View Full Version : Ohio Official Resigns Amid Coin Scandal
bossradio93
05-28-2005, 03:50 AM
Ohio Official Resigns Amid Coin Scandal
Story, here (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050527/ap_on_re_us/coin_investment_19).
Yahoo! News/AP-May 27, 2005
Hollow
05-28-2005, 04:04 AM
http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/ap/20050527/capt.co10105270047.coin_investment_co101.jpg?x=180&y=270&sig=qsYnrlD2U1mfPz2MaoPDjg--
what the **** happened to his face?
Janice
05-28-2005, 10:22 AM
My husband and I saw this on the news, and he kept saying that he wants those rare coins. He's a coin collecter.
James"Thunder"Early
05-28-2005, 10:31 AM
At least he's not a Democrat
Janice
05-28-2005, 11:14 AM
At least he's not a Democrat
Like this guy.... :D
State Senator Under House Arrest in FBI's Sting
Four Charged With Taking Payoffs, Threatening to Kill Witnesses
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (May 28) - A judge ordered that a state senator be placed under house arrest Friday over the objections of prosecutors, who played a video of the lawmaker watching an undercover agent count out $10,000 and an audiotape of him threatening a potential witness.
The tapes were played at a bond hearing a day after Sen. John Ford was charged as part of a two-year FBI sting operation nicknamed "Tennessee Waltz." Ford is charged along with four other current and former state lawmakers with taking payoffs, but he alone is accused of threatening to kill witnesses.
U.S. Magistrate Diane Vescovo set bond at $20,000 and ordered Ford to be placed under house arrest until his trial. The lawmaker then slipped out the courthouse through a garage exit, avoiding the news media.
Prosecutors, saying Ford should remain in federal custody, appealed before the paperwork needed to release him could be processed, but a district court denied their request for a stay. A new hearing was scheduled for Tuesday before another federal judge, who could uphold Vescovo's decision, modify it or send Ford back to jail.
Ford is the brother of Harold Ford, who served 11 terms in Congress. His nephew, Rep. Harold Ford Jr., has served five terms in Congress and said Wednesday he would run in 2006 for the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Majority Leader Bill Frist.
The videotape shows John Ford across a desk from an undercover FBI agent laying down $100 bills for what U.S. Attorney Tim DiScenza said was a bribe. Ford leans over and the agent asks him if he is counting. Ford says, "I ain't trying to count. I trust you."
In a scratchy Feb. 3 audiotape, Ford tells an undercover informant that he owns a gun and could shoot someone. The informant can be heard laughing, which FBI agent Mark Jackson described as nervous laughter because "the threat sounded legitimate to him."
Jackson said Ford told an agent at a later meeting that "if he caught someone trying to set him up, he would shoot that person, kill them, so that there would be no witnesses."
Ford's attorney, Michael Scholl, suggested the lawmaker was joking with the agent.
"Things are said ... that are meant in a joking manner," Scholl said, adding that "Ford has a problem of running his mouth too much."
Ford was arrested Thursday as part of a sting operation in which undercover agents created a sham company named E-Cycle Management and posed as executives who asked lawmakers to introduce bills to help their business.
According to the indictments, the lawmakers and two other men took $92,000 to usher bills for E-Cycle through the Legislature. Ford is accused of taking $55,000 between August and April.
The other defendants were released Thursday without posting bond.
Ford can't leave the federal court district except to appear in Nashville before the state Senate Ethics Committee, which is investigating him on an array of unrelated allegations. Ford cannot attend regular sessions of the Legislature.
Over three decades in the Tennessee Senate, Ford has lost paternity lawsuits, given a political job to a girlfriend, used campaign money for his daughter's wedding and been successfully sued for sexual harassment. The Senate Ethics Committee and a federal grand jury are also investigating $429,000 Ford received from a consulting company with financial ties to the state's Medicaid program.
05/27/05 21:05 EDT
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.
theshark8777
05-28-2005, 11:20 AM
Like this guy.... :D
State Senator Under House Arrest in FBI's Sting
Four Charged With Taking Payoffs, Threatening to Kill Witnesses
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (May 28) - A judge ordered that a state senator be placed under house arrest Friday over the objections of prosecutors, who played a video of the lawmaker watching an undercover agent count out $10,000 and an audiotape of him threatening a potential witness.
The tapes were played at a bond hearing a day after Sen. John Ford was charged as part of a two-year FBI sting operation nicknamed "Tennessee Waltz." Ford is charged along with four other current and former state lawmakers with taking payoffs, but he alone is accused of threatening to kill witnesses.
U.S. Magistrate Diane Vescovo set bond at $20,000 and ordered Ford to be placed under house arrest until his trial. The lawmaker then slipped out the courthouse through a garage exit, avoiding the news media.
Prosecutors, saying Ford should remain in federal custody, appealed before the paperwork needed to release him could be processed, but a district court denied their request for a stay. A new hearing was scheduled for Tuesday before another federal judge, who could uphold Vescovo's decision, modify it or send Ford back to jail.
Ford is the brother of Harold Ford, who served 11 terms in Congress. His nephew, Rep. Harold Ford Jr., has served five terms in Congress and said Wednesday he would run in 2006 for the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Majority Leader Bill Frist.
The videotape shows John Ford across a desk from an undercover FBI agent laying down $100 bills for what U.S. Attorney Tim DiScenza said was a bribe. Ford leans over and the agent asks him if he is counting. Ford says, "I ain't trying to count. I trust you."
In a scratchy Feb. 3 audiotape, Ford tells an undercover informant that he owns a gun and could shoot someone. The informant can be heard laughing, which FBI agent Mark Jackson described as nervous laughter because "the threat sounded legitimate to him."
Jackson said Ford told an agent at a later meeting that "if he caught someone trying to set him up, he would shoot that person, kill them, so that there would be no witnesses."
Ford's attorney, Michael Scholl, suggested the lawmaker was joking with the agent.
"Things are said ... that are meant in a joking manner," Scholl said, adding that "Ford has a problem of running his mouth too much."
Ford was arrested Thursday as part of a sting operation in which undercover agents created a sham company named E-Cycle Management and posed as executives who asked lawmakers to introduce bills to help their business.
According to the indictments, the lawmakers and two other men took $92,000 to usher bills for E-Cycle through the Legislature. Ford is accused of taking $55,000 between August and April.
The other defendants were released Thursday without posting bond.
Ford can't leave the federal court district except to appear in Nashville before the state Senate Ethics Committee, which is investigating him on an array of unrelated allegations. Ford cannot attend regular sessions of the Legislature.
Over three decades in the Tennessee Senate, Ford has lost paternity lawsuits, given a political job to a girlfriend, used campaign money for his daughter's wedding and been successfully sued for sexual harassment. The Senate Ethics Committee and a federal grand jury are also investigating $429,000 Ford received from a consulting company with financial ties to the state's Medicaid program.
05/27/05 21:05 EDT
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.
At least he's not from Ohio.
Janice
05-28-2005, 11:21 AM
At least he's not from Ohio.
:lol: Do I have to find a misbehaving Democrat from Ohio now?
James"Thunder"Early
05-28-2005, 11:22 AM
Like this guy.... :D
State Senator Under House Arrest in FBI's Sting
Four Charged With Taking Payoffs, Threatening to Kill Witnesses
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (May 28) - A judge ordered that a state senator be placed under house arrest Friday over the objections of prosecutors, who played a video of the lawmaker watching an undercover agent count out $10,000 and an audiotape of him threatening a potential witness.
The tapes were played at a bond hearing a day after Sen. John Ford was charged as part of a two-year FBI sting operation nicknamed "Tennessee Waltz." Ford is charged along with four other current and former state lawmakers with taking payoffs, but he alone is accused of threatening to kill witnesses.
U.S. Magistrate Diane Vescovo set bond at $20,000 and ordered Ford to be placed under house arrest until his trial. The lawmaker then slipped out the courthouse through a garage exit, avoiding the news media.
Prosecutors, saying Ford should remain in federal custody, appealed before the paperwork needed to release him could be processed, but a district court denied their request for a stay. A new hearing was scheduled for Tuesday before another federal judge, who could uphold Vescovo's decision, modify it or send Ford back to jail.
Ford is the brother of Harold Ford, who served 11 terms in Congress. His nephew, Rep. Harold Ford Jr., has served five terms in Congress and said Wednesday he would run in 2006 for the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Majority Leader Bill Frist.
The videotape shows John Ford across a desk from an undercover FBI agent laying down $100 bills for what U.S. Attorney Tim DiScenza said was a bribe. Ford leans over and the agent asks him if he is counting. Ford says, "I ain't trying to count. I trust you."
In a scratchy Feb. 3 audiotape, Ford tells an undercover informant that he owns a gun and could shoot someone. The informant can be heard laughing, which FBI agent Mark Jackson described as nervous laughter because "the threat sounded legitimate to him."
Jackson said Ford told an agent at a later meeting that "if he caught someone trying to set him up, he would shoot that person, kill them, so that there would be no witnesses."
Ford's attorney, Michael Scholl, suggested the lawmaker was joking with the agent.
"Things are said ... that are meant in a joking manner," Scholl said, adding that "Ford has a problem of running his mouth too much."
Ford was arrested Thursday as part of a sting operation in which undercover agents created a sham company named E-Cycle Management and posed as executives who asked lawmakers to introduce bills to help their business.
According to the indictments, the lawmakers and two other men took $92,000 to usher bills for E-Cycle through the Legislature. Ford is accused of taking $55,000 between August and April.
The other defendants were released Thursday without posting bond.
Ford can't leave the federal court district except to appear in Nashville before the state Senate Ethics Committee, which is investigating him on an array of unrelated allegations. Ford cannot attend regular sessions of the Legislature.
Over three decades in the Tennessee Senate, Ford has lost paternity lawsuits, given a political job to a girlfriend, used campaign money for his daughter's wedding and been successfully sued for sexual harassment. The Senate Ethics Committee and a federal grand jury are also investigating $429,000 Ford received from a consulting company with financial ties to the state's Medicaid program.
05/27/05 21:05 EDT
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. 4 others we're arrested that day too, including a Republican State Senator ;)
Janice
05-28-2005, 11:25 AM
4 others we're arrested that day too, including a Republican State Senator ;)
I don't see that in the story, but if so, big deal. They got their big fish. Democratic Senator John Ford. What a crook!
James"Thunder"Early
05-28-2005, 11:29 AM
I don't see that in the story, but if so, big deal. They got their big fish. Democratic Senator John Ford. What a crook!It wasn't in this story, I saw it somewhere else. But, I'm not surprised at John Ford.
theshark8777
05-28-2005, 11:43 AM
:lol: Do I have to find a misbehaving Democrat from Ohio now?
Might be hard to find a democrat in Ohio...
Ohio8
05-30-2005, 12:14 PM
Tom Noe and Governor Bob Taft, et al are bums!!! I live in Ohio, so this really p*****s me off. They revoked Noe's passport, but they forgot to throw him in jail. I doubt he'll do any serious jail time, though. He'll undoubtedly do time in a Club Fed. :mad: :mad:
James"Thunder"Early
05-30-2005, 10:04 PM
In Tennessee John Ford resigned. it's not like he had a choice, but he's never been honest. a few months ago it was discovered he was living with two different women at the same time and had children by both!
Max Whittaker
05-30-2005, 10:34 PM
:lol: Do I have to find a misbehaving Democrat from Ohio now?
Oh, you could find misbehaving Democrats anywhere. You can find misbehaving Republicans anywhere, as well. It all comes with being a politician.
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