[Other than a
weeklong series inspired by a visit to Newport’s historic mansion The Breakers, I
haven’t had the chance to write much in this space about my neighbor to the
south. Well, Little Rhody, that changes this week! Leading up to a special post
on some of my many wonderful RI colleagues!]
Three figures
who embody the small state’s outsized
history of corruption.
1)
Joseph
Bevilacqua: There’s a lot in that hyperlinked New York Times obituary for disgraced former State Majority Leader
and Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court Bevilacqua that illustrates the manifold varieties of corruption
to which he was allegedly linked before his resignation from the court. Aiding
and abetting a criminal for a share of the stolen goods. Officiating at the
wedding of an incarcerated mob boss’s chauffeur. Visiting an organized
crime-tied motel for illicit encounters with his secretary and others.
Longstanding friendships with numerous criminal leaders. The man was a Scorcese
film in the flesh. But I think there’s one particular line in that obituary
which reflects the statewide legacy of corruption to which Bevilacqua’s
individual example connects: “He is survived by … his son, State Senator John
J. Bevilacqua.” (To be very clear, I’m not suggesting that John was in any way
corrupt—but it’s nonetheless telling that the son of man who spent decades
under investigation for that variety of charges would be elected to the same
legislature in which his father had served.)
2)
Edward
DiPrete: DiPrete, a three-term Republican Governor of Rhode Island (from
1985 to 1991), is also the state’s first former governor to have served time in
jail; he pleaded
guilty in 1998 to 18 charges of bribery, extortion, and racketeering, largely
stemming from hundreds of thousands of dollars of state contracts he awarded
during his time as governor, and spent a year in prison. In DiPrete’s case
multi-generational family involvement in the political corruption was very much
at the heart of his situation, as he took the plea in exchange for leniency
toward his son Dennis, a co-defendant in the case who along with his father had
been under investigation since 1990. But the more representative aspects of the
DiPrete case are its close connection to the Rhode
Island construction industry, which has long been associated with organized
crime and political corruption at a level seemingly unmatched by any other
state. Given stories like that hyperlinked Providence
Journal article, it’s fair to ask whether any Rhode Island governor or
politician could entirely escape those ties; certainly the DiPretes did not.
3)
Buddy
Cianci: Born and raised in the Providence area, Cianci served as the city’s
mayor from 1975 until 1984, when he pleaded
nolo contendere to an assault
charge (ironically, the least corruption-related of any of the scandals
detailed in this post, although it was a contractor whom he was alleged to have
assaulted) and resigned the post. He then tried to run in the special election for
his successor, but a rule he had supported making it illegal for convicted
felons to hold public office in the state prohibited him from doing so. But
times and rules change, and in 1990
Cianci successfully ran for mayor of Providence once more, this time governing
from 1991 to 2002 (making him the city’s longest-serving mayor). In 2002 he was
running unopposed for a seventh consecutive term when he was convicted
on federal racketeering charges and sentenced to five years in prison,
leading to a second forced resignation. In any other state that would likely be
the end of the political story—but this is Rhode Island, and in 2014 Cianci ran
for mayor yet again! He lost that time, but nonetheless, I can’t think of a
more Rhode Island political moment than a two-time convicted felon running for
a third separate stint as mayor of the state’s capitol.
Last RI history
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Histories and stories from RI (or any state) you’d highlight?
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