Former Bell Assistant City Manager Found Guilty in Corruption Case - East Idaho News
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Former Bell Assistant City Manager Found Guilty in Corruption Case

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GETTY BELL 121113?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1386782622561Lawrence K. Ho-Pool/Getty Images(LOS ANGELES) — On Monday, a jury found the former Assistant City Manager of Bell, Calif., guilty in a corruption scandal in which city officials paid themselves such outrageous salaries that the city almost went broke.

Former Assistant City Manager Angela Spaccia was found guilty of conspiracy and misappropriation of public funds, among other charges. Spaccia faces up to 17 years in prison.

In a news conference after the sentencing, District Attorney Jackie Lacey, referring to the collective theft by the city’s officials, said this had been the most significant corruption case her office had ever prosecuted. Bell’s former city officials, she said, had perpetrated what she called “grand theft by paycheck” amounting to $6 million.

In Bell, a city with a population of 35,000, one in four residents lives below the poverty line.

The scandal, described by the Los Angeles Times as “corruption on steroids,” first made headlines in 2010. But it began earlier, in 1988, when Robert Rizzo, then the town manager for Hesperia, Calif., got hired as the manager for Bell. According to the Los Angeles Times, Rizzo got the job in part because he had been willing to work for less money than other candidates.

Over time, according to prosecutors, Rizzo’s salary and benefits package ballooned to $12 million. He allegedly secured the cooperation of his fellow officials by offering them similarly rich rewards. The city’s former police chief, for example, got compensation of $457,000 a year. City council members each received $100,000.

The state of California brought suit in 2010, accusing Rizzo and other city leaders of plotting to enrich themselves and to conceal their compensation. Five former council members have since been convicted of fraud.

Rizzo eventually pleaded no contest to 69 charges, leaving Spaccia to stand trial alone.

Rizzo, who is scheduled to be sentenced this March, could face up to 12 years in prison. Separately he is being investigated for tax fraud charges by federal officials.

Rizzo’s attorney, James Spertus, tells ABC News, “Mr. Rizzo accepted responsibility and is trying to make things right, while Ms. Spaccia continues to deny responsibility for any wrongdoing and continues to blame others. Hopefully, the ultimate sentences in these cases will reflect these differences. Ms. Spaccia is far more deserving of punishment than Mr. Rizzo.”

So far, says Spertus, not one of the defendants has been asked to make restitution. “There have been no orders yet. It happens at sentencing, and Mr. Rizzo will try to make full restitution.”

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