From the NY Times:
Santo Petrocelli Sr., the former owner and chairman of a company that received millions of dollars to install and maintain city street lights and traffic signals, was sentenced on Monday to three months in prison for making tens of thousands of dollars in payments to Brian M. McLaughlin, the former assemblyman and union leader who is now serving a 10-year federal prison sentence for racketeering.
Mr. Petrocelli was a founder and owner of the Petrocelli Electric Company, based in Long Island City, Queens, which hired workers represented by Local 3 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, where Mr. McLaughlin was a business representative. Mr. Petrocelli, who is known as Sandy, was also sentenced to two years of supervised release. The sentence was issued by Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum of Federal District Court in Manhattan.
Mr. Petrocelli pleaded guilty on July 31 to one count of making illegal payments to a union official. He admitted that he knew the payments — not only cash, but also the use of a company car — were illegal.
In imposing the sentence, Judge Cedarbaum said she sought to discourage anyone “who may be tempted, as Mr. Petrocelli was tempted,” from “being drawn into supporting a corrupt union official over many, many years.”
How is a 3-month sentence discouraging?
Photo from the Daily News
Monday, November 30, 2009
Petrocelli gets 3 months for bribing McLaughlin
Labels:
Brian McLaughlin,
bribery,
court,
petrocelli electric,
prison
6 comments:
How much did he pay the judge to get such a short sentence?
Wow, someone got paid off. I guess McLaughlin didn't have any cash left to pay off the judge.
I hope his buddy Tom Suozzi and all those Glen Cove "friends" are next
or who did he give up?
Mafiosos always get off with just a slap on the wrist.
But there's always prison justice.
Maybe some angry brother he screwed will "off" him in the shower room!
The right question is what politician did he back that got him out of this mess.
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