Detroit mayor pleads guilty in sex scandal, quits
By ED WHITE and COREY WILLIAMS
Associated Press
September 5, 2008
DETROIT (AP) -- Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was bounced from office Thursday in a deal with prosecutors that will send him to jail and put an end to the sex scandal that embarrassed this chronically struggling city and preoccupied its government for months.
The 38-year-old "Hip-Hop Mayor" who brought energy and excitement to City Hall when he took office in 2002 pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and will get four months behind bars.
The Democrat will also pay a $1 million fine and lose his license to practice law, and cannot run for any elected office for five years. His resignation will take effect in two weeks.
Kilpatrick was charged earlier this year with perjury and other offenses for denying he and his chief of staff had an affair. The scandal broke wide open in January with the release of a trove of lusty text messages between the two of them that appeared to contradict the mayor.
"I lied under oath," the beefy former college lineman said in court Thursday. His wife, Carlita, watched from the second row, occasionally closing her eyes.
Coming after eight months of turmoil and demands that Kilpatrick step down, the plea bargain was met with relief from politicians and ordinary Detroit residents alike. His departure could also remove a major embarrassment for Barack Obama and the Democrats in Michigan, a crucial battleground state in the presidential election.
"This gives us hope. He's not a king," said Monica Smith, 24, of Detroit, a college student who was on the courthouse steps. "This is a huge victory for the city of Detroit. He was not a role model. He was a thug. I'm definitely optimistic."
For the scandal's nearly eight months, Kilpatrick repeatedly said the nation's 11th-largest city hadn't missed a beat. He liked to say trash was still being picked up, snow was cleared, parks were open and the grass was cut.
But Detroit �" which has struggled for decades with high crime, unemployment and a shrinking population �" has been hurt mightily by the mortgage crisis and the downturn in the auto industry, faces a possible budget deficit of $65 million, and was recently declared one of America's "fastest-dying" cities by Forbes magazine.
Some business leaders said the city suffered while the criminal case hung over the mayor.
"I'm not sure there were lost projects. Things were put on hold," said Doug Rothwell, head of Detroit Renaissance, an economic development group. "For business people, if you don't know the environment, you don't invest. What you found was everything was put on pause. Hopefully we can get things off the pause button."
Richard E. Blouse, president of the Detroit Regional Chamber, said: "A lot of damage has been done to the region's image."
The scandal stems from a whistleblower lawsuit filed by two former police officers who accused Kilpatrick of retaliating against them for trying to investigate misconduct by the mayor and his security detail. Questioned under oath in 2004 and 2007, Kilpatrick repeatedly denied having an affair with his chief of staff, Christine Beatty.
>> Continued -- Page 1 2
Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
|