Puerto Rican governor
charged in campaign scam
March 28, 2008
Caribbean Net News
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
(Reuters): Puerto Rican
Governor Anibal Acevedo
Vila and 12 political
associates in the
Caribbean island and on
the US mainland were
charged with election
funding fraud in an
indictment unsealed on
Thursday.
|
 |
|
Anibal Acevedo
Vila, governor
of Puerto Rico..
Photo: Bloomberg
News |
The charges said Acevedo
Vila collected illegal
contributions and spent
far more than he
reported during his
election campaigns from
1999 to 2004.
A group of
Philadelphia-area
businessmen solicited
contributions from
relatives and staff and
illegally reimbursed the
donors, the indictment
alleges. The governor
then helped them get
government contracts in
Puerto Rico, it says.
Before taking office as
governor in January
2005, Acevedo Vila was
the US territory's
resident commissioner,
its non-voting
representative in the US
Congress.
Charges in the 27-count
indictment include
conspiracy, making false
statements to the FBI,
wire fraud, defrauding a
federal election funding
program and tax crimes.
Acevedo Vila, who faces
19 counts, issued a
statement saying he
would turn himself in on
Friday and called the
charges politically
motivated.
"It's the result of
three years of leaks,
rumors and a spectacle
designed to harm me,"
said Acevedo Vila, who
faces re-election in
November.
"Because the federal
authorities have decided
to stretch their
jurisdiction and twist
the truth, I am going to
defend my rights and
protect the dignity of
my family and the people
of Puerto Rico who
support me."
He is a member of the
Popular Democratic
Party, which favors
maintaining Puerto
Rico's status as a US
commonwealth rather than
seeking full US
statehood.
Acevedo Vila is the
third well-known
Democrat to get into
trouble with the law
this month. Elliot
Spitzer resigned as New
York governor amid
reports that he hired a
$1,000-an-hour
prostitute. Detroit
Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick
was charged with perjury
and other offenses
stemming in part from a
sex scandal.
Acevedo Vila, who
endorsed Sen. Barack
Obama of Illinois as the
Democratic contender in
the US presidential
race, is also a
superdelegate, one of
the party insiders and
elected officials who
may hold the deciding
votes in the contest
between Obama and New
York Sen. Hillary
Clinton.
Puerto Rico's 4 million
residents cannot vote in
the November election
but they help choose
party nominees and will
hold a presidential
primary election on June
1. Puerto Rico will send
55 elected delegates and
eight superdelegates to
the Democrats'
nominating convention in
August.
Acevedo Vila was
secluded inside La
Fortaleza, the historic
governor's mansion in
Old San Juan, as
prosecutors held a news
conference on Thursday
to announce the charges.
Investigators said
Acevedo Vila routinely
supplemented his income
with campaign funds, in
amounts ranging from
$500 to $5,000. They
said he also used
campaign cash to pay for
family vacations in
Orlando, Florida, and to
send his children on a
trip to China.
The other 12 defendants
were arrested and
included campaign donors
and staff and some of
Acevedo Vila's current
and former aides in
Washington and San Juan.
They are accused of
making and collecting
illegal contributions,
mostly funneled through
the campaign's public
relations and media
company.
If convicted, the
defendants face from
three to 20 years in
prison and fines of up
to $6.4 million. The
governor himself faces
up to 20 years if
convicted on all counts.