Categories: NewsSports

Fourth Philly pol pleads guilty to corruption

Pennsylvania State Rep. Michelle Brownlee (D-Philadelphia) became the latest politician to plead guilty to conflict of interest charges on Monday after a controversial sting that ensnared several pols.

Brownlee pleaded guilty Monday in a Dauphin County court outside Harrisburg.

Brownlee was caught on tape accepting a $2,000 gift from an undercover operative in return for promised political favor.

She did not deny accepting the bribe when questioned before a grand jury, said D.A. Seth Williams in March when he announced charges against her.

Brownlee was previously outed as an alleged recipient of an illegal gift when the Philadelphia Inquirer revealed in March 2014thatAttorney General Kathleen Kane had shut down an undercover stinginto political corruptionwithout pressing charges.

The sting, launched by then-Attorney General Tom Corbett, used an undercover operative who posed as a lobbyist seeking influence in the Harrisburg state house — and secretly recorded and videotaped conversations with sitting officials in which he offered gifts for promised favors.

D.A. Seth Williamstook over the case in June 2014, and has since pressed charges against all five Philadelphia Democrats named in the original Inquirer report, as well as one not previously named, former State Rep. Harold James.

Former Traffic Court Supervising Judge Thomasine Tynes, who was implicated in the same sting,has already pleaded guilty and admitted to accepting a $2,000 Tiffany’s bracelet in exchange for favors.

Tynes was sentenced to 23 months in prison. She is also serving a two-year sentence in federal prison for her role in widespread ticket-fixing at Philadelphia Traffic Court.

State Rep. Ronald Waters and former State Rep. James, who were also charged, have previously pleaded guiltyto conflict of interest charges.

Waters was ordered to repay the $8,750 he accepted and sentenced to 23 months probation.

James was sentenced to 12 months probation.

Vanessa Lowery Brown is scheduled to appear in court on July 13.

One defendant, Louise Williams Bishop, is fighting the charges and at a hearing on June 5 filed subpoenas for the undercover operative, a prosecutor and another investigator who worked on the sting.

Bishop reportedly claims the sting was racially motivated.

Williams has said that there is no evidence of racial or political targeting in the evidence from the sting.

Metro Philadelphia

Recent Posts

Revised Bus Revolution plan set to go for SEPTA board approval this month

The Bus Revolution plan has been finalized, and SEPTA’s board, which previously put off a…

4 hours ago

76ers vs Knicks: Betting preview, predictions & TV Schedule

The Philadelphia 76ers are back home in Philly to take on the New York Knicks…

7 hours ago

Keep New York out of Philly: 76ers owners buy 2,000 tickets for Thursday’s game

The Philadelphia 76ers off-court strategy heading into Game 6 of their NBA playoff series is…

7 hours ago

Lightning in a Bottle: Will Shipley Ready to Contribute for Eagles

The one highlight the Philadelphia Eagles chose to broadcast of Will Shipley after they drafted…

8 hours ago

How “the Philadelphia way” has turned the Eagles into a premier franchise

The Philadelphia Eagles haven’t always been a premier franchise in the NFL. After years of…

9 hours ago

Vendor that mishandled Pennsylvania virus data to pay $2.7 million in federal whistleblower case

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM Associated Press A large staffing firm that performed COVID-19 contact tracing for…

11 hours ago

This website uses cookies.