BRIAN ROSS REPORTS
- Like Jay-Z + the Beatles, But Worse
- Update: Help for Homeless Children
- Bush Era, Revised -- and with More Barbeque
- The Tax Woman Cometh
- Paging Mr. Stanford: Antigua Called
- Who Are You Calling Partisan?
- Update: IRS Won't Use Private Debt Collectors
- But Is It Art?
- PMA Scandal a Sore Point for Dems in 2010?
- Down in Flames
- A New Mystery for RNC Chief
- PMA Clients Were Big Givers
- Raided Lobby Firm Still a Force on Capitol Hill
- Stanford Update: Another $143 Mil Found
- Cheney, Hooked on Controversy
TOP BLOTTER CATEGORIES
- Abramoff Lobbying Scandal
- American Al Qaeda
- Avian Flu
- Beirut Hospital Out of Gas
- Cheney
- CIA
- CIA Secret Prisons
- D.C. Madam Affair
- FBI
- Federal Air Marshal Service
- Homeland Security
- Hurricane Katrina
- IRS
- Mark Foley Internet Scandal
- Millionaire Sex Scandal
- Nigerian E-mail Scams
- Norman Hsu, Clinton Fundraiser
- NSA: Wiretapping
- Osama bin Laden
- Payola
- Pharmacy Investigation
- PMA
- Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert
- Stanford
- Steele
- Terror
- Troopergate
- U.K. Airline Terror Plot
- U.K. Bombing Attempts
- Wen Ho Lee
- William Jefferson
- Zarqawi
« Previous | Main | Next »
Reports: Bribed Ex-Lawmaker to Leave Prison Soon
February 11, 2008 6:17 PM
Former Congressman Bob Ney, Republican from Ohio, is set to be moved from a prison cell to a halfway house, according to news accounts.
Ney went in to federal prison in Morganton, W. Va. last March (as inmate number 28882-016) to serve a 30-month sentence for taking bribes from and doing favors for disgraced superlobbyist Jack Abramoff.
Following his conviction in late 2006, Ney revealed an addiction to alcohol which he said contributed to his criminal ways. He disappeared from public view into a rehabilitation facility.
Ney's revelation was supported by former staffers, one of whom later wrote to tell Ney's sentencing judge that while in Congress, his former boss "would often begin drinking beers as early as 7:30 a.m."
Ney's admission of alcoholism also opened up the possibility he could qualify for a rehabilitation program outside of federal prison that could shorten his time in a cell by up to a year,.
That fact that was not overlooked by Ney's lawyer. In a court filing shortly after his client's confession, Mark Tuohey asked the judge to find that "Mr. Ney’s alcohol addiction contributed to the conduct he has admitted."
"Mr. Ney would benefit from participation in the Residential Drug Abuse Program offered by the Bureau of Prisons during any term of imprisonment," wrote Tuohey.
February 11, 2008 | Permalink | User Comments (2)
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.
I suppose everyone deserves a second chance in life. Hopefully he'll have more success exiting rehab than most we unfortunately read about in the news.
Posted by: Leeds | Feb 11, 2008 10:06:21 PM
How many more GOP corupt politicians are yet to be outed? Many more once Bush is out of office. Hopefully the GOP culture of corruption will be eliminated once and for all.Their values are Mafia family values!
Posted by: AJ | Feb 20, 2008 2:37:04 PM
Post a comment
