conspiracy and fraud for
concocting a fake $23 million wire transfer to make it appear
they were contributing their own money toward the purchase of
the $147.5 million SunCruz Casinos gambling fleet. Based on that
fraudulent transfer, lenders provided the pair with $60 million
in financing.
‘Becoming a new man’
Abramoff told U.S. District Judge Paul C. Huck that he had
“started the process of becoming a new man. I am much chastened
and profoundly remorseful. I can only hope that the Almighty and
those I have wronged will forgive my trespasses.”
He and Kidan were also ordered to pay restitution of more than
$21 million. Both must serve three years’ probation after they
get out of prison.
Abramoff pleaded guilty in the SunCruz fraud in January. The
same week, he pleaded guilty in Washington to defrauding Indian
tribes and other lobbying clients out of millions of dollars. He
also agreed to cooperate in a corruption probe that could
involve up to 20 members of Congress, including former House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas. No date has been set for his
sentencing in that case.
More time to cooperate
The judge said Abramoff and Kidan will not have to report to
prison for at least 90 days so they can continue cooperating
with investigators in the corruption case and the slaying of
former SunCruz owner Konstantinos “Gus” Boulis.
Boulis was gunned down in 2001 at the wheel of his car amid a
power struggle over the gambling fleet. Three men face murder
charges, including one who worked for Kidan as a consultant at
SunCruz and who allegedly has ties to New York’s Gambino crime
family.
Abramoff and Kidan have denied any role in the killing and
neither has been charged.
If prosecutors are satisfied with their cooperation in those
cases, the two men’s sentences could be reduced.
Documents shift blame
Abramoff and his attorneys declined to speak with reporters as
they left court. His defense team filed 62 pages of documents
that depicted Abramoff as a deeply religious Orthodox Jew who
was generous to charities, dedicated to his wife and five
children and filled with remorse over his crimes.
But the documents also distanced Abramoff from the SunCruz fraud
and laid most of the blame on Kidan, a New York businessman and
disbarred lawyer.
“After the company was purchased, Mr. Abramoff learned that some
of the representations made by his partner were untrue,” the
defense said.
Kidan’s attorney, Joseph Conway, said his client has
acknowledged his guilt but disagrees “with the statement of
facts as laid out by Mr. Abramoff.”
In his own letter to the judge, Kidan said that he knew the
SunCruz deal was wrong but that he “was very caught up in the
fast-paced world of my partner and the high profile that came
along with it.”
The SunCruz fleet of 11 ships sailed from nine Florida ports and
Myrtle Beach, S.C., to international waters. The company
operates gambling cruises under new ownership after emerging
from bankruptcy.
Supporters asked for leniency
Before the hearing Wednesday, more than 260 people—including
rabbis, military officers and even a professional hockey
referee—wrote letters on the men’s behalf asking the judge for
leniency.
The letters, obtained by The Associated Press, put a new spin on
the foibles and crimes of a man who became the face of
Washington’s latest corruption scandal.
“Jack is a good person, who in his quest to be successful, lost
sight of the rules,” National Hockey League referee Dave Jackson
wrote, describing the time Abramoff brought 14 youngsters to his
dressing room before a game.
Kidan, in his own letter to the judge, said he knew the SunCruz
deal was wrong but said he “was very caught up in the fast paced
world of my partner and the high profile that came along with
it.” He added, “I am not the horrible person that the media has
written about.”
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