Saturday, November 11, 2023

Alan Hevesi died

 https://www.amny.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/alan-hevesi.jpg.webp

 AMNY

Queens political fixture Alan Hevesi, who served two decades in the Assembly and as city and state comptroller before resigning over a corruption scandal, died Thursday in his Nassau County home at age 83.

“Alan passed away peacefully surrounded by his children and loved ones after a prolonged illness,” Hevesi’s family said in a statement. “We will miss him and his laughter more than words can express.”

Current state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, Hevesi’s successor, praised him in a Thursday social media post. 

“Former State Comptroller Alan Hevesi was a long-serving public servant and educator,” DiNapoli wrote. “He cared deeply about Queens, fiercely debated issues he cared about and fought hard for school fiscal accountability.”

Before going into politics, Hevesi was a college basketball star, according to the New York Times, and earned a doctoral degree in public law and government from Columbia University.

Hevesi was first elected to the Assembly in 1971 and represented the Forest Hills section of Queens in Albany’s lower chamber for 22 years.

He then ran for city comptroller in 1993, unseating former city Comptroller Elizabeth Holtzman in the Democratic primary and overcoming Republican and Liberal line candidate Herman Badillo in the general election. 

As the Big Apple’s numbers guru, Hevesi successfully blocked former Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani from selling off the city’s municipal water system to the semi-independent New York City Water Board for $2.3 billion.

Facing term limits, Hevesi ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 2001.

The next year, Hevesi ran for state comptroller and won. In that position, he launched the office’s first investigations unit.

But Hevesi did not finish his first term as the state’s chief money man. He resigned in 2006 after he was found guilty by a state ethics panel of unlawfully directing a government employee to drive his disabled and chronically sick mother around in a state vehicle.

After leaving office, Hevesi pleaded guilty in 2010 to charges that he engaged in a pay-to-play scheme while in office and was sentenced to one-to-four years in prison. He was released on parole after 20 months behind bars.

Brooklyn City Council Member Justin Brannan wrote on social media that Hevesi was a “friend and early mentor” to him.

“Always the smartest guy in the room but still a tough kid from Forest Hills who never forgot where he came from,” Brannan wrote. “As comptroller, he used the power of the purse for good before that was a thing. He was a friend and early mentor of mine. Rest in peace, Alan.”

 

8 comments:

georgetheatheist said...

No mention in the obits about his saying Schumer would put a bullet between Bush's eyes if he could.

Anonymous said...

Let this be a lesson to all NYC voters, you can’t put the prisoners in charge of the prison.

Anonymous said...

@“ Let this be a lesson to all NYC voters, you can’t put the prisoners in charge of the prison.”
Is that how you got in charge?

Anonymous said...

Democrat....

Anonymous said...

"No mention in the obits about his saying Schumer would put a bullet between Bush's eyes if he could."

True, I was there when he said that. Queens college commencement!

Anonymous said...

That’s a good one about the war criminal chuck Schumer. One ear criminal wanting to shoot another?

Disgruntled Citizen said...

When his son was running for was it City Council or Assembly in Forest Hills, Alan drove around in a Karmen Gia on Election Day. He was spying on the poor bastards who got paid by the opposition to hand out propaganda flyers and palm cards to voters. Big tough guy recently released from prison would report these $10 an hour day workers to the Board of Elections if they were an inch too close to the poll site. What a man of the people.

Anonymous said...

Didn't Melinda Katz loyally work under him, in many positions, for many years?