Indictment of this alleged corporate bagman William Riley, Jr., involved alleged violations of Miami's lobbyist disclosure ordinance.
Thanks to our all-Republican County Commission, in the throes of overdevelopment, St. Johns County does not require lobbyist registration, and it "shows.'"
Fun fact: Upon receiving a $25,000 bribe, Republican U.S. Rep. Richard Kelly put the money in his jacket pockets, asking the undercover FBI agents, "Does it show?"
Rep. Richard Kelly testified he planned to use the money to finance an investigation of the shady characters who bribed him. The jury and the Court of Appeals were unimpressed.
Rep. Richard Kelly served thirteen months in federal prison and retired to Montana.
Rep. Kelly was for fourteen (14) years a Pinellas and Pasco County, Florida Circuit Court Judge, after working as former federal prosecutor and as the Zephyrhills City Attorney. ribe from an FBI informant portraying an Arab shei, dodgy U.S. Congressman Richard Kelly, a University of Florida Law School graduate,
It was a brilliant federal prosecutor Roger Adelman, an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C., successfully prosecuted Congressman Richard Kelly, who was the only Republican lawmaker arrested in ABSCAM in 1980. Fun fact: I got to know the incomparable Mr. Adelman in 1987, when he was a partner at the Washington, D.C. office of the international corporate law firm of Kirkpatrick & Lockhart; Mr. Adelman was a Dartmouth College rowing team friend of, and later pro bono counsel, for my friend and mentor, former Anderson County, Tenn. DA James Nelson Ramsey. Mr. Adelman prosecuted President Reagan's assassin, John W. Hinckley, Jr. and also prosecuted drug-dealing mobsters in the "Pizza Connection" heroin case, involving heroin delivered in pizza boxes (a case that required some 500 wiretaps and listening devices: one application for one warrant for the surveillance required a thick notebook, establishing probable cause, beyond peradventure. Mr. Adelman died in 2015.
From The Real Deal real estate news:
Meet William Riley Jr., Alex Diaz de la Portilla’s alleged bagman
Lawyer-lobbyist-commercial broker was criminally charged alongside Miami commissioner
From left: William Riley Jr. and Alex Diaz de la Portilla (Getty, Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department)
Until last week, William Riley Jr. was a largely unknown land use lawyer representing a handful of developers and property owners before the city of Miami. He also hung his commercial real estate license with a brokerage linked to the mayors of Coral Gables and Hialeah.
On Thursday, following his arrest on bribery, money laundering and other charges alongside Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla, Riley became a household name in the annals of political scandals that have come to define Magic City corruption.
Riley allegedly funneled illegal payments and campaign contributions to Diaz de la Portilla in exchange for the city commissioner allegedly doing favors for his biggest clients, anti-vax power couple David and Leila Centner, according to a Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrest affidavit. The Centners have denied any wrongdoing.
Riley and his defense lawyer Kendall Coffey declined to respond to questions. In a previous statement, Coffey claimed the criminal charges against his client “reflect an unfortunate attempt to criminalize entirely legal lobbying and fundraising activities.”
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