SUNY Fires 2 Officials, Citing Roles in Contracts
"top Pataki appointees had intervened with a SUNY official on Mr. Copeland's behalf, that one document relating to those events was destroyed and another was fabricated and that Mr. Copeland routinely mentioned his relationship to the governor in seeking work. "
The New York Times March 30, 2002
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
ALBANY, March 29 - The State University of New York has fired two officials involved in improper contracts with an architect who is a neighbor and relative by marriage of Gov. George E. Pataki's, and a local prosecutor is looking into the matter, officials said today.
The developments follow the release Thursday of a report by the state inspector general, Roslynn R. Mauskopf, into the award of contracts to Hudson Design, an architectural firm owned by James Copeland, who lives next door to the governor in Garrison, N.Y., and whose brother is married to a sister of the governor's wife, Libby.
Ms. Mauskopf found that SUNY officials had repeatedly distorted the contracting process to favor Hudson Design and violated numerous rules for contract awards. She also found that top Pataki appointees had intervened with a SUNY official on Mr. Copeland's behalf, that one document relating to those events was destroyed and another was fabricated and that Mr. Copeland routinely mentioned his relationship to the governor in seeking work.
When asked at a public appearance today in Lower Manhattan, Mr. Pataki would not say whether he believed Mr. Copeland had won the contracts because of his connections to him. He said he was pleased with SUNY's reaction to the report, and then did not take any more questions on the matter.
The university system fired Michael D. Clemente, general manager of the SUNY construction fund, who oversaw all the contracts, and Ellen Biggane, an assistant general manager, who, Ms. Mauskopf reported, faked a document to make it appear that an improper contract award had been handled properly.
"Those two individuals have been terminated, as of yesterday," said David Henahan, a spokesman for the university system, adding that the university would not publicly discuss the reasons for the firings. As high-level officials, Ms. Biggane and Mr. Clemente did not enjoy civil service protection and could be summarily dismissed.
Before going to SUNY in 1997, Mr. Clemente worked in the governor's office, as Mr. Pataki's deputy director for state operations, and before that, he was a legislative staff member when Mr. Pataki was in the Legislature. Messages left at Mr. Clemente's and Ms. Biggane's homes were not returned.
Ms. Mauskopf referred the document fabrication to the Albany County district attorney's office.
"The report is going to be reviewed by our grand jury unit, which handles white-collar crime, and we'll make a determination as to whether we think there's any potential criminal conduct," District Attorney Paul A. Clyne said today. "And if we feel that there is, we may take it to the grand jury to follow up on it with a criminal charge."
Ms. Mauskopf is a Pataki appointee, and at the governor's urging, President Bush has nominated her to be the United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, a region that includes Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island.
Today, Andrew M. Cuomo, one of the Democrats running against Mr. Pataki, a Republican, said the governor's sponsorship of Ms. Mauskopf created a conflict of interest for her in handling the case. He wrote to Attorney General John Ashcroft, asking him to direct a federal investigation into it.
"The inspector general's report whitewashes the seriousness of the matter, plays down the personal relationship of the contract recipient to Governor Pataki and the involvement of the governor's aides in the matter," Mr. Cuomo wrote. It "casts serious doubt on her qualifications for U.S. attorney," he added.
Michael McKeon, Mr. Pataki's communications director, said, "This kind of nasty attack from Andy Cuomo is so obvious, so expected and so laughable, it's just sad."
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