Update: Washington-based bankruptcy attorney Kevyn Orr was selected as Detroit’s emergency manager on Thursday.
Former Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is headed back to prison after a federal jury convicted him Monday on multiple charges of racketeering and extortion. City contractor and Kilpatrick friend Bobby Ferguson, and Kilpatrick’s father, Bernard, were also convicted of nine similar counts and one count of filing a false tax return, respectively.
The 42-year-old, once nicknamed the “hip-hop mayor” and considered one of the country’s most promising young politicians, left office in 2008 after he plead guilty to two obstruction of justice charges stemming from his sex scandal involving former chief of staff Christine Beatty. He served one year in jail for those crimes, but Monday’s conviction is much more serious. Kilpatrick was found guilty of 24 of the 30 counts of tax fraud, bribery, RICO, extortion, wire fraud, and more. The RICO charge alone carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.
“I am pleased that this long trial has ended and we can finally put this negative chapter in Detroit’s history behind us,” current Detroit Mayor Dave Bing told reporters after the verdict was announced. “It is time for all of us to move forward with a renewed commitment to transparency and high ethical standards in our city government.”
The state of Michigan stands to soon supercede that city government’s judgment with an unelected emergency manager, and Bing himself has taken pains to not stand in the way.
It has been 11 days since Michigan Governor Rick Snyder made that announcement, emphasizing that Detroit couldn’t wait for Bing and city officials to fix the city’s impaired finances. Snyder acknowledged that Detroit had the option of appealing that decision. Last Wednesday, the city council did so, without Bing’s involvement. That decision did not stem the protests against the state’s action, which would make Detroit the tenth–and largest–city to be subjected to emergency management in the history of the state.








