Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court redefined the federal bribery statute after it reversed a lower court’s opinion in an appeal filed by a former Indiana mayor who’d been convicted of bribery after he accepted $13,000 from a local towing company after steering a city garbage truck contract to that business. The court’s ruling means the federal statute will still criminalize quid pro quo bribery, but won’t extend to cover gratuities — which are payments made in recognition of actions a state or local official has already taken or has committed to take, without any quid pro quo agreement in place.
Go to prison for an obvious crime, but then get some people also on the take to declare the crime a non- crime, thus letting the criminals walk. The fix is obviously afoot, got it.
A largely unasked question is becoming glaring: Is Illinois doing all it should to use artificial intelligence to make government cost less and work better? So far, the evidence says no.
Go to prison for an obvious crime, but then get some people also on the take to declare the crime a non- crime, thus letting the criminals walk. The fix is obviously afoot, got it.