Former NJ mayor gets 2 years in prison for taking $110,000 bribe

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Photo Source: WABC

NEWARK, NJ — The former mayor of the city of Passaic, New Jersey, was sentenced Tuesday to more than two years in prison for taking $110,000 in corrupt payments from developers doing business in the city.

Alex D. Blanco, 45, of Passaic, previously pleaded guilty to one count of soliciting and accepting corrupt payments in connection with City of Passaic business.

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

From 2010 through 2012, two developers were seeking to build eight low-income residential units on property they owned in Passaic. After the Passaic City council and the Passaic zoning board of adjustment granted approval, Blanco – who had been mayor since November 2008 – had an intermediary approach the developers in July 2011. The developers were told they were expected to provide a sizable payment to the mayor to ensure that the project would proceed.

A short time later, the Passaic City council approved the release of $216,400 in Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds to the developers, money that had been earmarked for the project. In early September 2011, Blanco arranged for a meeting with the developers at which he solicited and agreed to accept $75,000. The next day, he arranged for a meeting with one of the developers in Clifton, New Jersey, and asked for the corrupt payment in cash, but was told by the developer that the developer had brought signed, blank checks, which could be made out to payees of Blanco’s choosing. Blanco obtained those checks – totaling $65,000 – once the payee lines had been filled in, arranged for them to be cashed, and pocketed the cash proceeds.

About eight days later, Blanco arranged for another meeting in Passaic with one of the developers and solicited and accepted two additional checks totaling $40,000, proceeds of which were ultimately provided to Blanco in cash. In March 2012, Blanco accepted cash proceeds from an additional $5,000 check solicited on his behalf. Much of the $110,000 in corrupt payments was derived from the HUD monies that had been released to the developers in 2011.

In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Judge William J. Martini sentenced Blanco to three years of supervised release and ordered him to pay restitution of $110,000.

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