Shifting Priorities
With many federal corruption cases reeling in the
face of Supreme Court setbacks, the 1990's also saw a major shift of federal
resources to combat violent crime. Public outcry about street violence
intensified through the mid-1990's as many state systems were recycling street
criminals through a revolving door of punishment-light plea deals. In response,
federal authorities, including the FBI, launched successful but
resource-intensive operations to take violent offenders off the streets by
charging them with federal crimes that led to much longer sentences in prison.
Politicians in the Bull's Eye
In 2001, the shattering atrocities of 9/11
transformed federal investigative priorities even more, dramatically catapulting
terrorism ahead of all other criminal priorities. Even as the Department of
Justice was moving rapidly to assign top prosecutors and agents to join the
legal war against terrorists, a different kind of devastation engulfed Wall
Street as the Enron era began to sink the confidence of the investing public. In
response, significant federal resources were allocated to staff new task forces
so that complex accounting fraud cases could be investigated and prosecuted with
unprecedented intensity and velocity. Inevitably, because public corruption
investigations are typically headed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
these deployments affected the availability of federal resources during the
early years of this decade.
In the last few years, however, with the addition of new
hires and the winding down of Enron-era prosecutions, corrupt politicians have
returned to the top of the FBI's most wanted targets. More than 600 agents,
roughly fifteen percent of its investigators, are committed to the battle
against corruption, resulting in a sixty percent increase in corruption
investigations since 2001. Meanwhile, the once-interred crime of theft of honest
services has re-emerged as a leading weapon in the battle against corruption.
After its Supreme Court erasure in 1987, 'theft of honest services' was restored
by an act of Congress in 1989. Following more than a decade of largely favorable
treatment by the courts, this increasingly favored prosecution tool does not
require proof of an 'explicit quid pro quo.' Instead, proof of a corrupt
relationship with a public official can establish criminality even without
demonstrating that a bribe was given in return for a specific public act.
Thus, with the FBI establishing public corruption as a top priority, and with
prosecutors armed with more flexible legal tools, last year, a nation-wide wave
of federal corruption cases reached from the Halls of Congress to more than five
hundred state and local officials. Meanwhile, influence peddlers like
super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff pled guilty to charges including 'theft of honest
services' that could generate still more leads concerning other suspects.
The Corruption Challenge
While the obvious consequences of a bribery scheme may
center on direct financial benefits to office holders that seem relatively
modest, the hidden costs of corruption are far greater. The often invisible harm
includes the increased costs and decreased quality that taxpayers receive when
kickbacks control who gets his way with contracts, zoning or key government
services. In extreme cases, communities face the risk that some may take their
business to other communities in order to avoid a muddy, slanted playing field
that penalizes honest companies.
Although public corruption damages an entire community, in contrast to other
crime problems, victims of bribery schemes rarely step forward due to concern
about political reprisals. And so it falls upon concerned citizens and business
leaders to advocate for action against public crooks. The challenges begin at
the ballot box by voting for leaders who emphasize integrity and demand tougher
anti-corruption laws. It is also important to create stronger tools for
prosecutors broadening criminal laws against improper conduct, and to impose
stricter controls on politicians, tightening financial disclosure and conflict
of interest rules. Along with stronger laws, a concerned community needs to
ensure that prosecutors, police and agents have the human and logistical
resources they need to succeed because corruption cases are among the most
difficult and time-consuming challenges for law enforcement. Also significant
can be the role of journalists in battling corruption. Because many people will
talk more readily in off-the-record phone calls to reporters than in an FBI
debriefing, the media will continue, at times, to be a first responder to leads
about sleaze. When media add their voices to the words of citizen leaders
demanding stronger action against corruption, law enforcement usually listens
even while it is not commenting. In all events, the key to overcoming any
concerns about a culture of corruption is to develop a culture of reform that is
dedicated and enduring. (Back to Kendall Coffey Home...)