Birmingham Mayor on Trial
The mayor of Alabama’s largest city goes on trial today on federal bribery charges. Birmingham mayor Larry Langford is accused of accepting cash, clothes and jewelry in exchange for steering millions of dollars in county bond deals to an investment banker. Tanya Ott reports.
Larry Langford knows how to stir things up. The former TV-reporter-turned-politician is known for holding bible lessons in city hall. He once marched into a council meeting flanked by submachine gun-toting cops to unveil a “top secret financial plan”. The man knows how to make an entrance and an impression.
As mayor of a nearby town he gave every student who made the honor roll $100. Eric Guster is a local attorney who’s not involved in the mayor’s trial, but is video blogging about it.
“When you’re talking about families that are poor. And someone gives you $100 and actually spends time with your child – he was a hero for that small community.”
But prosecutors say when Langford was a Jefferson county commissioner he accepted $235,000 dollars in designer clothes, jewelry and cash from lobbyist Al LaPierre. In exchange, Langford allegedly steered millions of dollars in sewer bond deals to investment banker Bill Blount. Those bond deals have since gone south, and the county faces what would be the largest government bankruptcy in U.S. history.
“Let me say this to you. This is America. You can indict a ham sandwich in this country. If you take off the lettuce and tomato, anything can go to jail.”
In an interview recorded before the judge issued a gag order, Mayor Langford said he, LaPierre and Blount are long-time friends who often lent money to each other. He said they had a signed contract for a loan.
“If I did business with people I don’t know and they walked off with the money you say, ‘You should have gotten to know that person’. If I do business with people that I do know and have confidence in, you’re gonna say ‘Well, those are your friends. You shouldn’t do business with them’.”
Both LaPierre and Blount have pleaded guilty and will testify against Langford. Video blogging attorney Eric Guster says the defense will attack that testimony head-on.
“If a person has pled guilty to a sentence of four years versus 80 years or 100 years then that can influence them not to tell the truth and to kind of tell the government what they want to hear.”
Bill Blount and Al LaPierre are two of the most politically-connected Democrats in Alabama. Larry Langford is also a Democrat. The former U.S. attorney who indicted the trio was appointed by President George W. Bush. And Langford supporters say the prosecution is politically motivated.
This is the latest in a string of local political corruption cases. In recent years, more than a half-dozen Birmingham-area officials have gone to prison on charges ranging from obstruction of justice to bribery.
Jay Grinney is CEO of HealthSouth Corporation, the rehabilitation company that itself was the subject of a $3 billion accounting fraud. Grinney was brought in to fix the company’s image. And he’s a high profile figure leading the effort to clean up Birmingham, starting with Mayor Langford.
“He created these huge problems that are on the verge of bankrupting the county, you know, the indictments. And it’s inconceivable. That kind of leadership is detrimental to every single person who lives in this community.”
Again, Mayor Larry Langford.
“If Christ returned tomorrow morning, we’d be ready to put him in jail. In this city, people never look for good. They always look for adversity.”
If convicted, Larry Langford faces hundreds of years in prison. His trial is expected to last 2 weeks.
After Watergate, Congress curbed the presidency. Now, Trump is testing those limits
President Trump's efforts to cut federal programs and fire watchdogs are drawing attention to 1970s-era government reforms.
Are immigrants still welcome in Mayor Eric Adams’ New York City? We asked New Yorkers.
New York City's mayor has embraced a more conservative, less immigrant friendly stance. What does that mean for a city that's built it's identity on immigration?
Trump officials signal potential changes at NOAA, the weather and climate agency
Federal workers at the home agency for the National Weather Service are concerned about a potential overhaul by Trump officials focused on cutting government costs.
Hamas releases three Israeli hostages, the sixth group freed under a ceasefire deal
In a ceremony surrounded by masked Palestinian militants and rubble from the Gaza war, Hamas released three Israeli hostages holding U.S., Russian and Argentinian citizenships on Saturday.
A Valentine’s Day aurora may be visible in the skies of the northern U.S.
During Valentine's Day weekend, northern parts of America, including Maine, may have a chance of seeing an aurora. But space weather scientists warn that the chances of this happening are slim.
Federal judge blocks CFPB from laying off more employees
The ruling from a federal court in Washington, D.C., is a reprieve for CFPB staff who had been bracing for mass layoffs as early as Friday.