Verizon exec: Pa. lawmaker wanted $50M
A Verizon executive testified that former Pennsylvania state Sen. Vincent Fumo tried to shake him down for $50 million to avoid breaking up the company.
Daniel Whelan, at the time president of Verizon Pennsylvania, said that $15 million was to be deposited in a bank owned by Fumo's family, $2.5 million was to go to Fumo's law firm in fees and $15 million was to be a contribution to Citizens' Alliance for Better Neighborhoods, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
Fumo, a Philadelphia Democrat and once one of the most powerful state legislators in the state, is on trial in Philadelphia on federal corruption charges. He allegedly got the Citizens' Alliance to pay for many of his personal expenses.
The alleged Verizon shakedown is not part of the indictment. But prosecutors argued that Fumo's actions are relevant to their case.
Whelan said that he consulted two of the city's most prominent lawyers, who told him to find a way of working it out with the senator,
the newspaper reported.
At the time, Fumo backed a plan to split Verizon into wholesale and retail telephone companies.
UPI
- Will U.S.-Russia Summit Finally Begin 'Reset'?
- July 4: North Korea Test Fires Short Range Missiles
- Is Kyiv Preparing to Change Course on the Crimean Tatars?
- Putin’s Approach in Pikalevo Won’t Save That "Company Town"
- Moldova: Communists say to create best conditions for voting abro
- Transnistria's leader reluctant to resume talks with Chisinau
- Video: Sarah Palin Resigns as Alaska Governor
- EU suspends the Eastern Partnership Program, Swedish PM said
- Before the Summit, the U.S. Forgives Russia for Invading Georgia
- AMN: democratic force’s duty to save Moldova from Communists
- Analysis: Black Sea Rivalry
- Iraq: Saddam Hussein and another ex-senior officials sentenced to death by hanging
- The rise and fall of Saddam Hussein
- 10 most important world events of 2005
- Report: Saddam Hussein has been executed
- Deadly blast at checkpoint near Peshawar
- Saddam Hussein handed over to Iraqi authorities, say lawyers
- Hillary Clinton determined to win the White House
- Saddam Hussein's execution could be within next 48-36 hours
- John Edwards running for White House