Pubdate: Sat, 14 Apr 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Benjamin Weiser A FELON'S WELL-CONNECTED PATH TO CLEMENCY On Monday, Harvey Weinig, a 53- year-old lawyer, onetime idealist and convicted felon, is scheduled to walk out of federal prison in Fort Dix, N.J. Mr. Weinig, a not terribly well-known beneficiary of former President Bill Clinton's midnight clemency orders, had his sentence of 11 years cut by half. There to meet him will be Alice Morey, Mr. Weinig's wife and the tireless architect of his release. For Ms. Morey, a City University law professor who met her husband when they were both young law students interested in social justice, the sweet moment outside Fort Dix will conclude an exhausting personal campaign. Over several years, including a final six intense months, Ms. Morey enlisted the help of a cousin who had been a speechwriter for Mr. Clinton. She lobbied the president's former deputy chief of staff, whose children had gone to the same school as hers. And she hired a politically connected former Justice Department lawyer who put together a voluminous application detailing her family's anguish and what she believed was her husband's unduly harsh prison sentence for his part in a drug money laundering conspiracy. The effort to use unusual access to maximum advantage paid off last Jan. 20 when Mr. Clinton's final clemency orders were announced, and Mr. Weinig was on the list. Mr. Clinton's clemency decisions have ignited a set of Congressional hearings and one wide-ranging influence-peddling investigation. Those inquiries are examining whether money or votes played a role in the cases of everyone from Marc Rich, the fugitive financier, to several Hasidic men from Rockland County, N.Y. There is no evidence that Harvey Weinig's good fortune resulted from any global conspiracy or promise of money. The formal process, including affording his prosecutors the chance to respond, was followed. But how Ms. Morey and her husband ultimately prevailed is a powerful illustration of what critics in law enforcement and Congress say is flawed about the clemency process: the primacy of personal connections, the jockeying for the president's ear. No one ever argued that Mr. Weinig was innocent. He pleaded guilty in 1995 to being a member of a conspiracy that laundered $19 million in the proceeds of drug sales, money the authorities said was wired overseas and ended up in the hands of Colombian drug traffickers. He also pleaded guilty to failing to tell the authorities about a kidnapping which had been carried out by another defendant, one of his clients. "The prosecution of Harvey Weinig, probably more than most cases, sent a message that the law applies equally to everyone, regardless of their wealth, status and influence," said Lev L. Dassin, a former prosecutor in the case. "I think that President Clinton's actions perverted that message. "It's troubling because the pardon power is designed to correct injustices in the system," Mr. Dassin said, "and when it's used in such a glaring example of where it should not be, it undermines the credibility of the system." But Ms. Morey and her lawyer made a passionate argument that his sentence was much longer than any of his co-defendants. They do not deny that their success was due in no small part to the ability to turn friends into the best-positioned advocates. No one involved in the case, though, apologizes for how it all happened - how Ms. Morey's cousin, the White House speechwriter, buttonholed John D. Podesta, Mr. Clinton's chief of staff, while jogging in a Washington park to press her husband's case, or how Harold M. Ickes, a Clinton confidant, spoke directly to the president out of a sense of friendship for the parents whose children had gone to school with his. Mr. Podesta and Mr. Ickes explain their efforts by saying they were persuaded of the moral merits of the argument that Mr. Weinig's sentence was disproportionate to others imposed in the case. They believed, too, that his two sons were suffering grievously. For his part, Mr. Clinton would not comment, but his lawyer, David E. Kendall, said the former president had decided all the cases "on the merits as he saw them." Mr. Kendall said, "Exercise by the president of his constitutional clemency power is almost always controversial." All of those who advocated in the White House for Mr. Weinig did say they recognized the disquieting reality that not every deserving case received such personal attention. "If you look to the bigger questions, `Well, shouldn't everybody have this kind of situation looked at?' the answer is, in the ideal world, yes," Mr. Ickes said. "We're not in the ideal world. You know, some get attention and some don't. That's the way the world works. I'm not justifying it. I'm not applauding it. I felt fortunate to be in a position, when the president asked me about this, to be able to say I knew him, and that I hoped he would take a hard look." The Conviction Conspiracy to Launder Money for Drug Cartel In the story of Harvey Weinig's commutation, one thing was always unquestioned: his guilt. "Although I did not initiate this money laundering activity," Mr. Weinig told a federal judge while pleading guilty in 1995, "there is no avoiding the fact that I engaged in serious illegal conduct for which there is no excuse." At another point, he told the judge that "I eagerly and greedily shared in the proceeds of the transactions." To Mr. Weinig's family and friends, his confession was a shock. Born in Brooklyn, Mr. Weinig attended the Hofstra University School of Law, where he met his future wife. After his 1974 graduation, he became a teacher in Hofstra's poverty law clinic. Later, when he was in private practice in Manhattan, his friends said, he offered free legal help to neighbors, baby sitters, housekeepers, elevator operators, even his doorman. The law school dean at the time, Monroe H. Freedman, recalled of the couple, "They did stand out, both of them, in terms of being extremely nice, conscientious, bright people." But by 1994, Mr. Weinig had developed a dark side, prosecutors said. They charged that Mr. Weinig and his partner, Robert Hirsch, had become leaders of the "New York cell" of a sophisticated ring that laundered proceeds for Colombian drug lords. Prosecutors contended that Mr. Weinig and his partners helped facilitate, through a network of couriers, cash pickups of drug money from the street. The money was then delivered to a Citibank branch in the Bronx, wired overseas and sent to Colombia. At another point, prosecutors said that Mr. Weinig and his partners skimmed $2.4 million to keep for themselves. Late in 1994, the government arrested Mr. Weinig and 22 others, including a Hasidic rabbi from Brooklyn, a Bronx hospital worker and a New York police officer, in what it called one of the largest money laundering operations ever uncovered in the city. After contesting the charges for months, Mr. Weinig eventually pleaded guilty in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Sept. 21, 1995, agreeing to forfeit his law firm's assets and a house in Amagansett, N.Y. At the sentencing in March 1996, Mr. Weinig's lawyer contended that his client had been drawn into the illicit world and that he had played a marginal role. Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy was unmoved. "Nineteen million dollars in drugs is a lot of money; that much drugs is a lot of pain," Judge Duffy said. The judge said that if Mr. Weinig's sons were using the drugs, "you would be singing a different story, an entirely different song." Mr. Weinig received the highest sentence allowed: 11 years, 3 months. The StrategyLawyer Who Knows Justice Dept. About a year later, two friends of Ms. Morey were playing host at a dinner in their apartment in a turn-of-the-century building at 82nd Street and Broadway. The night's topic: how to free Harvey Weinig. The guests included prominent lawyers and scholars and some former prosecutors who had worked for the United States attorney's office that had convicted Mr. Weinig. The dinner was lovely, the prognosis grim. An appeal was not an option. Parole for the federal crime did not exist. And Harvey Weinig could not be described as a sympathetic victim of some kind of Rockefeller-era state law that imprisoned people for decades for merely possessing or dealing drugs. As one friend, Thomas J. Concannon, a longtime Legal Aid Society lawyer in Brooklyn, put it, "I remember being absolutely convinced that nothing could come of it, other than for all the anxious people who were rooting for Harvey and Alice to come to terms with it, almost like a death." On Feb. 28, 1997, John R. Wing, Mr. Weinig's lawyer, wrote to Mary Jo White, the United States attorney in Manhattan, in a last-ditch attempt for a reduced sentence. In a 34-page letter, he focused on the disparity in sentences, noting that virtually every other defendant received prison terms of three years or less, even probation. Ms. White's office rejected the request. Ms. Morey thus turned to the long-shot notion of clemency. "I had to do something," she said. A New York lawyer who was her friend advised her to hire a Washington lawyer, and she turned to Reid H. Weingarten, a former Justice Department attorney. Mr. Weingarten said he agreed to work on the case for very little money, moved in part by the trauma suffered by Mr. Weinig's two young sons. "I'm a single father," said Mr. Weingarten, 51, who is divorced. "I felt for the kids." Among lawyers in Washington, if one's reputation is often defined by the prominence of one's clients, Mr. Weingarten had reached elite status during the Clinton administration. By the end of last year, he had represented at least one client in almost every recent Washington legal skirmish. His clients included the secretary of commerce, Ronald H. Brown; the former secretary of agriculture, Mike Espy; and Yah Lin Trie and Pauline Kanchanalak, who were both charged in the Democratic National Committee campaign financing investigation. Mr. Weingarten had also worked for 10 years at the Justice Department as a senior trial lawyer in the Public Integrity Section, prosecuting major corruption cases. "I'm a department guy," he liked to say. "I grew up in the Justice Department." Among his closest friends is Eric H. Holder Jr., who was the deputy attorney general under Janet Reno. But he also knew the faceless bureaucrats, the career staff. "I mean, he's not a fixer. He's not one of those big lobbyist types," said Margaret C. Love, the Justice Department's top pardon lawyer from 1990 to 1997. "He's a good lawyer. He makes people in the department feel comfortable because he was there a long time. He knows the ropes." As a private lawyer, he had filed two clemency petitions during Republican administrations, winning one. Mr. Weingarten told Ms. Morey that they would more likely succeed pursuing a commutation - a sentence reduction - rather than a full pardon. Ms. Morey said she did not care. "We just wanted him home," she said. Mr. Weingarten began writing the petition in late 1999. He and Ms. Morey collected testimonials from dozens of friends, former colleagues, and therapists who had treated the couple's children. There were also letters from inmates and a counselor at Fort Dix. In the cover memorandum, Mr. Weingarten called Mr. Weinig a lawyer with a history of public service who "made a horrible, life-changing mistake." In early April 2000, Mr. Weingarten filed the thick petition with the pardon attorney's office. "I believed," Mr. Weingarten said, "and I believe today, that if someone reads this stuff, if someone looked at this, that we were going to win." Mr. Weingarten said he next called Mary Jo White, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York. Her deputy responded that Mr. Weinig did not deserve clemency. "It was 1,000 percent clear that they were going to oppose it," Mr. Weingarten said. "She was appalled that a lawyer would engage in this kind of behavior." Mr. Weingarten also made an appointment to see Roger C. Adams, the Justice Department's pardon attorney. The pardon attorney's office has responsibility for developing a formal recommendation to the president. Mr. Weingarten said he did not believe that Mr. Adams would reverse Ms. White's position. But Mr. Weingarten wanted to influence the final Justice Department document, so he made what he called a kind of "closing argument." Months later, though, the pardon attorney sent the president a report strongly opposed to clemency. A former White House aide described the report as all but dictated by Ms. White's office and transmitted without changes. Nonetheless, Mr. Weingarten pressed his case when and where he could on trips to the White House to Mr. Podesta; to Beth Nolan, the White House counsel; and to Bruce R. Lindsey, another White House lawyer. The Ties Friends and Family Lead to White House If Ms. Morey's hiring of Mr. Weingarten was a smart move, it was not her only one. And so as Mr. Clinton entered his final six months, she decided to take what she called "the political route." "My goal," she says, "was to find someone - or many people - who had enough of an `in' one way or another to get it to the president's attention." "What I said was, `I'm not asking you to ask your friend to push Clinton to sign this petition. I'm asking you to ask your friend to ask Clinton to read it and do what's right."' Ms. Morey and her husband were hardly major contributors to the president. They donated $500 to Mr. Clinton in 1991 and $50 to Hillary Rodham Clinton last year. But Ms. Morey was not without tools. David E. Dreyer, a cousin by marriage, was deputy White House communications director from 1993 to 1995, and then was a senior adviser to Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin. She made her pitch. Mr. Dreyer, who said he was fond of his cousin Alice and occasionally saw Mr. Weinig at bar mitzvahs and other family functions, responded affirmatively. His friendship with Mr. Podesta, the president's chief of staff, remained strong. Occasionally, they jogged together on a trail that Mr. Podesta, an aspiring marathoner, had marked off in Rock Creek Park. One day in July 2000, Mr. Dreyer, while visiting Mr. Podesta's office, gave him the cover memo from Mr. Weingarten's petition. "I asked him to take a look at it," Mr. Dreyer said, "and explained to him the relationship, and why this mattered to me." Mr. Podesta made no promises, Mr. Dreyer recalled, and asked if the petition had been sent to the pardon attorney and White House counsel. "He was certainly willing to look into it as an act of friendship," Mr. Dreyer said. "But he is a person who lives, works and acts by the book." When Mr. Dreyer raised the matter again last fall while the two were jogging, Mr. Podesta said not to expect any action for several months. Ms. Morey, meanwhile, also decided to approach another friend, Mr. Ickes, a former deputy chief of staff to Mr. Clinton, who knew the Weinig family through their children at the Ethical Culture Fieldston School in Manhattan. Mr. Ickes said the friendship was part of the reason he agreed to help. "I think what really drove it home to me was the disparity in the sentences," Mr. Ickes said. The case finally reached Mr. Clinton's desk. There was a presentation of 10 to 15 minutes. Mr. Podesta said that to him the issue was close, tilting perhaps 55 to 45 in favor of clemency, with some lawyers from the White House counsel's office opposed. "I think that people were aware of what he had done, but that ultimately, I think that based on the length of time he had served and based on a humanitarian plea, while a difficult case, it seemed like the right decision," said Mr. Podesta, who recommended clemency. Mr. Ickes said the president raised the case with him. "He asked me about it a couple of times," Mr. Ickes said. "I don't think he was aware of all of the nuances, so I told him my view of it. It was the sentencing issue. I said, `Look, this guy was sentenced. He pled guilty. And nobody is claiming that he's a saint.' " The family and Mr. Weingarten were jubilant when they received the news on Jan. 20. Mr. Weinig called from prison and cried when they told him. Some strongly attacked the commutation. Jeffrey Drubner, a former agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation who led the money laundering investigation of Mr. Weinig, said, "It was his greed and his poor judgment which landed him where he is. There's nothing so special about Harvey Weinig and his family that distinguishes them from any other family that's been broken apart because the father decides to go out and be a criminal." In reflection, those who advocated for Mr. Weinig in the White House and those who privately rooted back in New York concede there are inequities in a system in which not every deserving case reaches the president. "I understood that there were others similarly situated," Mr. Podesta said, "and that weighed on me, but this was the case in front of us." Thomas Concannon, Mr. Weinig's close friend and a veteran lawyer, said, "If his case didn't get to the attention of the president, then some other file in front of him on the desk - the one just before Harvey's - might have been the last one before he needed to get something to eat." At that point, Mr. Concannon added: "I wouldn't have wanted him to be thinking about the larger philosophical questions. I would rather have him touch what's right in front of him." - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew