Bharara and the Moreland Commission: Federal Overstep or Legitimate Intervention?by Anna Jouravleva |
As
a reaction to widespread corruption in New York state government,
Governor Andrew Cuomo and Attorney General Eric Scheiderman appointed the
Moreland Commission to Investigate Public Corruption in July of last
year. The members of the Commission were deputy attorneys general with
broad powers to investigate violations of bribery, campaign finance,
lobbying and election laws. Governor Cuomo disbanded the
Moreland Commission last March, purportedly as part of a bargain to
pass stricter anticorruption laws made in a larger budget deal. Two
weeks later, the federal government stepped in, in a very public way. Preet Bharara,
the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, opened an
investigation into Cuomo’s decision to prematurely shut down the
Commission and openly questioned Cuomo’s justification for the decision. Last week, the New York Times reported that
subpoenas may have been served on the Commission's former counsel,
possibly to root out evidence of interference by the governor's office
in the workings of the Commission.
The
federal investigation raises an important question: how involved should
federal prosecutors be in corruption at the state and local level?http://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2014/05/23/bharara-and-the-moreland-commission-federal-overstep-or-legitimate-intervention/
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