Thursday, July 31, 2008

Councilwoman Maria Baez and (disgraced) NYS Senator Efrain Gonzalez!

posted by truthinthebronx
Wed, 03/14/2007 - 11:19am

Word on the streets, media circles and among community board members is that Councilwoman Maria Baez (who has little support among community boards in her district) is likely to be "implanted" for the Senate seat that, if convicted (which is highly likely) will be vacted by State Senator Efrain Gonzalez.

We all know that the evidence points to a guilty verdict. However, we

should not be surprised if he (Efrain) gets a "slap on the wrist" for stealing money for his personal use, an act which must be pusnihed severely and without pity.

Now, Maria Baez occupying such seat is a further slap in the face to the constituency. Yes, she will run for office since the Bronx Democratic machine does not have the power to avoid elections (if they did, trust me, they would put everyone in office who they liked). I hope that a viable candidate comes up and runs against Maria Baez. This woman is there because of her direct connection to Jose Rivera, Bronx Party Dictator (oops, sorry.. Chairman). Did you know that she does not even appoint any community residents to serve on the Community Boards within her district? Yes, that's correct. She leaves that to Bronx Borough President. Clearly, this reflects that she has very little care for those in community boards and does not really care what they feel, do, say or think. To her, that's a waste of her time.... There has been several names in private talks to fill this position... They include Majority Leader and son of Jose Rivera, Joel Rivera. But there's only one problem: Joel is running for Bronx Borough President in 2009 (although he has not made any formal announcement). Maybe it's time for a NEW face in Bronx politics. I'm tired of seeing the same faqces or the son or daughter of Jose Rivera. I'm surprised his (Jose's) ex-wife is not running ...or could she?

Where am I heading with this? Just wanted to start a conversation on this subject. I heard of a NEW FACE by the name of Nelson Castro, who has been described as young and with many ideas. there's only one, actuallly two, problems with him. First, he's a DOMINICAN-American. What does this mean? That the Bronx Party Machine will not support a candidate that is Dominican because they are afraid of opening the doors to other future Dominican-Americans running for office in the Bronx and thus, replacing the Puerto Rican dictatorship over its politics. This is discrimination but it's the truth, sadly. Just ask Adolfo how many Dominicans he has in his staff? Or other Bronx elected officials for that matter? Just ask and you'll see that this is the truth.... (a suggestion for NY Daily News, NY Times, NY Post, Norwood News, Bronx Boro Press).

The second problem is that Nelson Castro, whom I have never met and have not seen in any of the community boards and forums I have attended regularly, was a Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-Democrat. Clearly, this young man does not know which way he wants to go.

Anyways, what ya' think?

Original Link

http://www.r8ny.com

Indicted state senator to seek re-election

Photo: Courtesy of the New York State Senate

State Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr.

By Ed Forbes and Steven Beardsley
Federally indicted state Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr., D-Tremont, will run for re-election this fall, his campaign manager confirmed, making this the second election the legislator has participated in since being charged with money laundering and fraud in 2006.

“Yes we are running,” said Miguel Ponce, Gonzalez’s campaign manager, in a phone interview. “We’re gearing up right now.” Gonzalez’s trial was scheduled to begin last month after Judge William H. Pauley III postponed it from November 2007. Instead, in an April 1 pre-trial conference, Pauley again postponed jury selection, this time until Oct. 6.

Gonzalez’s lawyer, Murray Richman, said he requested the delay after receiving more than 20 boxes of materials from the prosecution.

The new trial date allows Gonzalez, 60, to run in the Democratic primary in September, a race that, in the heavily Democratic borough, essentially determines the winner of the general election. State senators serve two-year terms.

State Assemblyman Jose Rivera, D-Fordham, the chair of the Bronx Democratic Party, said that Gonzalez has both his personal backing and the endorsement of the party.

“I believe in supporting him,” Rivera said.

Gonzalez easily won re-election in November 2006, more than two months after the original charges were announced.

In two separate indictments released in August and December 2006, the federal government charged the senator with funneling more than $400,000 in member items—public money that legislators use to fund organizations in their districts—into a sham nonprofit organization that paid for Gonzalez’s personal expenses, including credit card bills, Yankees tickets and college tuition for his daughter.

The 10-count indictment carries a maximum prison time of 130 years. If convicted, Gonzalez would become ineligible to serve in the Legislature.

Dick Dadey, executive director of Citizens Union, a political watchdog group, said a second re-election campaign for the indicted Gonzalez is troubling.

“Citizens need to know quickly the outcome of this trial,” he said. “For there to have been one and possibly two elections going through, with Democratic Party support, is disappointing.” Indeed, the support of the Bronx Democratic Party is key for Gonzalez’s re-election. The party has long been considered a kingmaker for those competing in any borough election.

Barbara Bartoletti, legislative director for the League of Women Voters in Albany and a longtime observer of state politics, said legislators from New York City often work on a long leash from voters back home.

“Albany legislators are rather invisible in New York City, unlike the City Council and mayor,” Bartoletti said. “They don’t worry much about what they do up [in Albany] as far as ethical challenges, as long as they have the primary support.”

Rivera adamantly defended Gonzalez’s decision to seek re-election, saying the senator was popular in his district and had yet to be proven guilty in his trial.

“I think we’re all supporting him in the re-election, until there’s a trial and he’s found guilty,” Rivera said. “Then we’ll move on and find someone else.”

Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr., a longtime adversary of the Bronx Democratic Party organization and one of Gonzalez’s potential Democratic primary opponents, believes he can mobilize voters without party support.

“People will be engaged, and it won’t be a coronation,” Espada promised.

He said if he runs, he will address broader issues than Gonzalez’s alleged crimes, including the Yankee Stadium redevelopment. “There are these major strategic opportunities,” Espada said. “But at the same time there is a political leadership that is all too eager to sell the community down the drain.”

Espada, 54, has had legal troubles of his own. In 1998, he was charged with using money from his health clinic, Soundview Health Center, to repay an earlier failed state senate campaign. He was later acquitted of all charges.

The veteran politician drew a distinction between his case and Gonzalez’s. “It’s the difference between being falsely accused and exonerated,” he said, “and someone who will likely spend a number of years in jail for spending taxpayer money.”

Richard Soto, a Bronx community activist, said he intends to run against Gonzalez. While Soto said he will focus his campaign less on Gonzalez than on the needs of the district, he said the charges against the senator were emblematic of larger problems in the borough.

“Unfortunately, what’s been exposed with his legal problems isn’t just Efrain,” Soto said. “You can call it Bronx politics.” Ponce, Gonzalez’s campaign manager, said the re-election campaign would deal with the indictment issue as it arises.

“If it’s brought up at a public event then naturally we’ll address it,” he said. “But we’re not going to go out in front with it.”

sjb2139@columbia.edu

ejf2133@columbia.edu

Original Link
http://www.bronxbeat.org

Sunday, July 27, 2008

POL $MOKED N.Y. FOR 423G: FEDS

CHARITY 'THEFT' FOR HOMES & CIGAR LABELS


Original Link
http://www.nypost.com

By KATI CORNELL
December 14, 2006 -- State Sen. Efrain Gonzalez ripped off $423,000 in grant money earmarked for a Bronx kids' charity - and frittered away the cash on luxury digs, clothes, jewelry and even personalized cigar labels, an indictment says.

Gonzalez is accused of teaming up with the heads of three not-for-profit organizations in a complex scheme to use coveted state "member item" grants "to line his own pocket," U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia said in announcing the charges yesterday.

The Bronx senator sent $50,000 to pay rent on his wife's luxury apartment in the Dominican Republic - even as he carried out his alleged crimes with his live-in girlfriend, who directs a not-for-profit group and is also a defendant in the case, a source said.

Gonzalez, 58, is accused of directing $467,000 in grants over five years to Pathways for Youth - an organization that funds Little League baseball and a number of other programs - then diverting most of the money to two other charities under his control.

"The senator designated hundreds of thousands of dollars of member-item money to Pathways, ostensibly to help develop programs for children in The Bronx. Unfortunately, the children . . . received no such benefit from that tax money," said Rose Gill Hearn, commissioner of the city's Department of Investigation.

Gonzalez was previously arrested in August for allegedly looting $37,000 from Pathways and the West Bronx Neighborhood Association. He was re-elected anyway.

Asked about the new indictment yesterday, Gonzalez told The Post, "I'm innocent. Obviously, they don't have anything, to do this again. Talk to my lawyer."

Defense attorney Murray Richman said, "We will beat those charges in court. We were aware that they were forthcoming. It should be pointed out that the voters knew that the indictment was pending. Nevertheless, he got 87 percent of the vote."

Gonzalez allegedly withdrew cash directly from the United Latin American Foundation and the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, which is run by girlfriend Lucia Sanchez, 50.

Gonzalez allegedly squandered the money on jewelry, college tuition for his daughter, a home in upstate Monroe, Yankees tickets, and his mother-in-law's house and wife's apartment, both in the Dominican Republic.

Gonzalez is also accused of pouring $9,000 into his Gonzalez Rojas Cigar Company - designing personalized cigar labels with names like "Assembly," "Council" and "Speaker."

The new indictment charges Gonzalez and three others with crimes ranging from fraud and conspiracy to theft of honest services and federal funds. The others are Sanchez, Pathways Executive Director Neil Berger and Miguel Castanos, whose apartment is the home base for ULAF.

State lawmakers distribute nearly $200 million in member-item money annually, in a process that takes place behind closed doors with no oversight.

kati.cornell@nypost.com

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Efrain Gonzalez: The 'Hardest Worker'

Story by: phillip anderson

Mon Feb 18, 2008 at 07:33:51 AM EST

From the "You've got to be kidding me" file comes the news that state Senator Efrain Gonzalez billed taxpayers over $34,000, more than any other senator, (Assemblywoman Earlene Hooper takes the overall prize at over $ 36,000) for travel expenses and per diem payments last year. You remember Gonzalez, right? He's the Bronx senator who was indicted by the feds for fraud and theft of taxpayer funds in August of 2006, money he apparently spent on Yankees tickets (Why a Bronx Senator needs to spend a dime on Yankees tickets is beyond me), clothes and a house in the Dominican Republic. He then won re-election with 97% of the vote and was promptly indicted again, this time for allegedly stealing over $400,000 in member items that he steered to a Bronx charity but ended up spending, at least in part, to prop up his cigar business. If convicted of all 9 counts of the second indictment, he could do 100 years in prison. His trial was was supposed to have started last November. He's a real piece of work and now he's billing you 35 large.
Assemblywoman Earlene Hooper and Senator Efrain González Jr. recorded more travel expenditures last year than any other lawmakers in their respective houses, according to records obtained from the state comptroller's office.

Ms. Hooper, a Long Island Democrat and the deputy majority leader, billed the state $36,452 in 2007, more than any of the other 211 legislators. Only four lawmakers billed more than $30,000 in per diem payments, mileage, train tickets and taxi fare; totals in the $15,000-to-$25,000 range were typical.

Ms. Hooper charged the state the per diem for working in Albany on dozens of Saturdays and Sundays. She charged the full per diem for 18 consecutive days in February and, after the session ended, for 12 consecutive days in July, according to her travel vouchers, which were obtained through a Freedom of Information request.
...

Mr. González, a Bronx Democrat, filed the highest travel expenses in the Senate, billing $34,268.

Don't worry though. Gonzalez can explain. He's the "hardest worker." No, really. He said that.

"That makes me the hardest worker," he said in an interview, adding that he frequently traveled to Albany, even in the legislative off-season, to meet with state officials in different agencies.

"The real stuff is done here," said Mr. González, whose expenditures also included reimbursement for working on many weekend days. "It changes the dynamic if you do things personally and build working relationships. That's the way real life is."

Well, OK then. If you say so. The problem is, there isn't all that much going on in Albany on the weekends.

Barbara Bartoletti, the legislative director of the League of Women Voters of New York State, expressed shock at Ms. Hooper's billing.

"Is outrageous too strong a word?" she said. "Very little goes on in Albany on the weekends. Nothing's open. It's not plausible that she's working here on the weekends, because the state government isn't open. That's extraordinarily troubling."

Want to know what else is troubling? It troubles me that a man who is facing a CENTURY in federal prison for literally robbing the public blind is in a position to be billing the public for anything.

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The Trial (0.00 / 0)
is now scheduled to occur not earlier than late April of this year, but could well be postponed yet again.

Let's hope that it finally takes place in time for Gonzalez to be ousted or dragged away from his seat, as it's clear he will never vacate it voluntarily.


I've been a constituent of Mr. Gonzalez and it's hard to imagine a (4.00 / 1)
more inert representative than he was. On the issue of public school funding, for example, about which I often spoke to his staff and occasionally to him, Senator Gonzalez never had a clue.

That said, this is an odd holiday weekend to sneer at weekend travel to Albany. This is caucus weekend when black and Hispanic legislators meet, plan and are courted by lobbyists and other elected officials.

My own favorite group, Domestic Workers United, a proto-union direct action and lobbying group on behalf of NYS's 200,000 domestic workers, was honored there this weekend. The caucus may make the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights a legislative priority for the coming session.


Gonzalez Needs $$$ for Copies

Original Link
http://westbronxnews.blogspot.com

Friday, March 9, 2007

According to this blog item from Errol Louis of the Daily News, a lawyer for State Sen. Efrain Gonzalez said his client is too broke to pay for copying 20 boxes of documents that prosecutors have amassed in building their case against the embattled lawmaker.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Efrian does best by resigning of his ppost as NYS Senator and allow the Democrats to regain the trust of the people. He betrayed the people's trust and should be asked to resign by the leaders of the Democratic Party. Honestly and sadly, Efrain is a disgraced to the NYS Senate and to the Bronx.

Haile Rivera
Bronx Resident


http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Indicted Bronx Senator's Trial Postponed


Original Link
http://www.observer.com/files/imagecache/article/files/efraingonzalezweb.JPG

by ALEX KRATZ
NORWOOD NEWS

Original Link
http://www.norwoodnews.org/story/?id=296

Bronx State Senator Efrain Gonzalez's federal trial for corruption and fraud charges has been postponed until late April 2008 at the earliest, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, which is prosecuting the case.

Gonzalez, who has represented a large portion of the west Bronx (33rd District) since 1989, was supposed to be back in court on Nov. 16 for oral arguments relating to any pre-trial motions, but that date was pushed back to Feb. 29. Government prosecutors are then supposed to provide any evidence exhibits, a precursor to the trial, by April 14. The trial would then presumably start soon afterward.

Whenever the trial reconvenes, Gonzalez will be joined by co-defendants Neil Berger and Miguel Castanos, both of whom headed non-profits that Gonzalez is accused of defrauding. Lucia Sanchez, who worked for and shared an apartment with Gonzalez, is also facing charges. Sanchez worked in Gonzalez's office and for the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, a non-profit group at the center of the controversy.

All four defendants have been implicated in a broad conspiracy to bilk more than $400,000 in state funds for their own personal use. Gonzalez faces nine charges himself.

The postponements may be partially explained by a Sept. 14 letter from federal prosecutors to Judge William H. Pauley III, who is presiding over the case, requesting pre-trial motions deadline be pushed from mid-September to mid-October and any oral arguments from Oct. 26 to Nov. 2.

Prosecutors said they needed more time to conclude plea discussions with the defendants and also because Berger's lawyer, Herald Fahringer, was dealing with medical emergency within his immediate family.

Pauley agreed to push back the motion dates and scheduled any oral arguments for this Friday, Nov. 9 at 3 p.m. That date was postponed until Nov. 16. But now, that date has been postponed to Feb. 29.

Gonzalez is up for re-election next fall. Last fall, despite being indicted on criminal charges, Gonzalez easily won re-election. It's not inconceivable that Gonzalez would seek re-election again while the trial is still happening or if it still hasn't begun.

Gonzalez was originally indicted on mail fraud charges last September, but then three months later, in December, federal prosecutors piled on several other more serious charges.

At a March 23 pre-trial conference, Gonzalez's attorney, Murray Richman, said he needed more time to sift through all the prosecutions evidence against his client. Judge Pauley pushed the pre-trial motions to this fall.

Richman, who is handling all of Gonzalez's trial-related press inquiries, is out of the office until next Tuesday and could not be reached for comment.

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

SMOKING OUT THE FAT

Bronx state Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr. goes under the “pork” microscope

Original Link
www.nypress.com/19/51/news&columns/JohnDeSio.cfm

By John DeSio


The often discussed culture of corruption that engulfs Albany’s body politic reared its very ugly head last week, when for the second time in less than a year Bronx state Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr., was indicted on corruption charges. To be specific, Gonzalez has been charged, along with three others, with funneling more than $400,000 worth of taxpayer money through a network of not-for-profit organizations and then back to his own pocket.

Going after an elected official is a great way for an attorney to make his or her career, and United States Attorney Michael Garcia, following in the footsteps of those before him, has made it clear that he will be relentless with Gonzalez. Just days earlier, Garcia dropped the hint that such funding, commonly known as “pork,” would be subject to new scrutiny in an interview with the New York Post. “You have this pool of nearly $200 million a year. Where there is that type of stream of money, it’s going to create opportunities …,” Garcia said. “The federal government has a responsibility here. When we smell something, we’ll follow it.”

And Gonzalez smells pretty bad. The indictment charges that the Bronx Democrat used the money to pay rent, college tuition, membership dues in a vacation club in the Dominican Republic and, most notoriously, for the design of bands for cigars for his private, Dominican-based business, Gonzalez y Rojas Cigars, named for both his parents. Ironically enough, the names of those cigars held legislative names. Once they finally kicked production into high gear, consumers would be able to purchase “Senator,” “Assembly,” “Speaker” and “Council” varieties of cigars from Gonzalez y Rojas.

Just moments before the rumor of Gonzalez’s impending indictment began to swirl through political circles (about 15 minutes, to be exact), his colleague, state Sen. Jose M. Serrano, a fellow Democrat representing both Manhattan and The Bronx, spoke about the culture of “pork” funding and just what criteria he uses to fund groups in his own district. Serrano has been brutally honest about his own member items, even going as far as publishing a full list on the Room Eight political blog. Having been in the state Senate a short time and also serving in the Democratic minority, Serrano gets just $150,000 to distribute each year. But that small amount is subject to rigorous background checks.

“I’m not accusing anyone of anything, but this funding should not be used as an electoral tool, as a way to get brownie points,” said Serrano, adding that he would never fund any organization that would bring him or anyone else close to him a profit. “I only fund well-established programs.”

During his long career in the State Senate, Gonzalez has only faced a primary challenge once. He has no real public profile outside of the recent indictments, which he attributes to a desire to stay behind the scenes and out of the media spotlight. Few press releases have ever been issued from his office, all of which have contributed to his reputation in many Bronx political circles as a do-nothing legislator. That he has again been indicted for abusing his “pork” privileges surprises few, if any, and Bronxites saw a harbinger of his future problems in August, just before his first indictment, when a local Bronx newspaper asked several legislators to produce a list of each of their member items. Only Gonzalez refused.

Had that list been made public during the past few years, local media and others would have likely picked up on exactly what Garcia has found, and Gonzalez might not have been able to hold on to his seat for as long as he has. But the media and other activists might be alone in calling for Gonzalez’s head at this point, since Bronx elected officials, all Democrats, have been reluctant to say anything critical of their fellow traveler. Several legislators have publicly taken a “wait and see” attitude, refusing to even entertain the idea that these charges might be true (Gonzalez claims he’s innocent). No one has returned his contributions, and Bronx Assemblyman Peter Rivera, a Gonzalez ally, even charged that Garcia’s indictment was politically motivated, part of an effort to hurt the legislature as they returned to Albany last week to reportedly consider a pay increase. No such goodwill was extended to another Bronx legislator, Guy Velella, when he was indicted on corruption charges in 2004, despite having a considerably greater legislative and community resume than Gonzalez ever had. But Velella was a Republican and apparently not worthy of such consideration.

Many feel that Gonzalez and Queens assemblyman and labor leader Brian McLaughlin, who was indicted in October on similar charges, are just the tip of the iceberg. A cursory look at “pork” requests for the past few years indicates that while they might not be criminal, many other items are certainly questionable. As long as such business continues in Albany, it is unlikely that legislators would ever be able to push through a raise of any kind without significant backlash, with or without any perfectly timed indictment.

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Gonzalez Indicted

Original Link
http://www.bronxmall.com/norwoodnews/past/090706/news/N60907page1.html


State Senator Charged In Defrauding Non-profit

By ALEX KRATZ

If State Senator Efrain Gonzalez is found to have defrauded the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, as a recent indictment alleges, he didn’t have to go very far to do it.

In July, Gonzalez sat down for an interview with the Norwood News in a virtually empty two-room suite on the same floor of his district office on the Grand Concourse. Paintings of him as a stately, younger, slimmer lawmaker adorn the wall along with framed logos of his Dominican cigar company.

The suite, which Gonzalez has a punch code for and referred to as his other office, is the headquarters of the West Bronx Neighborhood Association (WBNA), the same non-profit group Gonzalez stands accused of siphoning money from for his own purposes.

On Aug. 25, Gonzalez, who represents the entire Norwood News readership area, was indicted on federal mail fraud charges. The indictment accuses the veteran Bronx lawmaker of using $37,412 of WBNA’s money for personal expenses, including rent in Monroe, NY, and in the Dominican Republic, Yankees tickets, membership at a Dominican vacation club, clothes and college tuition.

That Friday morning, Gonzalez, 58, surrendered to federal authorities. In the afternoon, he appeared in front of a federal judge at a courthouse in Manhattan, but did not enter a plea. According to his lawyer, Murray Richman, Gonzalez will plead not guilty.

The senator was released on $25,000 bail and told not to leave New York. Gonzalez is scheduled to return to court for a pre-trial conference on Oct. 13.

“I will fight for my constituents like I’m going to fight for this case,” Gonzalez told reporters on the courthouse steps Friday afternoon, adding that he would continue to serve as a state senator.

Richman, Gonzalez’ attorney of 30 years, says the indictment is missing something, most notably a charge saying the senator actually stole money.

“An alleged crime that appeared over a period of six years and this is what they come up with?” Richman said. “What is mail fraud anyway? I’m asking you? Do you see the word ‘larceny’ anywhere?”

In Richman’s opinion, the mail fraud charge smacks of a witch-hunt. “He was a target and they were looking for a charge,” Richman said. “What could be sexier than getting a politician?”

The mail fraud count carries a maximum sentence of 20 years and a fine of $250,000.

The Gonzalez indictment stems from a joint investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District, and the New York City Department of Investigation (DOI).

“Individuals are elected to public office in order to represent the public’s interests. Instead of using government funds to help the community he represents, this defendant served his own interests while allegedly siphoning government money into his own pockets,” DOI Commisioner Rose Gill Hearn said in a statement.

Heather Tasker, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s office, said the investigation is ongoing.

Richman said he doesn’t believe federal prosecutors will go to trial with only the one count of mail fraud. He expects superseding charges, or replacement charges, if prosecutors intend to take the case to trial.

The investigation began in August 2004. Gonzalez, his wife and several other Bronx officials were subpoenaed by federal prosecutors who were investigating the senator’s relationship with a handful of non-profits, including WBNA, the National Hispanic Policy Institute and the Institute for Multicultural Communication, Cooperation and Development. Gonzalez helped found all three groups and each employed family members and/or associates of the senator. The state attorney general’s office, which tracks tax records for all state non-profits, said that the National Hispanic Policy Institute is delinquent in filing forms and that the Institute for Multicultural Communication, Cooperation and Development didn’t have to file because it had less than $25,000 in assets.

“I haven’t done anything wrong,” Gonzalez told the Norwood News in September 2004. “Everything is just speculation. Whatever the investigators are looking for will come out in the process.”

A year ago, the Norwood News reported that, despite tax forms indicating that West Bronx had spent $210,000 on “conventions, conferences, and meetings,” Bronx community leaders had never heard of WBNA. On tax documents, WBNA states that its purposes include educational, cultural, youth programs, community issues, family values, environmental issues, voter registration drives and scholarships.

“We shun all publicity,” said a volunteer who answered the phone at WBNA in 2004. “We don’t really say all the things we do. We prefer to remain silent and help people. If the Lord acknowledges us in the afterlife, that’s good enough for us.”

According to public campaign finance records, Gonzalez’ Friends of Senator Gonzalez campaign committee donated $38,800 to WBNA over a four-year period beginning in 1999.

The Albany Times Union reported on Aug. 26 that WBNA received $112,000 over several years from Pathways for Youth, a New York City non-profit. Pathways, in turn, received at least $30,000 from Gonzalez in member items — state funds doled out at the discretion of individual lawmakers. The senator distributes $290,000 to non-profits in member item funds each year, according to the Times Union. For a story in the previous edition of the Norwood News, Gonzalez refused to divulge his member items.

In July of 2005, Pathways for Youth and an affiliate, the Gloria Wise Boys & Girls Club, were cut off from city contracts – which ran into the millions of dollars – after allegations of impropriety stemming from a DOI probe, according to a Daily News article.

A week after the indictment came down, Lucia Sanchez opened the locked door of Gonzalez’s district office at 1780 Grand Concourse. She looked apprehensive and said she’d been flooded by calls from reporters. On tax documents from 2003, Sanchez is listed as the only director, officer, trustee or key employee of WBNA (Gonzalez’ brother is also listed in previous filings), though she had no title and received no compensation for her work. On 2004 tax forms, Sanchez, who lived with Gonzalez for a time, and a woman named Kenia Castanos, are listed as secretaries who received no compensation.

Sanchez said she’s employed by Senate Minority Leader David Paterson’s office, but is assigned to Gonzalez’ office. When asked about her relationship with Gonzalez, Sanchez said, “No comment.” A Paterson staffer said the office would look into Sanchez’ employment but didn’t call back to comment.

Several calls to WBNA’s voice mail seeking comment were not returned. No one answered when the Norwood News knocked on their door last Thursday.

Gonzalez’ indictment is just the latest in a series of troubles for Bronx politicians. In 2003, Assemblywoman Gloria Davis stepped down after pleading guilty to bribery. And in 2004, State Senator Guy Velella also pleaded guilty to bribery charges and resigned.

Many of the senator’s Bronx colleagues said they respected Gonzalez and hoped the charges against him weren’t true.

One of the longest serving Hispanic state senators, Gonzalez is up for re-election this fall. He’s running unopposed in the Sept. 12 Democratic primary and faces Conservative Party candidate Ernest Kebreau in the November general election.


http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

N.Y. State Senator Is Charged With Stealing More Than $400,000













Original Link
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/nyregion/14senator.html

James Estrin/The New York Times

Efrain González Jr., a Bronx Democrat, on the Senate floor. He declined to comment on a new indictment, but said he was innocent.

Published: December 14, 2006

A New York state senator was charged yesterday with stealing more than $400,000 in state money appropriated for charities in his district and using it for personal expenses and luxuries for himself and his family.

The charges against the senator, Efrain González Jr., a Bronx Democrat, were contained in a new indictment announced by the United States attorney in Manhattan and came four months after he was indicted on charges of stealing $37,000 from a nonprofit organization.

Federal prosecutors said Mr. González funneled the money through two nonprofit companies, the West Bronx Neighborhood Association and United Latin American Foundation, which did little if any charitable work. The association’s office, according to prosecutors, was nothing more than a room adjoining Mr. González’s district office in the Bronx.

Federal prosecutors said Mr. González then used the state money — and some $40,000 in federal grants to the same charities — for a variety of personal expenses. Those included financing his private cigar company, paying membership fees in a vacation club in the Dominican Republic, paying rent and renovations for homes used by his wife and mother-in-law, paying college tuition for his daughter, and buying items like Yankees tickets and jewelry.

Moments after his latest indictment was announced in Manhattan, Mr. González was asked for comment on the Senate floor during a break in a special session and replied, “No comment; talk to my lawyer.” Then he added: “I’m innocent. You know, we’ve got to keep moving.”

He is scheduled to be arraigned tomorrow in federal District Court in Manhattan.

Mr. González’s chief of staff, Miguel Ponce, said yesterday that the senator “is looking forward to his day in court.”

At a news conference yesterday announcing the new indictment, Michael J. Garcia, the United States attorney for Manhattan, said the senator’s indictment pointed out the risk of corruption inherent in the Legislature’s practice of setting aside a pot of money for member items, the pet projects of individual lawmakers in their districts. Critics have objected that the budget does not identify the legislator sponsoring each item.

“This was a process that had little transparency in it, and that created risk,” Mr. Garcia said. “What we’re saying today is that that risk played out.”

Mr. Garcia declined to say whether federal prosecutors were investigating other lawmakers for the abuse of member items and whether any other charges were likely, saying only that his office was “obviously very focused on public corruption.”

Rose Gill Hearn, the city’s commissioner of investigation, who joined Mr. Garcia at the news conference, called on lawmakers to police the member item process better.

“The transparency, accountability and integrity of the member item process is an issue that should be analyzed on the state and city level,” Ms. Hearn said.

If convicted, Mr. González, 58, first elected in 1989 and re-elected in November, could be sentenced to 20 years on the most serious charges of “theft of honest services as a state senator” by embezzling member items and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

The Legislature sets aside $200 million a year for member items, federal prosecutors said yesterday. That includes $85 million each in the Senate and Assembly, and $30 million for the governor.

Yesterday’s indictment expands on the earlier one, charging that from October 1999 to January 2005, Mr. González allocated $423,000 in member items to a nonprofit corporation called Pathways for Youth, based in the Bronx, which said its mission was to help young people.

Pathways in turn directed the money to the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, whose stated mission was to promote civic and community affairs, but which in fact, prosecutors contend, served as a personal piggybank for Mr. González and two associates, Neil Berger, the executive director of Pathways, and Lucia Sanchez, a director of the association.

Mr. Garcia said yesterday that while Pathways did perform some legitimate charitable activity, the association and the third charity, United Latin American Foundation, did not perform “any substantial nonprofit work.”

Mr. González and the president of the United Latin American Foundation, Miguel Castanos, 46, of the Bronx, are charged with conspiring to steal more than $225,000 from that organization.

Danny Hakim contributed reporting.


http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Gonzalez Case Puts Focus on Member Items

Original Link
http://www.nysun.com/new-york/gonzalez-case-puts-focus-on-member-items/45131/


By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | December 14, 2006

A Bronx state senator is facing charges that he stole state funds to pay personal expenses that included rent on two residences in the Dominican Republic and the bills from his cigar company.

Federal prosecutors say the senator, Efrain Gonzalez Jr., 58, regularly directed state funds to a Bronx charity and then used the charity as a personal bank. The allegations are expected to put pressure on the Legislature to curb the $170 million it spends annually funding so-called member-items, which are the pet projects of assemblymen and senators.

"Demonstrated by this case is the fact that member-item expenditures present corruption vulnerabilities," the commissioner of the city's Department of Investigation, Rose Gill Hearn, said yesterday at a news conference announcing the charges.

Mr. Gonzalez, a Democrat, is the seventh member of the city's delegation to Albany to be indicted on corruption-related charges in the last three years. In all, nine politicians from the city's 80-member delegation have been charged with crimes in that time.

In the past six months, state prosecutors have charged Assemblywoman Diane Gordon of Brooklyn with accepting bribes and federal prosecutors have charged Assemblyman Brian McLaughlin with racketeering and embezzlement.

Even as Ms. Hearn announced the latest charges against a legislator, she cautioned against jumping to the conclusion that Albany was experiencing a crime wave, as one political observer, Henry Stern of New York Civic, suggested in July when Ms. Gordon was indicted.

She said that there are "dozens and dozens of lawmakers working very hard in Albany."

The "common-denominator" in the latest three such cases was her office's investigative work, she said.

The U.S. Attorney for Manhattan, Michael Garcia, who is prosecuting the case, said, "I am not going to say everyone in this particular branch of government is corrupt."

The charges unsealed yesterday replace an indictment against Mr. Gonzalez unsealed in August charging him with mail fraud by taking money from the Bronx nonprofit, the Pathways for Youth, Inc. The old indictment did not allege that Mr. Gonzalez used his elected office illegally, as the new indictment does.

"As a New York State Senator, Efrain Gonzalez, Jr., the defendant, therefore owed New York State citizens a duty to refrain from abusing the member items process for personal gain," according to the indictment.

An attorney for Mr. Gonzalez, Murray Richman, said, "We assert that we are not guilty and we will confront these allegations in court."

The indictment also charges three other individuals associated with Mr. Gonzalez, including the director of Pathways, Neil Berger, who is accused of writing numerous checks from Pathways' account to an organization that Mr. Gonzalez controlled. The second organization, the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, occupies an adjoining room to Mr. Gonzalez's district office, and served to cover the senator's personal expenses, prosecutors said.

Mr. Gonzalez is accused of spending more than $400,000 of Pathways' money to pay for renovations to his mother in law's Dominican Republic home and rent for his wife's apartment in the Dominican Republic among other expenses, according to the indictment. Between the years 1999 and 2005 he directed $423,000 of state money to Pathways, according to the indictment.

Mr. Garcia also said that $9,000 of state funds went to design and print cigar bands for the New York-based cigar distribution company that Mr. Gonzalez owns. The cigar bands were labeled with politically-themed names such as "Senator" and "Assembly," prosecutors said.

Pathways' stated intent was to improve the welfare of young people and was formerly known as the Boys' Athletic League. The federal government is a large source of its funding.

Mr. Gonzalez is scheduled to be arraigned on the new counts of mail fraud and wire fraud in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on Friday.

When the charges against him were announced, Mr. Gonzalez was in Albany for a special legislative session. First elected in 1989, Mr. Gonzalez has a reputation for his unassuming presence in Albany.

He is currently the chairman of the Senate Democratic Conference. He was born in Puerto Rico and entered politics as a representative of the city's transit worker's union. He is involved with the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators, and requested for his August bail order to be changed to allow him to attend various caucus events in five states, Puerto Rico, Ecuador, and Washington D.C.

"He hasn't done anything," the previous senator from Mr. Gonzalez's district, Israel Ruiz, said, referring to Mr. Gonzalez' tenure. "He hasn't improved anything. You don't hear him on any issue. He's not involved in any issue. He could care less. He deserves whatever he gets because he should have known better."

Mr. Ruiz said Mr. Gonzalez had once worked in his Bronx district office in the late 1970s. Mr. Gonzalez won the Senate position in 1989, after Mr. Ruiz was convicted of making false statements on a bank loan application.


http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Years Ago, Efrain Won His Case


Original Link
http://www.nypress.com/blogx/display_blog.cfm?bid=99316495

Bronx State Senator Efrain Gonzalez has been found on the wrong side of the law in the past, but in 1978 he was able to avoid any consequences.

With a little bit of digging, reporter Candice M. Giove has found that nearly three decades ago Gonzalez was indicted by federal prosecutors for his part in a scheme to allegedly bilk a non-profit group out of tens of thousands of dollars through a shady real estate deal.

According to the indictment, Gonzalez, his current defense attorney Murray Richman, the late Bronx State Senator Joseph Galiber and Victor Risso, chairman of the Hispanic Association for a Drug Free Society (SERA), purchased a South Bronx building for $75,000 and just hours later sold it to SERA for $350,000. Prosecutors accused the four of profiteering.

In the end, this ordeal had a happy ending for Gonzalez, who saw his charges dropped after Galiber, Richman and Risso were acquitted.

Gonzalez is currently under indictment for allegedly pilfering over $400,000 in taxpayer funds from a non-profit organization for his own personal use. My recent piece outlining his indictment and the culture of member items in Albany can be found here.

Posted by John DeSio at 3:06 PM

Efrain and Jabba, Separated at Birth?

You Be the Judge

Chatting on the phone today with a political friend of mine we, naturally, got on the topic of the latest political indictment. My friend's comment was that he'd never met Senator González, but that "he looks like Jabba the Hutt." I looked him up and well, you be the judge.


http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

I’ll Take ‘Pork Barrel’ for $400,000

Porky














official link
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/15/opinion/15fri4.html?_r=1&oref=login

Published: December 15, 2006

This is what happens when governments hide their money under a rock: On the eve of what is supposed to be a new day in Albany, another New York state senator has been indicted, this time charged with diverting to his own pocket more than $400,000 in state money that he earmarked for charities in his district.

State Senator Efrain González Jr., a Democrat from the Bronx, has told reporters that he is innocent of charges that he routed the funds to such things on the prosecutor’s list as his cigar company, his daughter’s college tuition, jewelry, home renovations and Yankee tickets. Mr. González is scheduled for arraignment today and is said to be looking forward to his day in court.

But this $400,000 is just part of the notorious member-item scheme, which allows legislative leaders to parcel out $170 million a year with little or no public record or oversight. The problems with the member-item system have become so obvious that even the very leaders who spent years hiding this money have now been forced by the courts to make the details public.

What details they are. Some were quirky — like a yurt in Suffolk County and a cage for mountain lions in Watertown. Others highlighted how politics work in the state. For example, the Senate majority leader, Joseph Bruno, who got to parcel out most of the $85 million claimed by his chamber each year, steered $500,000 to Evident Technologies.

The company’s former co-chairman, Jared Abbruzzese, is under investigation by the State Lobbying Commission for providing private flights at no cost to Mr. Bruno, whose office said that the state funds were meant to attract high-tech companies upstate.

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, who commanded about $7 million a year of his chamber’s member-item funds, funneled a lot to Jewish and Chinese groups, both important in his district on the Lower East Side. Even if Mr. González is not convicted and not thrown out of the Legislature, the system itself is a scandal.

When there are millions of dollars being spread around and nobody is really watching, it “created risk,” as Michael Garcia, the United States attorney for Manhattan put it. This is public money, and the public deserves to know how it is spent, why and whether it is worth it.

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf

Inquiry Puts Bronx Senator in an Unfamiliar Place: Under a Spotlight


By AL BAKER
Published: July 4, 2005


official link
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/04/nyregion/04gonzalez.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2

ALBANY, July 2 - Though he is the third-highest-ranking Democrat in the State Senate, it was not unusual that Senator Efrain Gonzalez Jr. of the Bronx missed the leadership's final news conferences of the legislative session last month.

Don Hogan Charles/The
New York Times
State
Senator Efrain Gonzalez
Jr. of the Bronx, first
elected to the Senate
in 1989, at a 1999
event.

In the 16 years that Mr. Gonzalez, a former city bus driver, has been walking the marble hallways of the Capitol, he has never been one to seek the spotlight. His Senate Web site lists no news releases. His aides say he is more comfortable flying below the radar, working person-to-person in informal settings.

Even the neighborhood organization he has long served as a benefactor and mentor is a decidedly low-key affair. Seldom has the organization, the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, been mentioned in news articles. Few in the borough know much about its work.

For months, though, Senator Gonzalez and the organization have been the recipients of unwanted notoriety, as subjects of a joint city and federal investigation whose premise and possible consequences remain unclear.

Last August, investigators from the United States attorney's office in Manhattan arrived with subpoenas for the neighborhood organization, which occupies an office next to the senator's on the first floor of a commercial building on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx.

Since then the senator, who has shared staff members and $32,000 of his campaign money with the organization over the years, has also turned over records, according to his lawyer, Murray Richman.

Over the past few months, city and federal investigators have questioned several people associated with the neighborhood association or the senator, but they will not disclose what has piqued their interest. Emily Gest, a spokeswoman for the city's Department of Investigation, which is involved in the inquiry, said, "We decline comment due to the ongoing investigation."

But Mr. Gonzalez's lawyer said the finances of the neighborhood organization appeared to be a focal point. "They are just looking at the allocation of moneys," Mr. Richman said.

Last month, as the senator went home for the summer to prepare for surgery to remove a tumor from his right kidney, allies and friends said the specter of the investigation still hung in the air.

"There are all these accusations flying around," said Michael Jones-Bey, an aide to Senator David A. Paterson, the Democratic minority leader. Mr. Jones-Bey said of Mr. Gonzalez, "He said there is nothing there."

Just a few weeks ago, Attorney General Eliot Spitzer skipped a fund-raiser for Mr. Gonzalez for which he had been listed as a host. An aide to Mr. Spitzer, Paul Larrabee, said that the attorney general had never agreed to serve in such a capacity. Mr. Larrabee attributed the mix-up to confusion that occurred in the planning of the event.

Allies and friends of Mr. Gonzalez, who describe the investigation as unfair, say the senator is bearing up well under the scrutiny. They describe him as a tough and savvy man, a former union official who has survived adversity in the past and is facing the investigation, like his illness, with perseverance.

"That cloud has been there," said Lynette Perez-Gonzalez, the senator's daughter. "But he just goes about his business, his daily life, doing what he's always done."

Mr. Gonzalez, who declined to be interviewed for this article, is one of the city's longest-serving state legislators, having been first elected to the Senate in 1989. Though he is chairman of the Senate's Democratic conference, he has also exhibited a distinct tendency to reach out across the aisle. In the past, his diplomacy has extended beyond bipartisan détente and he is known for having endorsed Republicans like Alfonse M. D'Amato and Rudolph W. Giuliani.

A native of Puerto Rico, Mr. Gonzalez entered politics after serving as a union representative for the Transport Workers Union and the Teamsters. Friends describe him as a jovial man with the core skills of a natural politician, a good memory, a way with people and a generous sense of humor.

At times, the senator will hand out cigars as he works a room. He has his own cigar company in the Dominican Republic, where his wife lives and where he is a housing adviser to the government.

It is in the Bronx, though, that the senator has fashioned himself into a powerful presence through his close ties to the borough's Democratic leaders and through his efforts to lure corporate support for economic development and increased opportunities for Hispanics. He is the president of the National Hispanic Policy Institute, which he has described as an organization to advance the interests of Hispanic-Americans. It is located, like the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, just down the hall from the senator's office at 1780 Grand Concourse.

The West Bronx organization, a nonprofit group founded in 1993, has been run for several years by people associated with the senator. The vice president of its board, Jose M. Nicot, is Mr. Gonzalez's former chief of staff. Lucia Sanchez, who was listed as its secretary in 2003, is a close friend of the senator's. She now works in his office as a legislative aide, and her salary is paid through the Senate leadership.

The West Bronx organization's small office is identified by two sheets of white paper with its name that have been taped to the front door. No one answered a knock last week, but Mr. Nicot later answered questions by phone and described Senator Gonzalez as the organization's "rainmaker."

"Efrain is the guy who has all of the relationships that make it rain," he said. "He's the guy that brings the money in."

Mr. Nicot said that, structurally, the West Bronx group was set up like a trade association or a political action committee, not a charity. It does not receive public money, he said, but relies on corporate contributions.

"When business has called and said, 'We have issues,' he has been there and he has solved those problems," said Mr. Nicot.

In recent years, the West Bronx group has raised about $200,000 annually, according to its tax returns on file at the attorney general's office. Of the $222,336 it raised in 2002, the last year for which it had filed the forms, costs included: $23,593 for telephone; $20,544 for travel; $92,796 for conferences, conventions and meetings; and $20,500 for "annual gala expenses."

Several people who said they knew Mr. Gonzalez well, however, said they were not familiar with the organization.

"It doesn't ring a bell," said Gwynn Smalls, the interim executive director of the Bronx Heights Neighborhood Community Corporation, a housing management and tenant advocacy group, who has known the senator for many years.

Mr. Nicot said publicity was not a measure of effectiveness, and he ticked off a list of efforts in which the association has been involved, including helping young women compete in beauty pageants, paying tuition for students at parochial schools and underwriting summer trips for neighborhood children.

He said money had also gone to support Ramitas de Borinquen, whose members twirl batons in the annual Puerto Rican Day Parade, and to help ship donated city fire trucks, ambulances and buses to the Dominican Republic after Hurricane Georges in 1998.



http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/pressreleases/December06/gonzalezs2indictmentpr.pdf