Moore: RI Justice: Go After The Little Guy

Russell J. Moore, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Moore: RI Justice: Go After The Little Guy

Rhode Island is beginning to resemble a scary Kafkaesque state where massive corruption goes unattended, while smaller misdeeds get punished vehemently.

It’s hard not to have that reaction to the news of Rhode Island State Representative Joe Almeida’s arrest for allegedly misappropriating about $6,000 in campaign funds, given the fact that much larger misdeeds have been met with radio silence from the authorities.

Superfical Analysis

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Almeida’s arrest was met with predictable and superficial analysis on social media, talk radio, and throughout the state's coffee shops. Shallow statements like 'more corruption in the statehouse', and 'what a big surprise', and then the popular partisan refrain 'more Democratic corruption' have been the common statements in the wake of Almeida's arrest. 

But those types of sentiments overstate what Almeida is being accused and, and quite frankly, downplays the serious corruption, prosecuted and not prosecuted, that's plagued Rhode Island over the last several decades. It really begs the question as to whether or not Almeida is being scapegoated and prosecuted in order to satisfy the public’s yearning for justice.

Campaign Accounts

In fact, knowing how politicians use their campaign finance accounts, it's hard to get fed up over what Almeida has been accused of. State police investigators arrested Almeida on the premise that he couldn't prove where he spent his campaign funding over several months during 2012. 

Keep in mind, campaign contributions are not taxpayer money, and Almeida is not being accused of taking improper campaign donations. And in the grand scheme of things, $6,000 is nothing--Senators and Representatives routinely spend thousands at Rhode Island eateries. Legislators and general officers (Governor, Lieutenant Governor, etc.) are permitted by law to spend their campaign cash on things that are campaign related (even remotely related).

Almeida, a former police officer, who has made a name for himself at the statehouse as a champion of minority rights, is accused of merely failing to document how his money was spent--which is a felony, and seems like a heavy punishment. Sure, if Almeida did, in fact, use the money for reasons that those donations weren't intended for, that's an injustice, but it's certainly not public corruption and is no reason to put him in prison.

Not public corruption

Make no mistake about it: Almeida is not being accused of selling his public office for his own personal gain here. When former House Majority Leader Gerard Martineau pled guilty to selling bags to health care companies in exchange for blocking pharmacy freedom of choice bills, which were was an affront to the general public. The same was the case when former State Senator John Celona admitted to taking gifts in exchange for legislative favors. That's not what's being accused here.

It seems like Almeida would've been better of had he never even bothered to file the campaign finance reports at all, as that's been done by two members of current Providence City Council leadership with very little repercussions. Most likely, what Almeida is guilty of is being a horrific records keeper. That's not a good thing by any stretch of the imagination, but hardly a reason to throw someone into the hoosegow.

What's frustrating for people who monitor Rhode Island politics is the fact that a relatively small issue like Almeida's campaign records keeping results in a high profile arrest, yet the 38 studio's debacle has resulted in 0 arrests. The corruption at the RI Resource Recovery Center has resulted in 0 arrests, and the state of Rhode Island paid an extra million to investigate that matter. (On a federal level, the shenanigans by the hucksters in the finance industry resulted in 0 arrests). On those cases, the people of Rhode Island were literally burnt out of more than $100 million in each instance, and there has been no justice metered out.

Lack of justice

Further, the state legislature has refused to pass an ethics bill that would subject state legislators to the same ethics rules that the state's general officers, and mayors and other executives are subject to. Currently, the state code of ethics doesn't prevent state legislators from voting on bills that would directly benefit themselves or their families--let that sink in.

There's certainly a lack of justice in the state of Rhode Island with respect to its government and how it's operated in the past, but the arrest of Almeida does nothing to address those issues and is a distraction at best and an injustice of its own at worst.

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in RI media, both for newspapers and on political campaigns. Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter@russmoore713

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