Former NY Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver passes away at 77

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, one of the most powerful figures in state government for two decades before his conviction on corruption charges, has died in federal custody. He was 77.

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Silver died Monday, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. The person could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

The Manhattan Democrat, who told a judge he prayed he would not die in prison, had been serving a more than six-year sentence in federal prison.

He was convicted of using his clout in state government to benefit real estate developers, who rewarded Silver by referring lucrative business to his law firm.
Silver’s supporters have said he was in failing health recently and was susceptible to contracting COVID-19. He was furloughed for several days in May before federal authorities denied him home confinement.

Silver’s conviction ended a nearly four-decade career in the Assembly. He first won a seat representing Manhattan’s Lower East Side in 1976. Though he cut a low-key figure in the halls of the state Capitol, carefully parsing out comments in a baritone mumble, he was a consummate practitioner of Albany’s inside game.

He was elected Assembly speaker in 1994, a powerful position that put him on equal footing with the governor and state Senate leader when it came to making key decisions about annual budgets or major legislation.

In all, Silver served as speaker during the tenure of five New York governors, from Mario Cuomo to Andrew Cuomo.
He became known as an inscrutable and stubborn negotiator, blocking proposals so often he was sometimes called “Dr. No.” Some of his obstructionist reputation had to do with being the lone Democrat at the negotiating table during Republican Gov. George Pataki’s three terms, during which time the GOP also controlled the state Senate. But not all of it.
He helped scuttle former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg’s plan to locate a football stadium on Manhattan’s West Side. And he took the brunt of the blame for the collapse in 2008 of Bloomberg’s congestion-pricing plan for Manhattan, which would have charged electronic tolls for driving through the borough’s most highly trafficked neighborhoods.
The exasperated mayor put out a press release saying it “takes a special kind of cowardice” not to have lawmakers vote on the plan. Silver said he didn’t have the votes.
He survived an early tenure coup attempt and became adept at horse-trading to secure education funding, tenants rights legislation and other policies favored by Assembly Democrats. An Orthodox Jew, Silver was known to observe Sabbath even during the marathon negotiation sessions that preceded annual budget deadlines and the end of legislative sessions.
Over time, he became a symbol of Albany’s much-maligned opaque style of governance and, ultimately, a target of federal prosecutors.
Prosecutors accused Silver of trading his influence for money. In one instance, they argued that Silver persuaded a physician to refer asbestos cancer patients to his law firm so it could seek multimillion-dollar settlements from personal injury lawsuits, a secret arrangement that allowed him to collect about $3 million in referral fees. In return, prosecutors said he directed hundreds of thousands of dollars in state grants to a research center run by the doctor.
Silver’s lawyer argued that his client was entitled to accept payments for outside work.
His original 2015 conviction was tossed out by an appeals court after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that narrowed the definition of a corrupt act. He was convicted again at a second trial in 2018 tailored slightly to conform to the high court ruling.
But an appeals court ultimately threw out the conviction related to the asbestos cancer patients, citing a faulty instruction to the jury. Prosecutors decided not to retry him on that charge. In the part of his conviction that stuck, the court found that he had supported legislation that benefited real estate developers who were referring tax business to a law firm that employed him.
Silver gave up his leadership position following his arrest in January 2015 and lost his legislative seat upon his first conviction that November.
Silver joined a long list of state lawmakers, including other top leaders, who have been sentenced for crimes including bribery, conspiracy, tax evasion, fraud and racketeering. One of the leaders with whom he shared power during his time as speaker, Republican state Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, was convicted of extortion, wire fraud and bribery in a case that moved through the courts at roughly the same time as Silver’s case.
Silver begged for mercy at ahead of his sentencing in a letter to the judge.
“I pray I will not die in prison,” Silver wrote, saying he was “broken-hearted” that he damaged the trust people have in government.
Silver was the youngest of four children of Russian immigrants. His father ran a wholesale hardware store. As an adult, he and his wife had four children and lived in a lower Manhattan apartment blocks from his first home.
He received a bachelor’s degree from Yeshiva University and a law degree from Brooklyn Law School.


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29 Comments
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Jay
Jay
2 years ago

BDH. May his neshoma have an aliyah.

To all those saying he deserved it.. ask yourself why was he incarcerated when hundreds of violent criminals walk the streets freely in NYC. Rioters caused TWO BILLION dollars in damages during the George floyd protests across the country. Anybody was held accountable? Was there a country wide crackdown?? Ask yourself if this is a fair justice system.

Moishe
Moishe
2 years ago

BDE Shelly made some errors but did a lot of good for our community over the years.

Maven
Maven
2 years ago

B’D’E.

Yemach Shemo Vezicro former governor Cuomo. One more person died because of this evil Menuval Cuomo.

Trump was about to pardon Silver but Cuomo played dirty politics.

Zmedel@gmail.com
2 years ago

How cruel can a judge be to let Sheldon Silver die in prison?
He single handed did more for his community than anybody ever will.

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
2 years ago

very sad and perverted justice. Shame shame on the USA. Shame on our system
Every other cirminal got out on covid. Micheal cohen free man , all the blue collar oy very covid. Shelly a rich white politcan , he must die and rot in prison.

May his suffering at the end of his life take away any yesorim oif yena velt. May the Trebitch’s and rest of the family who suffered so much see no more tzar

Last edited 2 years ago by
Liam K. Nuj
Liam K. Nuj
2 years ago

ברוך דיין האמת

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
2 years ago

shame on the USA. Shame on our Justice system

Moe
Moe
2 years ago

BD”E

ShalomAlYisroel
ShalomAlYisroel
2 years ago

BDE. A good man.

ananymous
ananymous
2 years ago

Boruch Dayan HaEmes! Rest in Peace Shelly. May your memory be a Blessing for all. Speaker Silver did more his constituents than that piece of drek Cuomo.

Phineas
Phineas
2 years ago

His Neshama should have an aliyah. No one here is qualified to judge a life, especially through news articles.

As for people who complain about the justice system, it functions pretty close to how it was designed. Everyone has a reason for why one person or another should get mercy. Dovid HaMelech understood that “biyah Adom al Apola”. Human courts don’t judge a person’s whole cheshbon, just what’s in front of them.

Frum Jews should stop being surprised that frum people aren’t shown special consideration. No such consideration was promised, nor should it be expected. This judge has probably incarcerated hundreds of people who died in jail.

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
2 years ago

Well, let us not speak ill of the dead.

Emes
Emes
2 years ago

HON. SHELDON SILVER, A”H
husband of Rosa Silver
father of Eddie Silver, Janine Somerstein, Rookie Trebitsch
and Estie Fried

FUNERAL
Will take place on Wednesday, January 26th at 10 AM
at the Bialystoker Synagogue
7-11 Bialystoker Place
New York, NY 10002

Kevura will takre place in Beth Moses Cemetery in Farmingdale, NY

Phineas
Phineas
2 years ago

You can’t judge a life by only what you see in the news. HaMakon Yinacheim, and may his yisurin be a kapparah.

For those who think the justice system should have been more merciful, DOvid HaMelech says “u’vyad Adam al Apola”. You put yourself at the mercy of human judges, but they don’t advertise rachmonus. Frum Jews need to stop testing the system. It works as designed.

Triumpinwhitehouse
Triumpinwhitehouse
2 years ago

He will face the real judgement day.