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A Cincinnati Council Member's Situation Touches on a Number of Important Ethics Issues

There is a situation involving a Cincinnati council member that touches on many important government ethics issues, which I will deal with it in multiple blog posts over the next couple of days. In this post, I will set out the basic facts and the issues.

An upcoming Supreme Court appeal holds interest for government ethics

Today's NY Times has an interesting article on the "honest-services fraud" statute: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/07/us/07honest.html?_r=1&scp=5&sq=joun%2… (URL may require subscription) [Quote]: It has become an important tool for federal prosecutors, who used it successfully against the lobbyist Jack Abramoff and many of his associates. It is an element of the cases against former Gov.

Public Servants Should Not Take Action Against Those Who File Non-Frivolous Ethics Complaints Against Them

When a congressman goes after a lawyer whose organization filed an ethics complaint against him (in his capacity as Colorado's secretary of state), you know he is more interested in getting even than he is in the public interest. Getting even, however, is not what public servants should be doing.

The Death of an Ethical Administrator

It's good to see that, upon his death, attention is being given to the life of Donald C. Alexander, the IRS Commissioner who stood up to President Nixon at the end of Nixon's time in office.

According to the New York Times obituary, among Alexander's accomplishments was disbanding the Special Services Staff of the IRS, which had been investigating Nixon's critics. Alexander said he did it because "political or social views, 'extremist' or otherwise, are irrelevant to taxation."