Abramoff Gets 6 Years in Prison
By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press,
March 29
Disgraced former lobbyist Jack Abramoff and a business partner were
sentenced Wednesday to five years and 10 months in federal prison, the minimum
they faced for fraud related to their 2000 purchase of the SunCruz Casinos gambling fleet.
Abramoff and Adam Kidan both pleaded guilty to conspiracy
and wire fraud, but they won't have to report to prison immediately.
The judge postponed their reporting date for at least 90 days
so the two can continue cooperating in a Washington corruption investigation and a Florida probe into the
killing of former SunCruz owner Konstantinos Boulis. Both deny roles in the killing.
Abramoff pleaded guilty in connection with the corruption probe but has yet to
be sentenced.
In court Wednesday, Abramoff said the fraud case was
"incredibly painful" for himself, his family and his friends.
"In the past two years I have started the process of
becoming a new man," he said.
U.S. District Judge Paul C. Huck also ordered them Wednesday
to pay restitution of more than $21 million.
Abramoff and Kidan admitted concocting a fake $23 million
wire transfer to make it appear they had made a large cash contribution to the
$147.5 million purchase of SunCruz Casinos. Based on that fake transfer,
lenders provided the pair with $60 million in financing.
The same week Abramoff pleaded guilty to the SunCruz fraud,
he entered guilty pleas to three federal charges as part of a wide-ranging
corruption probe that could involve up to 20 members of Congress and aides,
including former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas.
In addition to assisting in that investigation, Abramoff,
47, and Kidan, 41, are expected to give statements in the investigation into
the Feb.
6, 2001,
slaying of Boulis, who was gunned down at the wheel of his car amid a power
struggle over the gambling fleet. Three men face murder charges, including one
who worked for Kidan as a consultant at SunCruz and who allegedly has ties to New York's Gambino crime
family.
Both Abramoff and his partner Kidan have repeatedly denied
any role in or knowledge of the Boulis murder. But prosecutors say Kidan has
not been ruled out as a suspect and defense attorneys say Abramoff could
provide critical inside information about the dispute with Boulis, who also founded
the Miami Subs restaurant chain.
Ultimately, cooperation in those investigations could reduce
Abramoff's and Kidan's sentences.
Before the hearing, more than 260 people — including rabbis, military
officers and even a professional hockey referee — wrote letters on the men's
behalf asking the judge for leniency.