Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 2004
Source: Charlotte Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2004 The Charlotte Observer
Contact:  http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78
Author: Anna Griffin, Raleigh Bureau

BALLANCE TO PLEAD GUILTY TO CHARGE

Longtime state legislator and former U.S. Rep. Frank Ballance plans to 
plead guilty to conspiring to commit mail fraud and to launder money, 
essentially admitting he used his political clout to funnel taxpayer money 
to himself, his son, his mother and his daughter.

Ballance, a 62-year-old Democrat, likely will serve at least three years in 
prison as part of a deal with federal and state prosecutors, his lawyer 
said. He could have spent 15 years behind bars had a jury found him guilty.

"With his health, he would have been looking at spending the rest of his 
life in prison," said Joseph Cheshire, his lawyer.

Ballance's son, a district judge, faces one misdemeanor count of failing to 
file a federal income tax return. He faces up to a year in prison, but 
should receive no more than house arrest under the agreement with prosecutors.

A 51-page indictment handed down by a federal grand jury in Raleigh 
Thursday accused the elder Ballance, a Warrenton lawyer who served in the 
N.C. General Assembly from 1982 until 2002, of a string of shady dealings 
going back a decade. Ballance resigned his congressional seat in June, 
citing health concerns rather than the ongoing federal and state 
investigation against him.

The heart of the government's case involves Ballance's connections to the 
John A. Hyman Memorial Youth Foundation. Ballance established the 
tax-exempt agency in 1985 to help combat drug and alcohol abuse in Halifax, 
Warren and Hertford counties. He was its chairman.

In 1994, Ballance began asking his fellow legislators to give the 
foundation state money. They agreed, budgeting a total of $2.3 million for 
the foundation between 1994 and last year.

Over that same time, the indictments say, the foundation began giving large 
amounts of money to agencies and businesses run by Ballance's family 
members and friends. Among the examples cited by prosecutors:

- - The Hyman Foundation gave $5,000 to a company run by Ballance's daughter 
for -computer work that had already been done by another business.

- - Garey Ballance, Ballance's 34-year-old son, made a down payment on a new 
Lincoln Navigator -- a luxury vehicle that he soon equipped with TV 
monitors, according to the indictment -- with $19,234 in Hyman Foundation 
grants to a youth group he ran. Gov. Jim Hunt appointed Garey Ballance to 
the bench; Garey Ballance also worked on Gov. Mike Easley's 2000 campaign.

- - The foundation paid $69,169 in rent to Ballance's church.

- - The foundation sent $32,500 to a local rural health agency that then 
passed the money on to a day care run by Ballance's mother, and later 
transferred $104,000 to her for a new foundation she was supposed to be 
starting. She returned that money after the state auditor began investigating.

Prosecutors say Ballance tried to hide such transactions from lawmakers by 
forging signatures, encouraging his employees to forge signatures and using 
his legislative post to keep state regulators from looking too deeply into 
the foundation's finances.

"Frank Ballance was an organizer, leader, manager and supervisor of 
criminal activity that involved five or more participants and was otherwise 
extensive," prosecutors said in the indictment.

Ballance and his lawyers had been negotiating with prosecutors for weeks, 
in part to cut down on the amount of time Ballance might serve in prison 
and also to avoid criminal charges against other family members, said 
Cheshire, his lawyer.

"Congressman Ballance feels like mistakes were made, he made them, and 
nobody else should pay for them," he said.

Cheshire did not dispute most of the details in the indictment. But he said 
he disagreed with prosecutors' portrayal of Ballance as someone who 
knowingly misused his public office for personal gain.

"I prefer to believe that Congressman Ballance was going too far too fast, 
doing far too many things and paying far too little attention," he said. "I 
don't believe this is some great fraudulent conspiracy."

In the General Assembly, Ballance was known as a champion of poor and black 
North Carolinians; he rose to become one of Senate leader Marc Basnight's 
closest aides. Ballance won a seat in Congress from northeastern North 
Carolina in 2002.

Ballance, who will surrender to the court today, was sitting in his 
dentist's chair Thursday afternoon when the indictment was released.

The Fall of Frank Ballance

Former U.S. Rep. Frank Ballance was indicted Thursday on one count of 
conspiracy to commit mail fraud and money laundering. POLITICAL BACKGROUND 
| A Warrenton lawyer who attended N.C. Central University, Ballance served 
in the N.C. House from 1982 to 1988. He won a seat in the N.C. Senate in 
1988 and rose to become one of the state's most influential Democrats. In 
2002, Ballance was elected to the U.S. House. He resigned in June citing 
his struggle with myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune disease that weakens 
muscles.

THE CHARGES - The 51-page indictment against him detailed a string of 
transactions involving a tax-exempt drug treatment program he founded and 
businesses and non-profits run by family members. Ballance's attorney says 
his client will plead guilty and expects to be sentenced to between three 
and five years in prison. Ballance is 62. His son, District Judge Garey 
Ballance, faces one misdemeanor charge of failing to file an income tax 
return in 2000.

What's Next for Ballance

Charged with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and money 
laundering, Frank Ballance is scheduled to appear in court today. His 
guilty plea could come later this year or early next year.
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