Not all corruption is equal.
In a recent column, “A Kennedy Stirs Connecticut's Politics,” Kevin Rennie sideswiped departing Republican
leader Larry Cafero, who is to the Republican Party what Rocky Marciano was to
boxing, a hard slugger:
“Cafero got snagged in a 2012 federal investigation into campaign contributions and legislation. He was caught on video as an informant deposited $5,000 in cash into a refrigerator in Cafero's office. The money was converted into campaign contributions from straw donors, and the scheme was revealed last year during the criminal trial of a campaign aide to former Speaker of the House Christopher Donovan.
“What a mess Cafero leaves in his wake. His gelatinous, silent deputies, Reps. Themis Klarides and Vincent Candelora, have disgraced themselves beyond repair for failing to take a stand for honor during this long fiasco. They will wear Cafero's deep stains for however long they remain in public life.”
And the sins of the
political father shall be visited upon the heads of his political children – yea,
even to the tenth generation: “… gelatinous, silent deputies… have disgraced
themselves beyond repair… They will wear Cafero’s deep stains for however long
they remain in public life.”
And the stain that
has dishonored Cafero and his gelatinous deputies is … what exactly?
An “informant,” Ray
Soucy, tapped by the FBI as a singing canary, deposited an envelope containing
$5,000 in cash “into a refrigerator in Cafero’s office.” Apparently – though we
may never know for certain – Mr. Soucy was given the cash by the FBI and told –
though we may never know for certain – to make use of it to incriminate Mr.
Cafero. Mr. Soucy had earlier used money provided to him to incriminate several
associates of then Speaker of the House Chris Donovan. The net cast over the troubled waters by
the FBI snagged a few Donovan operatives, but the big fish, Mr. Donovan, got
away. Mr. Donovan’s campaign for the 5th District seat in the U.S.
House collapsed in ruins under the hammer blows of the FBI investigation.
The attempt to
ensnare Mr. Cafero failed when the Republican leader in the General Assembly
noticed Mr. Soucy stuffing the cash in the refrigerator and rejected the FBI
bagman’s fraudulent cash donation.
Speculation may and
usually does run wild at this point. Did Mr. Cafero know when the cash was
being stuffed in the fridge that Mr. Soucy was an FBI plant? Probably not,
because following Refrigeratorgate, Mr. Cafero did accept from Mr. Soucy tainted
donations in the form of checks that he apparently did not know were tainted.
The FBI later would advise Mr. Cafero he was not a target of their
investigation. Mr. Soucy, the FBI plant, was successful in delivering tainted
campaign funds to several of Mr. Donovan’s associates, some of whom were
convicted and sentenced to prison. But Mr. Donovan, his campaign for the U.S.
House in tatters, escaped the prison noose. The play of events suggests –
though, of course, we may never know for certain – that the sting operation, at
some point, may have been compromised. In any case, the Big Fishes wriggled
free, and the FBI was satisfied with smaller fry. None of Mr. Cafero’s
gelatinous associates were arrested, very possibly because neither Reps. Themis
Klarides nor Vincent Candelora had accepted tainted campaign donations.
Never-the-less, the
two targets of Mr. Rennie’s outrage, Ms. Klarides and Mr. Candelora, are not
merely gelatinous; they “have disgraced themselves beyond repair; they are
dishonorable; they will “wear Cafero's deep stains for however long they remain
in public life.”
So says Connecticut’s
equivalent of Nathanial Hawthorne’s the Reverend Master Dimmesdale, Hester
Prynne’s godly pastor in the Scarlet
Letter. The Reverend Dimmesdale was a secret sinner always in good odor
with his flock:
'People say,' said another, 'that, her godly pastor, takes it very
grievously to his heart that such a scandal has come upon his
congregation."
In any partisan
commentary that has pretentions to non-partisanship, fairness equates to equal
flailing. If you whip a Republican who richly deserves the whipping – say, a
felonious governor – you must find a Democrat to whip, so that the pans of your
justice scale will be evenly balanced. If you whip a Democratic Speaker of the
House, you must find on the Republican side someone equally odious you must
flail. And the weight of the accusation must appear to be equivalent – even
when the justice pans bear different weights.
There is no indication
– NONE – that Ms. Klarides deserves the letter “A” Mr. Rennie has pinned upon
her. Mr. Cafero’s honor was not damaged by an FBI canary whose cash campaign
contribution he rejected, as politely as possible. The sting operation is as
old as Adam and Eve: The serpent in the garden is God’s advocate sent upon the
earth, like the FBI, to seek the ruin of men’s souls. Sometimes the satanic
advocate, the tester of men, succeeds, sometimes not.
Both Mr. Donovan and
Mr. Cafero rejected the overtures of the FBI’s satanic advocate, Mr. Soucy,
once a union leader in Connecticut’s prison system. Because Mr. Soucy had co-operated with the FBI, he avoided jail
time. Donovangate should put Mr. Rennie
in mind of a remark made by Bill Buckley following a failed 1957 coup plot
against Indonesian strongman Sukarno: "The attempted assassination of
Sukarno last week,” Mr. Buckley wrote in National Review, “had all the earmarks
of a CIA operation. Everyone in the room was killed except Sukarno."
Measured by the
number of top dogs upon whom the shadow of the prison fell, the Donovan sting
operation was far from successful. Perhaps Mr. Rennie will devote one of his
columns to explaining why and then demand that the General Assembly create an
Inspector General Office to examine and prosecute future cases of corruption in
Connecticut, the state that regulates everything but itself.
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