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Hog-Wild Corruption

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Former Arkansas State Rep. Micah Neal pled guilty last week to a felony charge of conspiring “with an Arkansas state senator to use their official positions to appropriate government money to certain nonprofits in exchange for bribes.”

Neal, who embraced graft his first month in office, received $38,000 in “legislating-around” money between 2013, when he entered the House, and 2015.

Court documents mention a number of seasoned conspirators, though not by name. There’s mysterious Senator A, who took Rep. Neal under his crooked wing.

Their scheme, reported Arkansas Business, “direct[ed] $600,000 in state GIF funds to the Northwest Arkansas Economic Development District, which then distributed it to two nonprofit entities.” Those two outfits — Entities A and B — then kicked back dough to Rep. Neal and Senator A through bagmen.*

Arkansas Business sorted out “the alphabet soup of unindicted people and entities.” It turns out Senator A, the ringleader, is someone we’ve encountered before: former State Senator Jon Woods.

Remember Issue 3, the dishonestly-worded 2014 constitutional amendment that weakened term limits (while telling voters it “established term limits”), imposed a gift ban so “tough” that now all legislators can get free meals from lobbyists anytime, and created an “Independent Citizens Commission” (a majority appointed by legislators) that gave legislators a 148 percent pay raise?

That was Woods’s.

His indictment appears imminent.

Meanwhile, Neal’s attorney extends to us his client’s wish that “this case does not overshadow all the good he did while serving as [a] representative.”

What good? The term limits scam.

Neal’s corruption doesn’t overshadow all he did as a legislator — it illuminates it.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

 

* Three additional conspirators were engaged in delivering the bribe money to Rep. Neal and Sen. Woods. In court papers, these bagmen were referred to as Person A (a lobbyist for Entity A), Person B (“the president of Entity B and a friend of Senator A”) and Person C (“a friend of Senator A and Person B”).


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Arkansas State Rep. Micah Neal, Independent Citizens Commission, Senator Jon Woods

 

7 replies on “Hog-Wild Corruption”

If my memory serves me correctly isn’t one of the Arkansas governors was Bill Clinton? And wasn’t there an investigation into the officials corruption?

That is why we started the Independent American Party and will not let our candidates accept money from lobbyists. We have a small but growing group of Arkansas who are putting together a party structure to get our candidates on the ballot.

Since the man discovered graft as soon as he entered the House, how could term limits stop him? Even if he had corrupt mentors, he was obviously not immune to temptation. The best thing that could have been done was not to elect him in the first place.

Term limits are not magic. They won’t prevent every corrupt act by people who enter the legislature already hell-bent on corruption and graft. But it is pretty obvious from this specific case that the scheme originated and depended on a state senator who had been in office for over a decade and was the leading opponent of term limits. 

Of course the other benefit if term limits is that those who are corrupt will have an expiration date and there will be a limit to their damage. 

You might want to read my follow-up about the rampant corruption taking place before term limits took effect and how those career pols set up the slush fund now at the center of the graft. 

https://thisiscommonsense.org////2017/01/11/politicians-bearing-gifs/

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