The Feds once again are sniffing in the Bridgeport political mire, fertile ground for prosecutors.
“State Sen. Dennis Bradley Jr. of Bridgeport and his
campaign treasurer, former city school board chairman Jessica Martinez,” we are
told in a Hartford paper, “were charged
Tuesday with a conspiracy to cheat the state’s troubled public campaign
financing system out of about $180,000.”
“Troubled” is newspeak for -- the public campaign financing
system is so riddled with politically manufactured loopholes that it no longer
works.
If the state of Connecticut had an independent Inspector
General (IG), armed with subpoena power and charged with uprooting intentional
and incidental corruption in state and municipal agencies, Bradley’s alleged
attempt to steer a crooked course around the plain intent of the law that established
the “troubled” campaign financing watchdog might have died aborning.
Democrat Progressives in the state’s General Assembly recently
established an IG position and then – ironically, say some prosecutors in
Connecticut -- narrowed its scope and powers so that the IG might inconvenience
only state’s police forces, and not, say, loophole infested state welfare
operations, or political corruption in Bridgeport, a city that has borne its
share of past federal investigations.
The present Mayor of Bridgeport, the Honorable Joe Ganim, a
lawyer, served six terms as the Park City Mayor from 1991 to 2003 before the
Feds pulled him over, assembled a grand jury and sent him to prison. Ganim was convicted
of 16 federal counts: one count each of racketeering, extortion, racketeering
conspiracy, and bribery; two counts of bribery conspiracy; eight counts of mail
fraud, and two counts of filing a false tax return.
If the state Democrat Party was astonished at Ganim’s temerity, its astonishment barely registered on the fragile consciences of Democrat politicians who hooted with lusty cheers when Governor John Rowland was sent to the hoosegow by the Feds – twice. In Bridgeport, Democrat political bygones generally are soon forgotten. The still politically efficient Tammany Hall like Democrat Party machines in Connecticut’s large cities know how to live and let live.
Now this -- another lawyer has stumbled into an all too
familiar big-city mare's nest.
Bradley, following a grand jury indictment, has been charged
with one count of conspiracy and five counts of fraud, dimming his political
future. It should be pointed out here that a grand jury is not a trial jury. Grand
juries are prosecutorial instruments. The critic who noted that a grand jury properly
inflamed could be persuaded to indict a grapefruit for jaywalking may have been
exaggerating a wee bit, but the general perception that grand juries are favorably
disposed towards prosecutors, especially in matters involving politicians, is
on target.
Part of the evidence presented to the grand
jury that returned indictments against him involved emails written by a
campaign volunteer and a staffer, neither of whom were hostile to Bradley.
The grand jury focused on a March 2018 event at Dolphin’s
Cove restaurant in Bridgeport. “The event,” one newspaper reported, “had all
the trappings of a campaign kickoff [including an announced campaign run for office], but Bradley insisted the affair was
organized to show appreciation by his law firm, the BDK law group, for clients
and friends.”
In one email, a volunteer asked Bradley, concerning his
characterization of the event in question as a non-campaign event, “Wouldn’t
that be illegal?”
Bradley wrote back, “No it’s a BDK law group party.”
Another staffer, unidentified in the grand jury indictment,
writes Bradley, “Don’t worry Dennis if you go to jail you are a lot cuter than
(another convicted Bridgeport politician) — u will be ok and I’ll make sure ur
commissary always has enough so you can make toilet wine and mufungo.”
Mufungo, news reports helpfully note, “is slang for a dish
made by prisoners using chips, ramen and rice.”
Both emails are what Henry David Thoreau called circumstantial
evidence, having noted, “Some circumstantial evidence is very strong, as when
you find a trout in the milk.”
It remains for a real jury in a real court of law to determine
whether the emails cited above represent “trouts in the milk.”
Bradley may or may not have his day in court. Pleading to lesser
charges is not unusual in the prosecution of politicians.
If Bradley is tried and found guilty by a jury of his peers
and thereafter sent to prison, he may take some comfort in knowing that the
state legislature, like Bridgeport dominated by left of center Democrats, has
passed a bill, now awaiting Governor Ned Lamont’s signature, that would expunge
the prison records of some inmates if, upon graduating from prison,
they stay out of trouble for seven to ten years.
The Democrat Party machine in Bridgeport is not going anywhere
soon. And when Bradley’s bygone is gone, the very young Democrat up-and-comer,
chastened and rehabilitated, may once again run successfully for office in Connecticut's “Park City”.
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