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                    December 14, 2010
		Tom DeLay and moral equivalence in Travis County, Texas
Many Republicans regarded the prosecution of former U.S. House  Majority Leader Tom DeLay as a politically motivated witch hunt. After all, the  prosecution took place in Austin, Texas, located in the heart of Travis County:  It's a liberal bastion in an otherwise "red" state. DeLay is hated there.  
Interestingly, most people in Travis County probably would be  hard-pressed to explain exactly what DeLay did to deserve to be convicted of "money laundering" -- a crime one  associates with drug dealers and thugs. He's set to be sentenced later this  month, and faces decades in prison.
Countering charges of a politically motivated witch hunt,  DeLay's  prosecutors pointed out that they also had gone after  Democrats for ethics violations. 
One example: State Rep. Kino Flores, a veteran South Texas  politician who was convicted last October of four felony charges for  failing to fully disclose assets on ethics forms.
What exactly did Flores do? Nobody would have trouble  understanding that. Among other things, he ran a shake-down business. He was  known as "Mr. Ten Percent" for helping people get state  contracts -- and then demanding 10-percent of their profits. His victims faced  him during his trial.
As the Austin American-Statesman   reported:
Jesus Sifuentes, a Palmview truck driver, testified that Flores demanded — and he paid — Flores 10 percent of the money he made on a trucking contract with Transit Mix concrete company. He said Flores got him the job.He listed Flores on checks he wrote as a “consultant.”Over three years, those payments to Flores amounted to about $20,000, the witness said.When he objected to those payments, Flores demanded $60,000 — and he refused. He then lost the Transit Mix contract, his truck, his house and eventually his marriage, Sifuentes said.
That's just one of many sleazy dealings that were described at  Flores' trial. Yesterday, Flores was sentenced for his crimes: five years  of probation on four felony charges; and two years of probation on five  misdemeanor charges. He'd faced a $10,000 fine -- but was ordered to pay only  $1,000. He also was ordered to do 400 hours of community service.
Tom DeLay faces sentencing later this month. It will be  interesting to see if he also gets probation in Travis County.




