College Guide

Blog

May 11, 2011 8:39 PM Quid Pro Quo at Old Dominion

By Daniel Luzer

A Virginia state legislator, Republican Phillip Hamilton, apparently used his job to give half a million dollars to set up the Center for Teacher Quality and Educational Leadership at Old Dominion University. In return, Hamilton became director of the center. The cushy part-time job paid him $40,000 a year.

According to a piece in Talking Points Memo by Ryan Reilly:

[Hamilton] was convicted Wednesday on one count of federal program bribery and one count of extortion under color of official right. Hamilton will face up to 10 years in prison on the bribery charge and up to 20 years for the extortion charge when he is sentenced on Aug. 12, the Justice Department said Wednesday.

The center apparently was supposed to “train teachers for success in urban school environments.”

“Bribery and extortion are never just the cost of doing business in government. Today’s guilty verdict should serve as a reminder to every legislator of the trust the public has in our elected officials,” Neil H. MacBride, the top federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal reports that, elsewhere in the boardrooms of the Republic, Federal Communications Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker will leave the agency to become the top lobbyist at Comcast. Four months ago she approved the cable giant’s controversial $13.75 billion purchase of NBC from General Electric.

This sort of behavior is entirely legal, though ethically it’s pretty damn similar to what Hamilton was doing. Baker will no doubt get paid more than $40,000 at her new job.

Daniel Luzer is the web editor of the Washington Monthly. Follow him on Twitter at @Daniel_Luzer.

Comments

  • ComradeAnon on May 12, 2011 6:15 PM:

    Cushy job? $40,000 a year? Dude, go big or go home.

  • Neil B on May 12, 2011 8:07 PM:

    Quid Pro Quo at Old Dominion - I was in the middle of that, helping Phil Hamilton's challenger Robin Abbott win that election for State House. Hamilton's budding problems turned off many voters, but Abbott worked real hard and connected with many citizens because of her work with the disabled and concern for consumer rights. She noted today that Hamilton's troubles were just sad, and that he had indeed done many things for handicapped people. I think his potential sentence, up to 30 years (however unlikely in practice) is excessive - yes what Hamilton did was wrong, but there is corruption all over Washington etc. and so many get away with it.

  • va blue on May 13, 2011 8:00 AM:

    $40K is pretty cushy for a PART TIME job. No?