The jury in U.S. District Court in Manhattan found James Grant, who was a deputy inspector in the New York Police Department, not guilty on all charges. Still, jurors decided to convict one of the businessmen, Jeremy Reichberg, on several bribery and conspiracy charges involving other police officials.
The jury found Reichberg not guilty on one count — that he had paid bribes to Grant. After the verdict, Grant turned to Reichberg and quietly said: “You’re going to be OK.”
The case had cast a shadow over the Police Department and had even tarnished the image of Mayor Bill de Blasio, though he was not accused of wrongdoing.
The verdict appeared to reflect the higher bar the U.S. Supreme Court has set for public corruption cases with its 2016 ruling that reversed the bribery conviction of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell. In that ruling, the court determined that making introductions or setting up meetings, even in exchange for gifts or financial benefits, did not constitute a crime.
Over several weeks, federal prosecutors presented evidence — witnesses, wiretaps, and text and email messages — that they said documented years of corruption “big and small” in which high-ranking police officials provided favors to Reichberg and a second businessman, Jona S. Rechnitz. In return, prosecutors said, the officers received lavish gifts, all-expenses-paid trips on private jets and access to prostitutes.
“The favors happened because of the gifts,” Kimberly J. Ravener, a federal prosecutor, told jurors. “They weren’t part of a special, unique friendship. They were part of a worn playbook.”
But after deliberating over three days for nearly 17 hours, the jurors said prosecutors failed to prove that Grant had done official favors in return for the gifts. One juror noted that Reichberg and Grant were longtime friends.
Throughout the trial, the defense maintained that there was nothing criminal about the transactions between Grant, 45, and Reichberg, 44. “We ask for help from our friends, and they ask for help from us,” Susan R. Necheles, Reichberg’s lawyer, told jurors in her closing remarks. “In life, it’s called friendship.”
Grant’s lawyer, John Meringolo, said his client and Reichberg had met in Borough Park — a predominantly Orthodox Jewish neighborhood in Brooklyn — more than a decade ago. Grant’s rise through the ranks, Meringolo told jurors, was the result of hard work. “We know bad cops," he said in his closing argument. “That is not a bad cop.”
Jurors said the panel agreed almost immediately that Reichberg was guilty of most of the bribery charges against him. But a majority of the panel — all but two members — was also convinced at the start of the deliberations that prosecutors had not proved Grant did favors in return for the gifts he received.
“Grant was a flunky, a pawn to Rechnitz and Reichberg,” said one juror, Ives Bonilla, 67, of the Bronx. “He was overwhelmed by their wealth. He was razzled, dazzled by the millions they were talking about and spending.”
Part of the government’s case relied on testimony from Rechnitz, the wealthy son of a real estate developer who pleaded guilty to honest services wire fraud as part of the investigation that led to charges against the two defendants.
Rechnitz was also a witness at the federal corruption trial of Norman Seabrook, the once-powerful leader of the correction officers’ union. He testified that he had a close relationship with de Blasio, who had accepted large donations from Rechnitz and Reichberg.
Lawyers for Grant and Reichberg argued that Rechnitz gave false testimony against their clients in a bid to get a lighter sentence. Some jurors said they found parts of Rechnitz’s testimony believable, but others said they had doubts.
Prosecutors said Reichberg was a “fix-it guy” who used his relationships in the Police Department to help people with arrests and traffic violations for a fee.
But Reichberg also used his influence for his own benefit, prosecutors said, describing how he arranged a police escort to a nail salon for a nurse he wanted to date and, on another occasion, how he was taken to a barbecue by a police boat.
“Citizens can’t get official action like this for no reason,” Ravener said.
During the trial, Rechnitz described himself as the “money man” who paid for expensive gifts and trips at Reichberg’s direction. He said he spent nearly $59,000 on a private jet to fly Grant and others to Las Vegas during Super Bowl weekend in 2013. Reichberg recruited a prostitute, Gabriella Curtis, to sleep with Grant on the trip.
On Christmas Day of that year, Reichberg and Rechnitz dressed as Santa to deliver gifts to high-ranking police officials, including Grant, who got diamond earrings for his wife and toys for his children. Rechnitz testified that he also paid for Grant and his wife to stay at a luxury hotel in Rome, meals at upscale restaurants and upgrades to his home.
In return, prosecutors argued, Grant escorted Rechnitz to the airport using lights and sirens, provided special access to events, and used his connections to expedite a gun license for Reichberg. “All of the financial benefits went one way and the favors went another,” lead prosecutor Martin Bell told jurors.
Meringolo argued that it was customary for officers to do favors for friends.
Rechnitz testified that he and Reichberg also courted Philip Banks III, a former chief of the department, the highest ranked uniformed officer. They showered him with gifts and took him on several trips, including to Israel.
Banks was not charged with a crime. He resigned in 2014, citing professional reasons for his departure. His lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, said Banks “did zero for anybody that was even remotely corrupt.”
Rechnitz said another official, Stephen McAllister, a former police inspector who is now the commissioner of the Floral Park Police Department on Long Island, arranged to close a lane in the Lincoln Tunnel to make the drive into Manhattan from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey easier for one of Rechnitz’s business associates. McAllister was not accused of wrongdoing.
Prosecutors also presented evidence suggesting that Reichberg had used his influence with a third police official, Michael Harrington, a former deputy police chief, to orchestrate promotions for several officers. Among other things, Harrington arranged the police boat ride to the barbecue in return for gifts. In March, Harrington pleaded guilty to dispatching police resources without permission and was sentenced to two years’ probation.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.