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Ted "A Series of Tubes" Stevens Found Guilty

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Mon Oct 27, 2008 04:18 PM
from the now-a-series-of-cells dept.
techmuse writes "According to a series of tubes sites, Senator Ted Stevens has been found guilty of lying about free home renovations that he received from an oil contractor. He faces up to 5 years in jail, and the outcome of his current reelection bid is now in doubt. 'The conviction came after a tumultuous week in the jury room. First there were complaints about an unruly juror, then another had to be replaced when she left Washington following the death of her father. Finally, jurors on Monday discovered a discrepancy in the indictment that had been overlooked by prosecutors. Jury deliberations in this historic trial have at times been as contentious as some of the proceedings The Justice Department indicted Stevens on July 29, and the Alaska Republican took a huge legal gamble and asked for a speedy trial in order to resolve the charges before Election Day. Judge Emmet Sullivan complied with Stevens' request, and in less than three months from the time of his indictment, Stevens was found guilty.'"
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Related Stories

[+] Politics: Sen. Ted "Tubes" Stevens Is Indicted 553 comments
Many readers are letting us know about the indictment of Sen. Ted Stevens on seven counts of making false statements on his financial disclosure forms. We discussed the raid on the senator's house a while back. Everyone's favorite technologically challenged senator is the longest-serving Republican in the history of the upper house. An Alaskan paper gives deep background on the probe that has ensnared Stevens and a number of other Alaska political figures.
[+] Conviction of Sen. Ted Stevens Is Thrown Out 440 comments
A federal judge has thrown out the conviction of the senator who educated us all about the true nature of the Internet. Ted Stevens had been convicted last fall of lying about free home renovations that he received from an oil contractor, 8 days before he lost his Senate re-election bid. The judge blasted the US Department of Justice prosecutors for mishandling the case in ways that might rise to the level of criminality. "In 25 years on the bench, I have never seen anything approach the mishandling and misconduct in this case," Judge Emmet G. Sullivan said. He called the allegations "shocking and disturbing." According to the article, "Several jurors have told The Washington Post that the evidence against Stevens was overwhelming during a month-long trial that ended in October."
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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 27 2008, @04:21PM (#25533549)

    Prison, it's not like a big building, it's more like a series of cubes.

  • by KnowledgeEngine (1225122) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:21PM (#25533553)
    I can forsee the senator saying that his jailtime will be much like living normal life, but behind a series of bars connected together. I look forward to his jailing, so I can enjoy more humorous remarks about the particular "Series of Bars" he is behind at any given time.
      • by GospelHead821 (466923) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:41PM (#25534611)

        I can take no pleasure in the thought of an 84-year-old man going to federal prison. Were he a younger man guilty of a more heinous crime, I could see the necessity or prudence of it. As it is, I will do no more than shrug and say "Let justice be served."

        • by AuMatar (183847) on Monday October 27 2008, @06:21PM (#25534987)

          Comprimising our democracy for money? There can be no more heinous crime. For a member of Congress to take such a bribe should be a death penalty offense.

                  • by ScrewMaster (602015) * on Monday October 27 2008, @09:49PM (#25536687)
                    You're welcome.

                    So far as this mess is concerned, a good deal of it can be traced back to the 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. Now, some argue that this law, by repealing the much-older Steagal-Glass Act, was merely bringing the U.S. banking industry in line with Europe's. Maybe so, but considering that a goodly chunk of Europe is suffering a similar meltdown it probably wasn't such a great idea. I don't really know, I'm not an economist.
                  • by sjbe (173966) on Monday October 27 2008, @09:56PM (#25536751)

                    So, when did it become possible to sell mortgage-backed securities, and why did it go into overdrive around 2002, 2003?

                    Modern US incarnations started in 1938 [wikipedia.org] with the creation of Fannie Mae.

                    There are a LOT of reasons why they went into overdrive lately. Low interest rates, hedge funds, deregulation, policies [wikipedia.org] to encourage home ownership gone awry, big profits in securitization [wikipedia.org], lack of transparency into exotic securities, inadequate risk management policies at banks, and several other reasons come to mind.

                    It isn't a simple situation with a simple solution unfortunately. Any solution that does come however will need to come from regulation requiring disclosure of exotic security positions and limits on the ability to endlessly bundle and transfer risk through securitization. A better term for sub-prime is high risk. But everyone thought they could just transfer the risk to someone else and eventually there was so much high risk debt that it clogged up the credit markets.

                  • by malice (82026) on Monday October 27 2008, @11:12PM (#25537229) Homepage

                    The Real Deal on the Current Economic Crisis [factcheck.org]

                    So who is to blame? There's plenty of blame to go around, and it doesn't fasten only on one party or even mainly on what Washington did or didn't do. As The Economist magazine noted recently [economist.com], the problem is one of "layered irresponsibility ... with hard-working home owners and billionaire villains each playing a role." Here's a partial list of those alleged to be at fault:

                    The Federal Reserve [cch.com], which slashed interest rates after the dot-com bubble burst, making credit cheap.

                    Home buyers [upenn.edu], who took advantage of easy credit to bid up the prices of homes excessively.

                    Congress [gao.gov], which continues to support a mortgage tax deduction that gives consumers a tax incentive to buy more expensive houses.

                    Real estate agents [upenn.edu], most of whom work for the sellers rather than the buyers and who earned higher commissions from selling more expensive homes.

                    The Clinton administration [thehill.com], which pushed for less stringent credit and downpayment requirements for working- and middle-class families.

                    Mortgage brokers [pbs.org], who offered less-credit-worthy home buyers subprime, adjustable rate loans with low initial payments, but exploding interest rates.

                    Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan [federalreserve.gov], who in 2004, near the peak of the housing bubble, encouraged Americans to take out adjustable rate mortgages.

                    Wall Street firms [pbs.org], who paid too little attention to the quality of the risky loans that they bundled into Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), and issued bonds using those securities as collateral.

                    The Bush administration [iht.com], which failed to provide needed government oversight of the increasingly dicey mortgage-backed securities market.

                    An obscure accounting rule [consumeraffairs.com] called mark-to-market, which can have the paradoxical result of making assets be worth less on paper than they are in reality during times of panic.

                    Collective delusion [cch.com], or a belief on the part of all parties that home prices would keep rising forever, no matter how high or how fast they had already gone up.

                    The U.S. economy is enormously complicated. Screwing it up takes a great deal of cooperation. Claiming that a single piece of legislation was responsible for (or could have averted) is just political grandstanding. We have no advice to offer on how best to solve the financial crisis. But these sorts of partisan caricatures can only make the task more difficult.

      • by Xaositecte (897197) on Monday October 27 2008, @06:22PM (#25535013) Journal

        What do you think are the odds of him getting a pardon?

        I mean, really, why else would he want to have the trial finished before the election?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 27 2008, @04:21PM (#25533555)

    Dubya will pardon him on his way out

    Scooter will get a full pardon too (in addition to the sentence commutation he already got)

    'pubs will take care of their own, don't you worry

    • by megamerican (1073936) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:43PM (#25533911)

      Yes, because only one party is corrupt!

      Clinton is well known for having pardoned many cocaine traffickers before leaving office. One of the first things Bush did when getting into office was block a congressional investigation into it.

      Whatever you do, don't research Mena, AK [google.com]

      • Not buying it. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by EriDay (679359) on Monday October 27 2008, @06:39PM (#25535207)
        Yes there have always been corrupt politicians from all parties. The difference is Tom Delay and the K street project institutionalized corruption. That's why the Republican party is going down so hard in this election.

        Either that or the government is in worse condition than we know and and the republicans want to make sure there are no republicans anywhere near government for the next four years. I don't know how else to explain the terrible campaigns being run by all republicans this year.
      • by evilviper (135110) on Monday October 27 2008, @08:13PM (#25535973) Journal

        Yes, because only one party is corrupt!

        I'm tired of hearing this nonsense over and over again.

        Yes, Democrats have done plenty of wrong, but on the whole, they're absolute choir boys compared to the flagrant, bald-faced corruption of most of the Republican party.

        Of course, pointing the finger in willful ignorance is a typical Republican campaign tactic as well... See the McCain campaign's distribution of tire pressure gauges labeled "Obama's Energy Plan," Bush campaign promises that he was going to do more to combat global warming than Al Gore, and pretty much everything else they whole party has done in the past 20 years.

        It's a bit like a guy driving 110MPH in a 45MPH zone, and complaining to the cops about being singled out for a ticket, single HE wasn't the only one speeding, as everyone else on the road was going 50MPH... So why should HE get singled out and ticketed?

        There's plenty of fuckups on both sides, but pointing out that the Democrats aren't perfect, while the Republicans are widespread and institutionally corrupt, is purely feigned ignorance.

  • by Grandiloquence (1180099) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:21PM (#25533557)
    I would celebrate, but I know in my heart he'll be replaced by someone just as bad. Our body politic is rotten to the core.
    • by vil3nr0b (930195) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:24PM (#25533609)
      Another bad apple is fine. We will send him to prison just like Stevens. Eventually America will get pissed enough to start hanging these crooks in the street.....then it will stop.
      • by eln (21727) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:53PM (#25534047) Homepage

        232 years and counting, and that still hasn't happened. But sure, the next one will do the trick.

      • by erroneus (253617) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:01PM (#25534135) Homepage

        Corruption is a problem of availability, not so much moral strength.

        Separate temptation from politicians and you will see fewer troubles. It would be far cheaper to grant politicians in key positions generous allowances for the rest of their lives and to clear all expenses over certain through some sort of oversight board forbidden to have any contact with the people they are overseeing. They should be very well taken care of and at the same time, isolated from their keepers. Then let the special interests make their arguments for legislation and let it be balanced against public interest groups and may legislators then make fair and balanced choices, actions and decisions.

        No more revolving doors. No more contributions from special interests. Once a politician enters public service, he should never again need to consider private sector life and would therefore have less tempting him now and in the future.

        • by homer_s (799572) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:13PM (#25534293)
          From here [typepad.com]:

          " Among the articles of faith of "progressivism" is the theory - which never yields to experience - that you can fill the sea with enormous quantities of fresh red meat and then, Moses-like, successfully command the sharks not to devour it."

          "As long as Uncle Sam continues to stock the Potomac by ripping from the body politic such enormous quantities of flesh and muscle - now more than three trillion dollars worth annually - sharks and vultures will inevitably swarm throughout Washington in a competitive struggle to gorge themselves on this unfortunate feast."
        • by SydShamino (547793) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:26PM (#25534441)

          It would be far cheaper to grant politicians in key positions generous allowances for the rest of their lives

          Indeed. Instead, we have many people (including many on Slashdot) advocating for term limits, which force those politicians to immediately start thinking about their income post-service, and what they can do now to ensure it.

          I've always thought that being a lifetime public servant, if your constituents allow it, is far better than being another revolving door politician heading from a law degree into a cushy PR position at a company paying for the laws you gave them.

          Obviously Ted Stevens decided he could keep the office and get the payback, too; he should have retired six years ago, after which time he could have gotten all the house upgrades he desired for the work he'd already performed for the oil industry.

      • by rrhal (88665) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:57PM (#25534083)

        Many Alaskans would vote for a Sled dog if it had a R next its name on the ballot. It wouldn't suprise me if they reelect Stevens - then Sarah Palin would appoint his successor. Sarah may be going to Washington after all. Somehow I just don't see her appointing Cathy Murkowski ...

  • Duh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by headhot (137860) <tom@ruptur[ ]et ['e.n' in gap]> on Monday October 27 2008, @04:22PM (#25533567) Homepage

    So your a Senator of one of the largest oil producing states, an you hire an oil services company to renovate your house, instead of say, a home builder.

    Yea that doesn't look odd at all.

  • Slight correction (Score:5, Informative)

    by kithrup (778358) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:22PM (#25533577)

    He faces up to five years for each count. Although most seem to agree he won't serve anywhere near that much time.

  • by seanadams.com (463190) * on Monday October 27 2008, @04:22PM (#25533583) Homepage

    for his own rape kit?

  • Here is hoping (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sithkhan (536425) <sithkhan@gmail.com> on Monday October 27 2008, @04:23PM (#25533591)
    I hope he does the proper thing and resigns. Although the Republicans cannot afford a single loss of Senate seats, he needs to immediately show respect to the people of Alaska. Of course, I'm still waiting for William Jefferson (D - LA) to do the right thing too ...
  • Summary Correction (Score:5, Informative)

    by epdp14 (1318641) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:23PM (#25533593)
    The summary indicates that he faces up to 5 years in jail. This is incorrect. He faces up to 5 years in jail *per count*. Source: http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/10/27/stevens.jurors/index.html [cnn.com]
    • by mikael (484) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:32PM (#25533739)

      A total of 35 years:

      The jury found Stevens guilty of "knowingly and willfully" scheming to conceal on Senate disclosure forms more than $250,000 in home renovations and other gifts from an Alaska-based oil industry contractor.

      Stevens faces a maximum sentence of up to to 35 years in prison -- five years for each of the seven counts.

      The contractor is VECO [wikipedia.org], who wanted to build a gas pipeline from Alaska

  • The sad thing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by internerdj (1319281) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:24PM (#25533599)
    The truely sad thing is that if he is reelected then he can serve. Forgetting there being no law against a felon holding office. Shouldn't there be some law to protect the American people from legislators who commit felonies relating to their position?
    • Re:The sad thing (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ScoLgo (458010) <scolgo@NoSPAM.gmail.com> on Monday October 27 2008, @04:30PM (#25533701) Homepage

      To win a political race against Stevens, all his opponent needs do is bring this conviction up. That's not saying that I disagree with you but the real world will probably take care of this without the need for more laws.

      • Re:The sad thing (Score:5, Insightful)

        by eln (21727) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:02PM (#25534145) Homepage

        Not necessarily. Most people will vote for a long-term Senator because they have a lot of seniority, and seniority in the Senate is everything. A very senior Senator will be able to have much greater influence and be much more successful at getting earmarks passed.

        In short, as long as a Senator is able to bring home the bacon to his district, a little thing like a felony conviction won't necessarily do him in.

      • Re:The sad thing (Score:5, Insightful)

        by winomonkey (983062) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:34PM (#25534521)
        As an Alaskan, I would be a little hesitant to put any money on a wager against his being reelected. I know a lot of people who have hated him (or been staunch Democrats) and yet have voted for him. Those who disagree with his ability to be a decent person typically acknowledge that he has gotten our state a ridiculous amount of money and development.

        His being so ridiculously connected, and his serving as the chair of so many committees, has made a lot of people give up a vote to him. It is funny/sad to see people give up their own moral pride to keep the cash flowing in. On another note, for all of his crap and corruption, he has also done some good for the state and its many indigenous peoples.

        While I think that this is going to be a pretty major nail in the coffin of his political life, I am not convinced that it will really lay the issue to rest (it would take either a stake and some garlic or a severed spinal cord, depending on whether you tie his longevity to his being a vampire or one of the undead).
    • Re:The sad thing (Score:5, Informative)

      by SydShamino (547793) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:32PM (#25533753)

      Shouldn't there be some law to protect the American people from legislators who commit felonies relating to their position?

      if he is reelected

      Didn't you answer your own question? We already have election law and it allows us to choose to replace our criminal legislators, or, if we feel that they are still able to competently serve us, choose to return them to office.

    • Re:The sad thing (Score:5, Informative)

      by kabloom (755503) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:53PM (#25534041) Homepage

      The senate ethics committee can recommend that the he be expelled from senate by a 2/3 vote. The ethics committee has recommended such things before, but nobody's ever been expelled because they all resign first.

      The more likely possibility, however, is that Senator Stevens' close senate race has just gone down a series of tubes because of this.

  • by Doug52392 (1094585) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:24PM (#25533613)

    This pretty much ruined Ted's shot of being reelected, but will this hurt the image of political figures from Alaska? So close to election day, could this affect Sarah Palin's image? Morality? (Which has already been questioned).

    So what could this do to John McCain's campaign?

    (Probably already missed first post)

  • by fermion (181285) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:31PM (#25533733) Homepage Journal
    Stevens probably did a lot to help alaska. He probably knows more about the politics than anyone. He was in office for, what, 40 years, only 9 years less than Alaska has been a state. And the charges might be trumped out, and the defense was good. It was essentially what Reagan used in his drug smuggling case. I was not my doing, I don't recall, I don't know. So it is probably an effort to get him out of office. If he should have to office for so long.

    OTOH, one has to think that a guy that can't control his household might be over the edges. That he is so much a part of the Washington Elite, that he might not distinguish between what is done to benefit the country and what is done to enrich himself. It really speaks to the accumulation of power, and the corruption that accompanies it. One can imagine that a dictator might not be such a bad thing, except eventually the accumulated power and privilege ends up warping the sense of reality to a mentally deformed image. It is kind of the story of this election, can a guy with 8 houses and 13 cars and a corporate jet and a young rich second wife really represent the bulk of the people who do not have any of these. I don't know. It will be a change in Alaska, and we will see if they can make it. If they have been broken from their benevolent benefactor, or freed from their father figure. I sure he did good, but perhaps did not get out when the good he did was not overwhelming.

  • WTF?!!? (Score:5, Informative)

    by robinsonne (952701) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:33PM (#25533759)
    Despite being a convicted felon, he is not required to drop out of the race or resign from the Senate. If he wins re-election, he can continue to hold his seat because there is no rule barring felons from serving in Congress. The Senate could vote to expel Stevens on a two-thirds vote. Article here [msn.com]

    WTF?!?! Seriously?

    From same article, when asked about stepping down: "Put this down: That will never happen - ever, OK?" Stevens said in the weeks leading up to his trial. "I am not stepping down. I'm going to run through and I'm going to win this election.

    What an absolutely arrogant bastard! It's good to know what the rule of law really means to the men in charge of this country.
    • Re:WTF?!!? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Snowblindeye (1085701) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:45PM (#25533943)

      ... there is no rule barring felons from serving in Congress.

      Aren't felons barred from voting? So, they can't be trusted enough to cast one vote in several millions, but they can be trusted enough to be a Senator?

        • Re:WTF?!!? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Artifakt (700173) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:32PM (#25534493)

          Felons can have their rights restored by the appropriate legislatures after serving their sentences. One famous example was Johnny Cash. It is not uncommon for the legislature to restore selected rights to a whole group of felons at once - for example Florida restored rights to over 60,000 prior felons in one bill.
          It is also not unusual for some states to make restoration automatic - for example, it became automatic in Maryland for all felons to regain their right to vote as soon as they have finished serving any parole or probation, on July 1st, 2007. There is a single exception for MD, felons convicted of buying or selling votes.
                Usually, the right to bear arms is not restored, but the rights to vote, run for office and petition are. Rights of free association and movement may be limited, most commonly in the case of some sex offenders, even after other rights are restored.

  • I predict... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cplusplus (782679) on Monday October 27 2008, @04:44PM (#25533931) Journal
    ...a presidential pardon in 85 days.
  • The facts (Score:5, Informative)

    by UnknowingFool (672806) on Monday October 27 2008, @05:28PM (#25534455)
    Before some people go off on how he was an innocent man, here's some of the charges, his response, and the prosecution's point:
    • Prosecution: Part of the $250,000 Bill Allen provided was in furniture. He essentially replaced all the furniture in the Stevens' home.
      Stevens: Allen didn't have permission to remove the furniture, we didn't want it, and it was tasteless furniture.
      Prosecution: After Allen removed the furniture, Stevens didn't get back his old furniture but kept the new furniture, and didn't report Allen to the police. More importantly he didn't report this furniture among other things to the Senate. Also Senator Stevens reportedly wanted to gift this "tasteless" furniture to his newly married son.
    • Prosecution: Bob Persons gave the Stevens a $2,700 massage chair from Brookstone and didn't report this to the Senate.
      Stevens: It was not a gift. It was a loan, and we hardly used it.
      Prosecution: A loan for 7 years, interest free? Also Stevens sent a note thanking Persons for his "gift" and that he (Stevens) used it all the time.
    • Prosecution: An expensive fish statue that was donated to the Stevens memorial foundation somehow ended up not at the foundation headquarters but on his porch. Was this not another gift that isn't a gift?
      Stevens:"Ms. Morris, I have not died yet."
      • by Jeremiah Cornelius (137) * on Monday October 27 2008, @04:35PM (#25533785) Homepage Journal

        Agreed. Maybe he can join Stevens in the pen, someday.

        A Senator in the Fed Pen? he's going to come face to face with a whole new series of tubes!

      • Re:But Colin Powell! (Score:5, Informative)

        by megamerican (1073936) on Monday October 27 2008, @10:42PM (#25537041)

        I got modded down for pointing out that Colin Powell made a 1 hour speech [slashdot.org] of known lies to the UN to make our case for going to war with Iraq? I guess now that he endorsed Obama he must be a great guy again!

        That speech he gave was from a paper written [cpusa.org] by a post-graduate student in 1990. He and others knew it but he gave the speech anyway. Without that speech there would have been a lot more people against the war from the beginning.

        It really is too bad I didn't make i to a +5 troll. that would have made my day :)

    • We (or at least, I personally) would cut him a bigger break if he hadn't made that analogy
      A) In a speech justifying his vote against net neutrality
      B) If there hadn't been aspects of said speech that actually SUPPORT net neutrality, which he clearly doesn't understand at all
      C) If he hadn't, in the same speech, complained of one of his aides sending him "an internet" and it getting blocked for days
      D) If the context of that line hadn't been something that even by /. standards would be a ridiculous automotive analogy ("The Internet is not like a big truck..." WTF?)

      So, no, I really don't think he's going to get to live that one down for a while. I think at least half the humor derived from the situation is that the guy CLEARLY had no idea what he was talking about, and by some miracle managed to use *almost* the generally accepted terminology.

    • by evilviper (135110) on Monday October 27 2008, @07:34PM (#25535673) Journal

      Give Ted Stevens a break on the "series of tubes" analogy. He was trying to describe saturation of available bandwidth in terms of water going through a pipe. It is a particularly good analogy given that educational metaphor for electrical systems are usually in terms of water in a pipe (or tube).

      The "tubes" comment wasn't the ridiculous part... That's just the quickest short-hand for that whole speech he gave.

      While the numerous mis-statements, like calling the internet "tubes", and repeatedly calling an "e-mail" an "internet" where stupid... The fact that he thinks an e-mail from his staff took 4 days to get to his inbox because the "tubes" were "full" of movies downloading is what really demonstrates his woeful ignorance.

      But what really makes it really sad, important, etc., is the fact that he chaired the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, tasked with regulating the internet, and used his overwhelming clear ignorance to justify striking down network neutrality legislation.

      John McCain got similarly criticized for getting the Sunni/Shia thing wrong while making a speech, and failing to correct his own mistake.

      When you have a role of responsibility regulating something, and you demonstrate an utter ignorance of the subject, it's not "snickering" to point out that fact, as often as necessary.