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Home Front: Politix |
N.J. senator had no-work job |
2006-09-19 |
![]() Bryant, a Democrat, was the sole subject of the report released Monday. He did not return calls seeking comment, and did not show up to an event he was expected to attend on Monday at a college near Newark. Herbert J. Stern, a former federal prosecutor and judge, was appointed to investigate the university in December after the school admitted overbilling Medicaid by more than $5 million. A previous report he issued suggested losses from fraud and abuse there could exceed $243 million. The report said Bryant was employed at the university's School of Osteopathic Medicine from March 2003 until February 2006 and that during that time, the school's state allocation skyrocketed. According to the report, Bryant helped deliver a total of $12.8 million over the three years — up from $2.8 million per year before the school created a job for him. In 2003, the osteopathic school created a position for Bryant and did not advertise it publicly, the report found. John Crosbie, an official at the school, told investigators that Bryant was hired only for his "political juice." |
Posted by:Fred |
#9 When a New Orleans newspaper features you on a story on out of state corruption, you know you're corrupt... |
Posted by: tu3031 2006-09-19 20:04 |
#8 Being a senator is a no-work job. |
Posted by: DoDo 2006-09-19 19:23 |
#7 New Jersey, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the State Legislature. Her five hundred year mission: to exploit strange new sources of wealth. To seek out new marks and new taxpayers. To boldly loot where no politician has stolen before. |
Posted by: Nimble Spemble 2006-09-19 17:43 |
#6 Situation in Tallahassee at FAMU had a booster giving a cool million to the school for an eminent professor chair. The state matched the donors million. (2 million okay, stay with me here) The donor is a Memphis lawyer who borrowed all money at little more than prime. At the time 5 percentum. Donor is tapped to be the eminent professor! Pay is $100,000 per annum. :> Life is good, especially since an eminent professor I will leave the ROI as an exercise. |
Posted by: 6 2006-09-19 17:34 |
#5 Personally, I blame Toll Roads. These donks get their corruption training from Toll Commissions. Chicago and Cook County, IL can't be far behind NJ. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2006-09-19 10:13 |
#4 Think of it this way; New Jersey has only one way to go....up. |
Posted by: wxjames 2006-09-19 09:58 |
#3 NJ politicians are beyond absurd in their abuse of the system. The machine is so entrenched and it has happened so often on both sides of the aisle I'm not so sure anyone cares anymore other than federal prosecuters. It's certainly a sad state of affairs. |
Posted by: JerseyMike 2006-09-19 08:10 |
#2 And he did good, too. Invested: $35,000 per year for influence. Apparent influence returned: $10,000,000 Return on investment: 28,571 percent. Any free-entrprise guy would applaud that! I even bet that beats Hillary's investments in the '90's. Illegal, you say? Well ..... could be. |
Posted by: Bobby 2006-09-19 07:00 |
#1 and that during that time, the school's state allocation skyrocketed Bryant was hired only for his "political juice." And a Demo-donk to boot. What an amazing surprise. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2006-09-19 00:47 |