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{"id":10031,"date":"2011-07-13T06:00:51","date_gmt":"2011-07-13T11:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.occasionalplanet.org\/?p=10031"},"modified":"2013-02-15T20:49:40","modified_gmt":"2013-02-16T02:49:40","slug":"other-non-illinois-governors-behind-bars","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/occasionalplanet.org\/2011\/07\/13\/other-non-illinois-governors-behind-bars\/","title":{"rendered":"(Other) (non-Illinois) governors behind bars"},"content":{"rendered":"

Rod Blagojevich and the other Illinois governors jailed for corruption are not alone. They\u2019ve dominated the headlines lately, but 20th and 21st<\/sup> Century American history is rife with similarly sordid examples of top-of-the-ticket, out-of-bounds state officials elsewhere. They got caught abusing their power, engaging in obviously corrupt practices and violating the public trust. Here, in no particular order, is a non-comprehensive look at other intriguing stories from the governors\u2019 hall of shame.<\/p>\n

Bad bet on the bayou: Louisiana\u2019s Edwin Edwards<\/strong><\/p>\n

During his fourth term as governor, the colorful, gambling-addicted Governor Edwards<\/a> was ratted out by a for-profit-prison entrepreneur, who allegedly gave him $845,000 in conjunction with a scheme to locate a private juvenile prison in Jena. Edwards was indicted in 1998 by the federal government. The prosecution released transcripts of audio conversations, as well as excerpts of video surveillance that seemed to indicate dubious financial transactions regarding riverboat casino licenses for political cronies. The Edwards investigation also tarnished the reputation of San Francisco 49ers owner Edward J. DeBartolo Jr., who admitted to paying Edwards $400,000 in exchange for Edwards’s assistance in securing a casino license. Edwards was found guilty on 17 of 26 counts, including racketeering, extortion, money laundering, mail fraud and wire fraud. In October 2002, he began a 10-year prison term.<\/p>\n

Wheel dealer: Louisiana\u2019s Richard Leche<\/strong><\/p>\n

After Huey Long\u2019s assassination, Leche<\/a> ascended to the leadership of the \u201cLong faction\u201d in the state and served as governor from 1936-1939. One of his early statements offers an insight into his later-revealed corrupt activities: \u201cWhen I took the oath of office,\u201d he said, \u201cI didn\u2019t take any vow of poverty.\u201d He and other state officials developed a scheme to sell trucks to the state highway department. Under federal law, this activity constituted mail fraud. In 1940, Leche was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison. He served five and, in 1953, was pardoned by outgoing President Harry Truman. He later became a lawyer and a lobbyist.<\/p>\n

Charisma in cell block 11: Connecticut\u2019s John Rowland<\/strong><\/p>\n

When he took office in 1995, Rowland<\/a> was a charismatic, rising Republican star and was the youngest governor in the state\u2019s history. A year after being sworn in for his third term, he was accused of influence peddling and admitted that he had received free work from state contractors on his summer cottage. He eventually resigned, pleaded guilty to a federal corruption charge, and served ten months in federal prison. Asked a few years later to explain what happened, he said, \u201cThe sense of entitlement is the beginning. Before you know it, you’re doing things you never thought you’d do in the past. Then you send that message to others.” Rowland is also quoted as describing his downfall this way<\/a>: “It seems like just yesterday I was at the White House staying in the Lincoln bedroom and everything was wonderful. And then almost overnight I’m standing in line for toilet paper at a prison in Loretto, Pennsylvania.”<\/p>\n

Liquor is quicker: Tennessee\u2019s Ray Blanton<\/strong><\/p>\n

Elected in 1975, Blanton first got in hot water when a fired parole-board chairman accused him of taking bribes in exchange for clemency for prisoners. According to Downfall Dictionary<\/a>, federal investigators raided the state capitol as they looked into those charges, but didn\u2019t indict him. However, during the investigation, an undercover agent asked a Blanton bodyguard how much it would cost to pardon James Earl Ray\u2014the convicted murderer of Dr. Martin Luther King. The bodyguard reportedly said that, while King\u2019s assassin was too high-profile for clemency, for the right price, he could probably be allowed to escape. Later, Blanton was convicted of granting 12 licenses to liquor stores run by political allies in exchange for a kickback of a portion of their income. Those charges stuck, and in 1981, he was convicted of conspiracy, extortion and mail fraud. He was sentenced to three years in prison and an $11,000 fine. He was released after 22 months. He later worked as a radio commentator and used-car salesman.<\/p>\n

Guilty. I mean, not guilty: West Virginia\u2019s Arch A. Moore<\/strong><\/p>\n

Moore, a three-term Republican governor [1968, 1972 & 1984] in an overwhelmingly Democratic state, had a long history of shady dealings. Most recently, in 1990, he was convicted for extorting a $573,000 kickback<\/a> from a local coal company, while he was governor, to help it get $2 million from the state\u2019s black lung fund. He was also charged with failing to report, on his income tax returns, tens of thousands of dollars in payments from various companies and lobbyists, taking illegal payments for one of his reelection campaigns, falsifying documents and trying to persuade witnesses to lie. He pleaded guilty to that last charge when federal prosecutors informed him that they had taped him conspiring with his former campaign manager to obstruct the investigation. Shortly thereafter, he tried to retract his guilty plea, but the courts denied his request. He served more than two years in jail.<\/p>\n

Dad takes the fall: Rhode Island\u2019s Edward DiPrete<\/strong><\/p>\n

In December 1998, long after the end of his third term as Rhode Island\u2019s governor, Edward DiPrete pleaded guilty to 18 charges of corruption, admitting that he accepted bribes and extorted money from contractors while in office. He pled guilty in exchange for leniency for his son, a co-defendant in the case. DiPrete was the first Rhode Island governor to go to jail for corruption. His downfall was precipitous: In 1987, a public-opinion poll reported that he had an 89 percent approval rating, the highest of any American governor in a decade. ”The pressures of raising money for campaign spending obviously clouded my perspective,” he said.’<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Special cases<\/strong><\/p>\n

Not included in the preceding rogues\u2019 gallery are several governors for whom wrongdoings were investigated and\/or alleged without resulting in indictments or convictions. They include:<\/p>\n