Jury selection begins in Ed Mangano corruption trial in Nassau County

ByEyewitness News WABC logo
Monday, March 12, 2018
Corruption trial begins for former Nassau County Executive Mangano
The jury selection process begins Monday in the corruption trial of a former Nassau County Executive.

GARDEN CITY, Nassau County (WABC) -- The jury selection process began Monday in the corruption trial of former Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano.

Mangano is accused of taking bribes from a restaurant owner in exchange for business deals.

His wife and former Supervisor of Oyster Bay John Venditto are also being tried. All three have pleaded not guilty.

Opening statements are scheduled for March 12.

The trial is expected to last up to eight weeks.

Prosecutors say the Republican began engaging in corrupt acts within weeks of his election.

The indictment charges that Mangano and Venditto received bribes and kickbacks to help a Long Island businessman, Harendra Singh, obtain guaranteed loans. Linda Mangano, prosecutors said, was given a $100,000-a-year, no-show job at one of the Singh's restaurants, enabling her to make $450,000 while doing little besides tasting food. She was charged with obstruction of justice and making false statements for allegedly lying about the job to federal investigators.

Edward Mangano is also accused of accepting vacations and other gifts in exchange for his influence. The Manganos said they had a two-decade personal friendship with Singh, long before Mangano was elected, and that any gifts or favors between the families had nothing to do with his office.

"The Mangano family and the Singh family regularly interacted and socialized together," the lawyers wrote.

The case, announced publicly in 2016, is one in a string that federal prosecutors in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Albany have made against powerful politicians.

The indictments especially brought public attention to the former top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, Preet Bharara, who campaigned publicly for a need to clean up state politics.

Several of those federal prosecutions, though, have been troubled, especially after the Supreme Court issued rulings that narrowed the definition of public corruption.

Former Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno, a Republican, had his conviction overturned in a corruption case brought by federal prosecutors in Albany, and then won an acquittal at a retrial in 2014.

Former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Democrat prosecuted by Bharara in Manhattan, has his corruption conviction and a 12-year prison sentence overturned in July. A retrial is planned for the spring.

Jurors in Manhattan last week were deliberating in a bribery case against Joseph Percoco, who pleaded not guilty to accepting bribes while working as a top aide to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat.

Mangano's case is being handled by federal prosecutors on Long Island, overseen by newly appointed U.S. Attorney Richard Donoghue.

Prior to the trial's start, Mangano's lawyers unsuccessfully claimed selective prosecution.

Federal investigators had also looked into payments that Singh, the Long Island restaurateur, had made to Democratic New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.

As part of his own criminal case, Singh pleaded guilty to paying bribes to the mayor, in the form of campaign contributions, in an attempt to resolve a dispute with the city over his restaurant lease.

De Blasio was not prosecuted. He has denied taking any bribes and suggested Singh pleaded guilty only because he was desperate to get leniency for other corrupt acts.

In court papers, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Gatz said the two cases were different, partly because Mangano was accused of enriching himself personally, not simply accepting campaign cash.

Lawyers for Mangano say they won't pursue the issue at trial, but they requested broad latitude to ask Singh about his illegal conduct with de Blasio and his efforts to obtain a benefit by cooperating against the mayor.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report)

----------

* More Long Island news

* Send us a news tip

* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts