Leland Wong gets 5 years in 'pay to play' corruption scandal
Wong was a Los Angeles commissioner for more than a decade. He used his influence during Mayor James Hahn's administration in seeking city deals for Evergreen, a Taiwan-based shipping company.
Al Seib, Los Angeles Times
A judge on Friday sentenced onetime Los Angeles city commissioner Leland Wong to five years in state prison, bringing an end to Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley's "pay to play" investigation of the administration of former Mayor James K. Hahn.
Wong, the son of Chinese immigrants who had served in the administrations of three Los Angeles mayors, was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs as his friends and family watched. The San Marino resident was found guilty in July on 14 felony counts, including bribery, conflict of interest, perjury and embezzlement.
Prosecutors accused Wong of receiving monthly payments of $5,000, deposited into an off-shore bank account, from Evergreen Marine Corp., a Taiwanese shipping firm that was hoping to negotiate a lucrative new lease at the Port of Los Angeles.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Johnson called prison an appropriate punishment for an experienced city commissioner who used duplicity to help Evergreen gain "extraordinary access to city officials." Wong, 51, hid his financial relationship with Evergreen from harbor and airport officials and told Evergreen there was nothing unlawful about his actions, the judge said.
"He was engaged in graft and corruption, pure and simple," Johnson said.
Attorney Janet I. Levine, who represents Wong, said her client planned to file an appeal of his conviction and would ask the state Court of Appeal to release him pending that action. Levine also described her client as a giving public servant who deserved probation, not a prison sentence.
"The man has given his all to the community," she said. "He's not a danger. And he can give a lot more back."
Wong's sentencing concludes Cooley's 5-year-old investigation of the Hahn administration, one that involved two grand juries and a joint effort with federal officials. Although the "pay to play" inquiry originally focused on the Hahn administration's handling of campaign contributions and city contracts, no charges were ever filed in that area.
"This ends it," said Jane Robison, spokeswoman for the district attorney's office.
The "pay to play" investigation also focused on Ted Stein, another onetime airport commissioner, who became the subject of allegations in 2003 that he had linked renewal of an airport contract to campaign contributions. Three different agencies -- the U.S. attorney's office, the district attorney's office and the city's Ethics Commission -- closed their investigations without filing charges or seeking any enforcement action against Stein.
- Hahn Names Lawyer to DWP Commission Feb 29, 2004
- Leland Wong gets 5 years in 'pay to play' corruption scandal Oct 11, 2008
- City Hall Insider Accused of Bribery Aug 24, 2006
