N.Y. Senate Democrat Majority Leader Indicted for Stealing Dec. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Pedro Espada Jr., the New York Senate majority leader, and his son were indicted on charges of embezzling more than $500,000 from nonprofit health-care clinics in the Bronx section of New York City.
From 2005 through 2009, Espada, 57, and his son, Pedro Gautier Espada, 37, abused their positions at Soundview Healthcare Center in the Bronx, which gets more than $1 million a year in federal funding, according to U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch in Brooklyn, where the case is filed.
The indictment alleges that funds that could and should have been applied to purchase medical equipment and enhance health-care services for an historically under-served population were diverted by the defendants for their personal use, Lynch said today in a statement.
Attorney General Andrew Cuomo in April accused Espada in a civil lawsuit of taking $14 million over five years from his Bronx health clinics. In September, Espada was defeated in the Democratic primary for his Bronx seat. He and his son are scheduled to make their initial court appearances tomorrow.
Today is a sad day for Soundview and a sad day for the Espada family, Espadas lawyer, Susan R. Necheles of Manhattan, said in an e-mailed statement. Senator Espada and his son deny any wrongdoing and we intend to fight the charges in court.
Russell M. Gioiella, a lawyer for Espadas son, didnt immediately return a call for comment.
Obnoxious Abuse
Cuomo, in a conference call with reporters today, called Espadas case one of the more outrageous abuses of public office. Cuomo, who will become governor in January, said he couldnt leave the attorney generals office on a better note.
He was looting Soundview to pay for a lavish lifestyle, Cuomo said. It was really an obnoxious abuse of the taxpayer.
The Espadas are each charged with four counts of embezzlement and one count of conspiracy. Each embezzlement count carries a maximum sentence of 10 years imprisonment. The conspiracy count brings as many as five years.
In Cuomos earlier lawsuit, he claimed that Espada charged the clinics for $20,000 in takeout sushi dinners and billed them for $250,000 in personal expenses. The clinics spent more than $100,000 on campaign literature for Espadas 2008 Senate bid, Cuomo said.
Cuomo also sued Espada a second time, saying he cheated clinic workers by designating them as trainees to avoid minimum-wage laws.
Senate Defection
Espada called the civil charges political payback for his temporary defection to the Republicans last year, which resulted in a monthlong Senate deadlock. Governor David Paterson, a Democrat, appointed Richard Ravitch as lieutenant governor, giving him the tie-breaking vote in the Senate. That brought Espada back to the Democratic caucus, which then made him majority leader.
This case predated anything having to do with the Senate coup with Mr. Espada, Cuomo said today.
The case is U.S. v. Espada, 10-cr-985, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn).
--With assistance from Karen Freifeld and Henry Goldman in New York. Editors: Stephen Farr, Fred Strasser.