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http://chicagotribune.com/news/metro/chicago/article/0,2669,ART-50416,FF.html

Chicago Tribune
March 11, 2001

2 Jackson pals won clemency

Clinton cut activist's fraud sentence amid court appeal, pardoned
ex-lawyer

By Todd Lighty and Andrew Zajac
Tribune Staff Writers

Wielding clout to the last moments of President Bill Clinton's
term, Rev. Jesse Jackson successfully pressed for clemency for
two longtime supporters, including one whose looting of
government programs for the poor and for mentally handicapped
children was described by a judge as "evil itself."

A second Jackson ally pardoned by Clinton helped bring down a
bank, an insurance company and a newspaper, according to
prosecutors.

Both clemency requests went directly to the White House, skirting
the normal process that would allow federal prosecutors to weigh
in and possibly oppose the pleas for mercy.

Jackson said he pressed the case for Dorothy Rivers, a well-known
Chicago social activist convicted of stealing government funds
from social programs, because "she is contrite." But court
records indicate that Rivers has yet to acknowledge
responsibility for her crime and continued court appeals of her
5-year, 10-month sentence for fraud, theft and tax evasion even
as she applied for presidential mercy.

In a flurry of now-controversial orders in his last day in
office, Clinton slashed Rivers' sentence by 20 months and
pardoned John H. Bustamante, who pleaded guilty to fraud in 1993
for misspending a $275,000 loan. Clinton also commuted the
sentence of former U.S. Rep. Mel Reynolds, whose plea for
clemency was endorsed by Jackson and U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush
(D-Ill.), among others. The former president turned down
Jackson's request for clemency for his half-brother, Noah
Robinson, who is serving a life sentence for conspiracy to commit
murder.

In a recent interview, Jackson said he appealed to Clinton "back
in the fall sometime. ...We spent a lot of time together."

Jackson said all four individuals were worthy of clemency and
should not be lumped with political lightning rod pardons such as
that of fugitive billionaire Marc Rich.

"It never occurred to me that making appeals, to making
recommendations for eligible people, was a dirty thing until all
this mess came up," Jackson said. "This is what you do. You make
requests, then there's a process."

But in the cases of Rivers and Bustamante—as in 28 other of the
176 clemency orders issued by Clinton on Jan. 20—the process
omitted routine vetting by the Department of Justice.


Santa serving champagne

Court files in both Bustamante's and Rivers' cases paint vivid
portraits of respected community leaders using business and
government connections to embark on lengthy sprees of
self-enriching fraud and theft.

Rivers, known at one upscale boutique as "the Duchess," cut a
stylish figure as a fashion-conscious social activist, running
the Hyde Park-based Chicago Mental Health Foundation and the
Pritzker-Grinker School for children with behavioral disorders on
the South Side.

She also served on the Chicago Plan Commission, was active in the
local Democratic Party and had been a Jackson supporter since the
days of Operation Breadbasket, a predecessor of Jackson's
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition.

Rush joined Jackson in supporting a commutation for Rivers, who
is still a Rainbow/PUSH board member.

In defending efforts on Rivers' behalf, Jackson said, "She ain't
shot nobody. She ain't dealt in drugs. She ain't [running] a
house of prostitution. ... She's a good person who overspent a
grant or so."

But according to court records, Rivers' troubles went far beyond
overspending. She misappropriated at least $1.5 million in
government money over nine years, treating the coffers of her
school and foundation as her own personal bank account, according
to prosecutors.

Rivers even victimized her dying son by running up $70,000 in
charges on his credit card, prosecutors charged in court
proceedings.

Court records show that Rivers bought six fur coats, including a
$35,000 sable, and dropped $800 on a purse and $3,500 on a dress
with grant money she diverted.

Rivers spent nearly $125,000 in misappropriated funds on party
decorations, invitations, flowers and alcohol for political
fundraisers and soirees, according to government filings in the
case.

Among the most lavish and most talked-about events were Rivers'
New Year's Eve parties. Even the invitations were lavish: A Santa
Claus would arrive at guests' homes in a limousine to deliver the
invites along with glasses of chilled champagne.

In a move opposed by federal prosecutors, Rivers was convicted on
an unusual "Alford" plea in which she admitted the government had
enough evidence to prove guilt of fraud, theft and tax evasion
while still declaring her innocence.

The trial court judge, U.S. District Judge Robert W. Gettleman,
said it was only Rivers' age—she was 66 at the time —that kept
him from imposing a harsher sentence. He told Rivers he was
troubled by her refusal to accept responsibility for the crimes.

"The entire way this scheme was executed by you has yet to be
acknowledged by you," Gettleman said, according to transcripts.
"You had two organizations meant to serve the neediest of our
citizens that have been destroyed by this. To me, that's not the
appearance of evil, that's evil itself."

Rivers, now 69, appealed her 70-month sentence on the grounds
that it was too harsh, but lost. She later challenged her
conviction again, claiming ineffective assistance of counsel.

"I did not misappropriate any monies," Rivers wrote in October
1999 arguing that her case should be overturned. "If I had a
trial in this matter, I am positive I could substantiate that the
money the government claims was misappropriated was used for
proper purposes."

Gettleman rejected that argument in May 2000, telling Rivers her
lawyers did an outstanding job, and to accept responsibility for
her actions.

With her sentence reduction, Rivers is due to be released Oct. 1
from the Federal Correctional Institution in Downstate Pekin. She
did not reply to a written request for an interview. Her lawyer,
Walter Jones Jr., could not be reached for comment.

Even as her clemency plea made it to Clinton's desk, Rivers
continued to push for an appeal, despite Justice Department
administrative guidelines specifying that commutation requests
generally are not accepted "from persons who are presently
challenging their convictions or sentences through appeal or
other court proceeding."

The guideline is rooted in a belief that the president should
defer to the courts and that applicants should choose which
course they will take, said Margaret Love, who handled pardons
for the Justice Department from 1990 to 1997. "If somebody wants
to appeal, let them go down that path," Love said. "But you
shouldn't be going down two different paths at once."

Rivers' most recent appeal was denied Feb. 15, just weeks after
Clinton commuted her sentence.


Son's house and wedding

Bustamante enjoyed even loftier civic standing than Rivers.

A Republican, Bustamante was a power broker within both major
parties in Cleveland's black community for more than 30 years.

He founded the city's first minority-owned bank and owned the
Call and Post, an influential black weekly newspaper circulating
in Cleveland and Columbus.

A friend of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. from their student days
at Boston University, Bustamante also served as Jackson's
attorney for the better part of two decades. That role ended in
1993, when his law license was suspended for his fraud
conviction.

Bustamante also served as Jackson's spokesman when Operation PUSH
ran into financial trouble in the mid-1980s and explained
Jackson's personal finances when the civil rights minister filed
required disclosure statements in connection with runs for the
presidency in 1984 and 1988.

In 1988, the courtly, bespectacled Bustamante was forced out of
his position at First Bank N.A., the bank he founded, after
regulators questioned loose lending and management practices.

In 1990, he was charged in a 12-count indictment with
fraudulently obtaining almost $1 million from a Washington, D.C.,
insurance company.

Bustamante was found guilty on five of the counts, but a judge
threw out the conviction, saying that the jury had misunderstood
his instructions. Before a second trial, Bustamante pleaded
guilty to a single count of wire fraud for using a $275,000 loan
from the insurance company. The money, intended for oil
exploration, covered Bustamante's personal expenses, including
paying for a son's house and wedding.

In part because of various transactions with Bustamante business
interests, including the fraudulent loan, the insurer, Consumers
United Insurance Co. was placed in receivership in 1993,
according to court records.

Meanwhile, the Call and Post newspaper headed into what would
become a bankruptcy-inducing tailspin. Fight promoter Don King
purchased the paper at auction in 1998.

Prosecutors assailed Bustamante's business touch as "a five-year
cycle of fraudulent conduct."

"In a few short years, Bustamante's conduct has contributed to
the failure of a bank and the collapse of an insurance company
and he is on the verge of causing the demise of a newspaper,"
then-Assistant U.S. Atty. Dan Polster wrote in a presentencing
memo.

Jackson pointed to Bustamante's association with King and his
role as a minority business pioneer in justifying the pardon
appeal. Bustamante "helped bring Dr. King to Cleveland. ... John
wanted to found the [first] black bank in Cleveland. He's a very
erudite and distinguished gentleman. He was our lawyer for a long
time."

Bustamante, 71, could not be reached for comment.

But Bustamante's defense lawyer in his fraud case, Charles Clarke
of Cleveland, lauded the pardon as "a just result." He said
Bustamante was the victim of overzealous prosecution.

"John just decided to plead to one of the charges," Clarke said.
"He lost everything he had. John's highly respected in the black
community here."

Facing up to 5 years in prison, Bustamante was put on 5 years'
probation and ordered to pay back the $275,000 loan. According to
records, he had repaid only $7,168 at the time of his pardon. An
attorney for the insurance company says a civil judgment against
Bustamante remains in effect.

Among those who supported Bustamante's bid to clear his record
were former U.S. Rep. Louis Stokes (D-Ohio) and Rev. Otis Moss,
of Cleveland, a member of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition board.

Moss acknowledged talking with Jackson about the pardon. He
described Clinton's decision to grant it as "an expression of the
mercy of the Lord."

Both Bustamante and Rivers may have benefited from the expedited
path of their clemency appeals.

Under routine procedures, applications for presidential pardons
or commutations are sent for review to the Office of the Pardon
Attorney in the Justice Department. The review gives the
prosecutors who tried the case a chance to recommend whether
presidential mercy is justified.

Former pardon attorney Love said that bypassing Justice
Department review—while legal—"raises legitimate questions in the
public's mind about the fairness of the system and the
accessibility of the system to ordinary people."

Prosecutors who handled the Rivers and Bustamante cases said they
were not contacted for recommendations and they declined further
comment.

Jackson's only failure in clemency pitches was one for his
half-brother, who has been jailed since 1989. In that instance,
Jackson said, he was simply trying to help family. "I promised my
father on his dying bed that I would do my best to help my
brother."


Tribune staff writers Sabrina L. Miller and Monica Davey
contributed to this report.


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