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	<title>Mass Gov Scandals &#38; MA Corruption &#187; Deval Patrick</title>
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		<title>Dianne Wilkerson Bribe</title>
		<link>http://massgovscandals.com/2009/dianne-wilkerson-bribe/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Feb 2009 13:19:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[So how much bribe money will a legislator's bra hold anyway?

Here's an important state political story we almost missed given all the sound and fury surrounding the climax of the 2008 presidential election race between Barack Obama and John McCain and their trusty sidekicks, Joe Biden and Sarah Palin.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><h3 class="entry-header"><a title="So how much bribe money will a legislator's bra hold anyway?" rel="bookmark" href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2008/10/bra-bribes.html">So how much bribe money will a legislator&#8217;s bra hold anyway?</a></h3>
<p>Here&#8217;s an important state political story we almost missed given all the sound and fury surrounding the climax of the 2008 presidential election race between <strong><a href="http://topics.latimes.com/politics/people/barack-obama" target="_blank">Barack Obama</a></strong> and <strong><a href="http://topics.latimes.com/politics/people/john-mccain" target="_blank">John McCain</a></strong> and their trusty sidekicks, <strong><a href="http://topics.latimes.com/politics/people/joe-biden" target="_blank">Joe Biden</a></strong> and <strong><a href="http://topics.latimes.com/politics/people/sarah-palin" target="_blank">Sarah Palin</a></strong>.</p>
<p>For a brief change of pace we&#8217;re going to tell you about Massachusetts state senator <strong>Dianne Wilkerson</strong>. She&#8217;s a Democrat who&#8217;s in some more legal trouble now because, it seems, an FBI sting operation caught her on videotape stuffing numerous $100 bills into her bra as alleged bribe payments during <a onclick="window.open(this.href, '_blank', 'width=320,height=260,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false" href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/2008/10/29/diannewilkersonusatyap.jpg"><img style="margin: 7px; float: right;" title="FBI photo of Massachusetts state senator Dianne Wilkerson stuffing $100 bills in alleged bribes into her bra during a restaurant meeting" src="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/images/2008/10/29/diannewilkersonusatyap.jpg" border="0" alt="FBI photo of Massachusetts state senator Dianne Wilkerson stuffing $100 bills in alleged bribes into her bra during a restaurant meeting" width="320" height="240" /></a>a meeting in a fancy Boston restaurant.</p>
<p>According to U.S. Atty. <strong>Michael Sullivan</strong> and a 32-page affidavit filed in federal court Tuesday, Wilkerson is charged with accepting $23,500 in eight different bribes over an 18-month period in return for her legislative influence on behalf of a developer and bar owner, among others.</p>
<p>The embattled legislator has represented the Roxbury area since her first election in 1992 as the state&#8217;s only black state senator. Wilkerson, who&#8217;s been supported by Gov. <strong>Deval Patrick</strong>, lost the Democratic primary but is seeking reelection through a sticker writein campaign next week.</p>
<p><strong>Max Stern</strong>, Wilkerson&#8217;s attorney, maintains her innocence and accused federal authorities of trying to &#8220;character assassinate&#8221; her by bringing up past legal troubles, including a tax-cheating conviction and campaign finance violations.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/FedCrimes/story?id=6132629&amp;page=1" target="_blank">state bar has begun proceedings</a> to disbar Wilkerson for perjury during state court testimony on behalf of a nephew convicted of murder.</p>
<p>And now back to your regularly-scheduled presidential campaign.</p>
<p>&#8211;Andrew Malcolm</p>
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		<title>Tom Finneran</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Feb 2009 13:03:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://massgovscandals.com/?p=87</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Are you talkin’ to me, Felon Finneran?

I quote now from the letter that four bust-out ex-governors of Massachusetts have written to President Bush, begging them to pardon former House speaker Tommy Taxes Finneran, a man so crooked he needs a corkscrew to get into his pants in the morning.

“He has suffered daily taunts and ridicule of those who believe that every elected official is the equivalent of a common thief.”]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><h1><span class="Heading">Not a fan, felonious Tom Finneran? Well pardon me!</span><br />
<!--//Byline box//--></h1>
<div id="bylineArea"><span class="bold">By Howie Carr</span> | 						  Saturday, January 10, 2009  |  <a href="http://www.bostonherald.com/">http://www.bostonherald.com</a></div>
<p><!--//Byline box end//--> <!--//article Image//--></p>
<div id="storyImage"><img src="http://multimedia.heraldinteractive.com/images/337862c3cd_Finn_01102009.jpg" alt="Photo" /></p>
<div id="storyImageInner">Photo by Nancy Lane</div>
</div>
<p><!--//article Image//--> <!--//article//--><span class="articleBegin">A</span>re you talkin’ to me, Felon Finneran?</p>
<p>I quote now from the letter that four bust-out ex-governors of Massachusetts have written to President Bush, begging them to pardon former House speaker Tommy Taxes Finneran, a man so crooked he needs a corkscrew to get into his pants in the morning.</p>
<p>“He has suffered daily taunts and ridicule of those who believe that every elected official is the equivalent of a common thief.”</p>
<p>That’s me they’re talking about. When it comes to Felon Finneran, I’m in charge of daily taunts and ridicule. But despite what the Four Stooges wrote, I don’t believe every elected official is a thief. Finneran, on the other hand, was the House speaker &#8211; a job title that lately has a higher recidivism rate than godfather of the Gambino Crime Family.</p>
<p>As for Tommy Taxes being a “common thief” &#8211; I would never say that. Common thieves who do the crime do the time. Finneran committed multiple counts of perjury in the U.S. First Circuit Court of Appeals, but was convicted of one count of obstruction of justice, and didn’t do an hour, let alone a day, in durance vile.</p>
<p>And he still refuses to take responsibility for his sordid life of crime. So far, he’s Alibi Ike.</p>
<p>First excuse: he lied under oath because he was in a hurry to drive his wife to Mass General.</p>
<p>Second excuse: he’d been “gulping” Advil. No joke &#8211; Tommy Taxes claimed he was “Advil-addled.”</p>
<p>New excuse: I’ve ruined everything for him. Yeah, and tonight I’m going to make it snow.</p>
<p>The Four Stooges said Felon Finneran has been “severely punished.” Really? He’s still making big money for his wretched radio show, which we call “Sweet Sixteen,” because that’s generally about where it finishes in the ratings. The Felon usually runs neck and neck with “The River,” and sometimes he even edges the Manchester N.H. soft-rock station. Sometimes. His show is so compelling it now goes off the air at 9 instead of 10, and they’re trying to prop him up with a co-host.</p>
<p>Finneran should be breakin’ rocks in the hot sun. He fought the law and the law won. Although I still remember the day he was “sentenced,” and how Judge Rick Stearns was almost apologizing for having to ask him the questions every convicted felon has to answer.</p>
<p>Are you on drugs this morning, wiseguy? You do know you can’t own a firearm anymore, maggot. But no, it was all “Mistah Speakah” this and “I know this is a silly question but . . .” I was there in the courtroom hoping to make a victim-impact statement. See, I was at the courthouse the day Felon Finneran told his string of incredible whoppers about his racist gerrymandering scheme in the city of Boston.</p>
<p>I was shocked, shocked, I tell you. I tried not to let it destroy my faith in the integrity of the Massachusetts Legislature. But I can’t get over it. Then last year, the Felon speculated to Gov. Patrick that I should be taken for a one-way ride in the trunk of the governor’s Coupe Deval.</p>
<p>You can take the felon out of the State House, but you can’t take the State House out of the felon. President Bush, don’t enough people hate you already? You don’t need your own Marc Rich.</p>
<p><span class="bold">Article URL: <a href="http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1144332">http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1144332</a></span></p>
<h1 class="mainHead"><span style="color: #000000;">Tom Finneran Felon Finneran</span></h1>
<p><span style="color: #000000;"><img title="Former House speaker Thomas M. Finneran, arriving at his Mattapan home Monday." src="http://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2005/06/09/1118310168_0343.jpg" border="0" alt="Former House speaker Thomas M. Finneran, arriving at his Mattapan home Monday." width="410" height="300" /></span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000000;">Former House speaker Thomas M. Finneran, arriving at his Mattapan home Monday. (Globe Staff Photo / Justine Hunt)<br />
The Boston Globe</span></p>
<h1>Finneran&#8217;s gathering storm</h1>
<h1>
Ex-speaker&#8217;s strongest traits may have hastened his fall</h1>
<p>By Don Aucoin, Globe Staff  |  June 9, 2005</p>
<p>It was a spring night in 2001, and the hottest question on Beacon Hill was whether the state budget proposal about to be released by the House Ways and Means Committee would contain adequate funds for the Clean Elections Law.</p>
<p>The law to provide public financing of campaigns had been overwhelmingly approved by voters several years earlier, but House Speaker Thomas M. Finneran had made no secret of his hostility to it, and that had spelled doom for many a measure in the State House over the years.</p>
<p>That made Finneran&#8217;s response all the more surprising when a reporter asked how much money would be in the Ways and Means budget for Clean Elections. &#8221;I literally have no idea,&#8221; Finneran said. He went on to explain that he had been so busy with other legislative matters that he had left it in the hands of Ways and Means chairman John Rogers.</p>
<p>The notion of a hands-off approach on something Finneran cared about so deeply ran counter to everything that was known about the controlling, detail-oriented man who ran the House. But for the eight years Finneran presided as a speaker of unchallenged power, he seldom felt the need to agonize over his words or his image. Indeed, he was every inch the happy warrior, a sharp-tongued figure who freely expressed his opinions.</p>
<p>Yet in the aftermath of his indictment Monday on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice, some wonder whether the very traits that propelled Finneran&#8217;s rise to power &#8212; a self-confidence bordering on the cocksure, a reflexive refusal to yield on points large or small, an eager appetite for political combat &#8212; may have worked together to hasten his fall.</p>
<p>&#8221;Hubris,&#8221; said Pamela Wilmot, executive director of Common Cause of Massachusetts, speculating on why Finneran denied any involvement in the redistricting process. &#8221;There would have been no consequences to him had he told the truth: &#8216;Yes, I met with lawmakers and talked about this; yes, I met with the chairman of the committee.&#8217; There would have been no repercussions. People would have said, &#8216;Look, there&#8217;s Finneran controlling the process again, but that would been, &#8216;Yawn, yawn, what&#8217;s new?&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p>Finneran has vigorously maintained his innocence. Moreover, he has done so with the unambiguous force that characterized his eight years as House speaker, issuing a statement saying, &#8221;My response to the charges brought against me today is NOT GUILTY,&#8221; and telling reporters: &#8221;I&#8217;m not going to lose any sleep over it.&#8221;</p>
<p>If that is true, that would mean Finneran is less bothered by the indictment than are some of his admirers. Former House speaker David Bartley contended that the indictment is &#8221;just outrageous,&#8221; and that Finneran is called arrogant simply for exerting strong leadership and for being unyielding in his beliefs.</p>
<p>Such support is a testament to the charisma and brainpower Finneran brought to the post of House speaker, along with an iron-fisted approach that made dissidents an endangered species. Critics say Finneran&#8217;s belief that he was smarter than most &#8212; an opinion honed and to an extent affirmed in the State House &#8212; contributed to his current legal predicament. In this view, the commanding &#8212; critics called it arrogant &#8212; demeanor that defined his leadership in the House simply boomeranged on the witness stand.</p>
<p>&#8221;He was just daring the attorneys to challenge him, to doubt him,&#8221; remarked Representative James J. Marzilli, a Democrat from Arlington who was often at loggerheads with Finneran during the decade-plus they served together in the House. &#8221;You carry that outside this chamber, this institution, and people are a lot less willing to live by the rules he&#8217;s trying to force upon them.&#8221;</p>
<p>His will was so fierce, his talents so outsized, that Finneran grew used to getting his way on Beacon Hill. Often, his word literally was law. Now a jury will decide whether he broke the law with a few words of emphatic denial when he was asked, under oath, whether he knew the contents of a legislative redistricting plan before it was made public.</p>
<p>Lou DiNatale, director of the Center for Economic and Civic Opinion at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, said it was clear from the former speaker&#8217;s testimony that he found it &#8221;outrageous he had to testify before a federal jury over something that speakers have done over time immemorial in every state in the country . . . to protect his party members, Democrats, and his leadership. He made a mistake. He assumed this wasn&#8217;t going to be as explosive a public issue as it became.&#8221;</p>
<p>Whatever the outcome, the indictment has refocused the spotlight on a figure as compelling as he is contradictory. Finneran is a student of history who loves Edward Gibbon&#8217;s &#8221;The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire&#8221; and Winston Churchill&#8217;s &#8221;The Gathering Storm,&#8221; but he didn&#8217;t seem to see the storm gathering around him or to apprehend that his own pride and power might lead to a fall. In interviews with admirers and detractors of the former speaker, it was striking how often the twin themes of ambition and tragedy were sounded.</p>
<p>&#8221;Tom Finneran thought he was going to be either mayor of Boston or a United States senator,&#8221; said John McDonough, a former legislator and now executive director of Health Care for All, a consumer advocacy group. &#8221;He clearly saw the speakership not as a terminal position but as a launching pad for something bigger. Given his ambitions, there&#8217;s a note of tragedy in it, that someone so gifted and talented was not able to capitalize on his position to achieve that bigger goal.&#8221;</p>
<p>Barbara Anderson, head of Citizens for Limited Taxation, considered Finneran to have &#8221;a very thin skin stretched over a very big ego&#8221; from the day in 1991 when he ignored her outstretched hand and stalked away from her after the two did battle over Proposition 2 1/2, the tax-limiting measure that was her brainchild. Nonetheless, Anderson said, she now views Finneran as &#8221;a tragic figure who had tremendous potential for leadership but instead he got lost in his own hubris.&#8221;</p>
<p>Over time, Finneran became known for what he said as much as for what he did. In the middle of the 1998 debate over how much public financing should be given to New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft to build a new stadium, Finneran at a dinner in Peabody dismissed the idea of a tax break for the project with a vulgarity.</p>
<p>In 1998, at a post-primary unity breakfast after Scott Harshbarger had won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, the facade of unity crumbled in a hurry when Finneran floated the notion that Harshbarger might drift toward &#8221;the loony left,&#8221; a blow to a nominee who hoped and needed to appeal to moderate voters.</p>
<p>But for all of his swagger, the depictions of Finneran as a cartoon tyrant miss the mark, insist many who served with him, including some who lined up against him on issues or on leadership style. Most describe a man who was unfailingly cordial, who invariably recalled the names of members&#8217; spouses and children, and who would blink back tears while discussing the challenges facing the mentally retarded.</p>
<p>Representative Michael Festa, a Melrose Democrat who emerged as one of Finneran&#8217;s leading critics, said, &#8221;It&#8217;s a rare member of the House that would say they didn&#8217;t like Tom Finneran.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even though Festa often spoke out against Finneran&#8217;s tight control of the House, the two enjoyed a friendly relationship based on a shared love of gardening, and Festa had Finneran and his wife as a guest at his house several times. &#8221;The man is sufficiently complex for everyone to understand he&#8217;s not that one-dimensional as a person,&#8221; Festa said.</p>
<p>Yet the image that came through to the outside world sometimes lacked those other dimensions. Having entered the Legislature in his late 20s, Finneran perhaps inevitably leaned on the instincts and style of a State House insider. But that very style may have worked against him on the witness stand, in the view of DiNatale, who believes that the indictment is unfair.</p>
<p>&#8221;Finneran got popped for the wink and the nod,&#8221; DiNatale contended. &#8221;Because the culture of the [State House] building is &#8216;I know and you don&#8217;t know what&#8217;s really going on,&#8217; the wink and the nod is the dominant form of being in the know. . . . You can play these winking games with the press, you can even play them with the Legislature. You can&#8217;t play them under oath.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rick Klein and Jonathan Saltzman of the Globe staff contributed to this report.</p>
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		<title>Deval Patrick&#8217;s Task Force on Public Integrity?</title>
		<link>http://massgovscandals.com/2009/task-force-on-public-integrity/</link>
		<comments>http://massgovscandals.com/2009/task-force-on-public-integrity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jan 2009 00:24:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Boston Politics]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://massgovscandals.com/?p=39</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In true Deval Patrick fashion; in retrospect of the continued debacle called Mass State Government, Deval offers us full transparency with an internal task force designed to increase the illusion of public integrity.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>In true <a title="Deval Patrick News" href="http://devalpatricknews.com" target="_blank">Deval Patrick</a> fashion; in retrospect of the continued debacle called Mass State Government, Deval offers us full transparency with an internal task force designed to increase the illusion of public integrity.</p>
<p>This is a true bitchslap to the citizens of this state.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.devalpatricknews.com"><img class="size-full wp-image-40 alignleft" title="Massachusetts State House " src="http://massgovscandals.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/ma-state-house.jpg" alt="Massachusetts State House " width="225" height="169" /></a></p>
<p>Once regarded as left wing edu snobs we certainly must be the laughing stock of the free world to have to adhere to, let alone have to  establish this sure to be blundering task force.  Talk about a snowball heading downhill&#8230;</p>
<p><a title="Deval Patrick News" href="http://devalpatricknews.com" target="_blank">Gov Patrick&#8217;s</a> goal of a sweeping overhaul of the state&#8217;s ethics and lobbying laws by empowering his Ethics Commission an increase in power.</p>
<p>The Ethics Commission would get greater enforcement authority and attorney  general’s ability to investigate and enforce the laws would be strengthened,  including wire-tapping ability and the power to convene statewide grand juries.</p>
<p>What the hell is going on here?</p>
<p>Who is getting appointed and elected?</p>
<p>The last two speakers of the House Tom Finneran and Charles Flaherty committed and were convicted felons.   No Time Served.</p>
<p>The  governors 13 member Task Force on Public Integrity  all signed the report  which can be found by <a title="Task Force on Public Integrity " href="http://www.mass.gov/Agov3/docs/TaskForceFinalReport.pdf" target="_blank">clicking here</a>.</p>
<p>Without getting to high up on the soap box so no one can actually hear me. do any of you really think this can be fixed by the inside out?  There will never be full transparency people this is Massachusetts politics and it stinks to the highest of heavens.</p>
<p>Question is when are we going to follow our forefathers and stop this madness.</p>
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		<title>Sal DiMasi &#8211; Ethics Panel Forces Compliance</title>
		<link>http://massgovscandals.com/2008/sal-dimasi-boston-ethicsviolations/</link>
		<comments>http://massgovscandals.com/2008/sal-dimasi-boston-ethicsviolations/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2008 08:28:17 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Boston Globe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mass Gov Corruption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Political Corruption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sal DiMasi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deval Patrick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HOUSE SPEAKER]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi is refusing to comply with a demand for records from the state Ethics Commission in its conflict-of-interest investigation, leading to a secretive legal showdown that has yet to be resolved, according to officials familiar with the matter.]]></description>
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<h1>DiMasi refuses to provide records</h1>
<h2>Ethics panel files motion to force his compliance</h2>
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<div id="articleBodyImageH"><img title="House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi (left) stood with Governor Deval Patrick and Senate President Therese Murray in March." src="http://cache.boston.com/resize/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2008/11/02/1225684620_4047/539w.jpg" border="0" alt="House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi (left) stood with Governor Deval Patrick and Senate President Therese Murray in March." width="539" height="456" /> House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi (left) stood with Governor Deval Patrick and Senate President Therese Murray in March. (Suzanne Kreiter/ Globe Staff)</div>
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<div class="utility"><span id="byline"> By          Andrea Estes and Stephen Kurkjian </span> <span id="dateline"> Globe Staff And Globe Correspondent                      <span class="listPipe">/</span> November 3, 2008 </span></p>
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<p>House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi is refusing to comply with a demand for records from the state Ethics Commission in its conflict-of-interest investigation, leading to a secretive legal showdown that has yet to be resolved, according to officials familiar with the matter.</p>
<p>After DiMasi rebuffed the Ethics Commission and refused to furnish requested documents, lawyers representing the panel filed a motion on Oct. 21 in Suffolk Superior Court to force him to comply, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.</p>
<p>The motion, which is pending before Judge Geraldine Hines, was filed under DiMasi&#8217;s name but was later changed to John Doe, a court official said. Specifically what records the commission&#8217;s investigators are seeking from DiMasi and his reasons for not complying could not be learned. All of the court documents have been shielded from public view by court orders.</p>
<p>DiMasi spokesman David Guarino declined to comment on the speaker&#8217;s refusal to cooperate, saying, &#8220;The law is very clear: Anything that may or may not be before the Ethics Commission is confidential and there are penalties for anyone who violates that, so we have no comment.&#8221;</p>
<p>As DiMasi was spurning the ethics panel, his personal accountant, Richard Vitale, unsuccessfully attempted to quash a state grand jury subpoena last week for e-mail records, according to another court official briefed on the matter. The rejection of his motion by a Suffolk Superior Court judge means he will be required to comply with the subpoena and produce the e-mails. Those court proceedings also are not public because of grand jury secrecy rules.</p>
<p>The dual investigations &#8211; the Ethics Commission and state Attorney General Martha Coakley&#8217;s grand jury &#8211; are attempting to detail variations on a similar theme: the circumstances of payments made to a close cadre of DiMasi friends from entities seeking to win state contracts or influence legislation on Beacon Hill.</p>
<p>The private legal maneuvering continued last week even as Beacon Hill was publicly rocked by separate allegations in the Legislature, with the arrest of state Senator Dianne Wilkerson on federal bribery charges.</p>
<p>This is not the first time DiMasi has tried to fend off an Ethics Commission inquiry. In 1994, when he was House chairman of the Judiciary Committee, he won a Supreme Judicial Court case in which he challenged the legality of the commission&#8217;s demand for his records relating to $700 worth of meals, golfing, and entertainment he had accepted from a lobbyist over the two previous years.</p>
<p>This time around, the political stakes are much higher for DiMasi, who is the highest-ranking member of the House and one of the most powerful elected officials in state government. The demand for records from the Ethics Commission came in the form of a summons, which has the same legal effect as a subpoena. If he loses his challenge of the summons, and still refuses to comply, he could be held in contempt of court, according to state law.</p></div>
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<p>&#8220;It would be a cause for concern,&#8221; said House minority leader Brad Jones, of North Reading, when asked to comment on DiMasi&#8217;s refusal to cooperate.</p>
<p>One DiMasi backer expressed similar sentiments, but insisted on anonymity because the representative remains a loyal DiMasi ally.</p>
<p>&#8220;I do believe it will raise questions among the members about why he isn&#8217;t cooperating,&#8221; the representative said.</p>
<p>The Ethics Commission is looking into multimillion-dollar state contracts awarded to a software company, Cognos ULC, in 2006 and 2007. Cognos and an independent sales agent paid some of DiMasi&#8217;s friends and business associates more than $2 million while the software firm was pressing for lucrative state business. DiMasi had been actively pushing other state officials for the exact kind of performance management software that Cognos produces.</p>
<p>One of those friends was Vitale, who was given payments totaling $600,000 by the Cognos sales agent &#8211; in two lump sums after Cognos won state contracts. As he was working for Cognos, Vitale had extended DiMasi a highly unusual $250,000 revolving line of credit, secured by a third mortgage on DiMasi&#8217;s North End condominium. After the Globe reported the existence of the loan in May, DiMasi paid it back, Vitale was dismissed from the Charlestown accounting firm that bore his name, and the Ethics Commission launched its probe.</p>
<p>Vitale is also a central figure in the grand jury investigation headed by the attorney general, officials have previously told the Globe. That inquiry has begun by reviewing Vitale&#8217;s work on behalf of an association of ticket brokers pushing to gut antiscalping laws on Beacon Hill. Vitale was secretly paid $60,000 by the association a year after Vitale was extending DiMasi the loan.</p>
<p>The scalping measure easily passed the House, though it was bottled up in the Senate.</p>
<p>Vitale&#8217;s lawyer, Martin Weinberg, filed a motion in Suffolk Superior Court to quash a subpoena that asked for all of Vitale&#8217;s business e-mail records, according to a court official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The sealed motion went before Judge Carol Ball, who recused herself because she lives in DiMasi&#8217;s North End district, a court source said. It was shipped to Judge Charles Spurlock, who initially took the request under advisement, then ruled in favor of the attorney general on Friday, the court official said.</p>
<p>Weinberg refused to discuss the case, but issued the following statement: &#8220;Innocent people get investigated by law enforcement. Richard Vitale violated no laws. He is a successful businessman, consultant, and professional with a wide range of prominent clients. Any payments he has ever received from any client were received in full conformity with all ethical, regulatory and legal standards.&#8221;</p>
<p>Richard Nicolazzo, a spokesman for the accounting firm Vitale Caturano, where Vitale worked before he was forced to resign this year amid the ticket-broker controversy, said the company is cooperating with investigators but declined to say what documents, if any, had been provided.</p></div>
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<p>In addition, two State Police officers visited the company&#8217;s Charlestown headquarters last week in search of tapes from the security cameras in the building&#8217;s underground garage, according to an executive familiar with the company. But the troopers left empty-handed after being told the cameras had been installed earlier this year and the tapes were maintained for only short periods of time before being reused, the executive said.</p>
<p>The Globe previously reported that the Ethics Commission and Coakley&#8217;s office are two of the five agencies looking into the money that some of DiMasi&#8217;s friends and business associates received from groups with business interests on Beacon Hill. The FBI has also made initial inquiries, according to state and federal sources. And Secretary of State William F. Galvin has been investigating whether Vitale and two other friends of DiMasi&#8217;s received lobbying fees without reporting them, as required by state law.</p>
<p>Inspector General Gregory Sullivan has been investigating the circumstances surrounding the awarding of two major Cognos contracts &#8211; a $4.5 million contract with the education department in 2006 and a $13 million technology contract with the state&#8217;s Executive Office for Administration &amp; Finance. The latter contract was revoked after a scathing inspector general report, and the money was returned to the state.</p>
<p>DiMasi has denied steering any contracts to Cognos, and said he didn&#8217;t know his friends were receiving any payments.</p>
<p>Though the contracts were awarded by executive agencies, they required special funding from the Legislature. Former Cognos employees and state officials have said that Joseph Lally, a former company vice president turned independent sales broker, bragged that he was friends with DiMasi and could have money added to the budget for the software.</p>
<p>Vitale and Lally were not the only ones who benefited from the Cognos deals. Steven J. Topazio, a criminal defense lawyer who shares office space with DiMasi, received a $5,000-a-month retainer from Cognos for two years. Topazio has not responded to requests for comments. And lobbyist Richard McDonough, a longtime DiMasi associate and Cognos&#8217;s lobbyist, received $1.45 million from Cognos and Lally, $1.1 million of which he failed to report to state regulators, according to the Inspector General. McDonough has denied violating any lobbying laws.</p>
<p><em>Andrea Estes can be reached at <a href="mailto:estes@globe.com">estes@globe.com</a>. Globe staff writer John A. Ellement contributed to this report.</em><img class="storyend" src="http://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/File-Based_Image_Resource/dingbat_story_end_icon.gif" border="0" alt="" width="6" height="8" /></p>
<div class="copyright">© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.</div>
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