Secretary Fined for Role in Illegal Bid to Aid Hahn
Law firm employee helped her attorney boss launder donations in 2001 mayoral campaign.
By Jeffrey Rabin, Times Staff Writer
The secretary to prominent Los Angeles attorney Pierce
O'Donnell has been fined $41,000 by the city Ethics
Commission for her role in "aiding and abetting" his
laundering of contributions to James K. Hahn's 2001
campaign for mayor.
The fine imposed Tuesday brings to $445,700 the amount of
civil and criminal penalties levied in connection with
O'Donnell's laundering of 26 contributions to Hahn's
campaign. The secretary to prominent Los Angeles attorney
Pierce O'Donnell has been fined $41,000 by the city Ethics
Commission for her role in "aiding and abetting" his
laundering of contributions to James K. Hahn's 2001
campaign for mayor.
The fine imposed Tuesday brings to $445,700 the amount of
civil and criminal penalties levied in connection with
O'Donnell's laundering of 26 contributions to Hahn's
campaign.
The penalties are among the largest ever imposed in Los
Angeles for laundering of political contributions.
Los Angeles voters have limited the amount that any
individual can give directly to candidates for city office.
The maximum contribution in a citywide race is $1,000 per
election, except in certain circumstances.
It is illegal to make political contributions in the name
of others.
In February, O'Donnell pleaded no contest to five
misdemeanor counts of using a false name in making
political contributions to the Hahn campaign. A Los Angeles
Superior Court judge sentenced O'Donnell to three years'
probation, ordered him to pay $155,200 in fines and
penalties, and barred him from participating in any
political fundraising for three years.
The State Bar of California is evaluating whether to take
disciplinary action against O'Donnell, a nationally known
trial lawyer.
In March, the Ethics Commission levied a $147,000 civil
fine after O'Donnell admitted that he made the
contributions under assumed names. O'Donnell used $25,500
in personal funds to reimburse the contributions made by
employees of his law firm, their relatives and other
associates, including his personal trainer.
The same month, the state Fair Political Practices
Commission fined O'Donnell $72,000 in connection with the
laundered donations.
The Ethics Commission staff had recommended that
O'Donnell's secretary, Dolores Valdez, be fined $61,500 for
her role in soliciting and reimbursing 21 of the
contributions. But the commission scaled back the penalty
Tuesday after her attorney, Michael J. Proctor, argued that
Valdez was not in a position to challenge her powerful
boss.
Valdez is the last to be fined in connection with the
laundered contributions, said Ethics Commission Executive
Director LeeAnn Pelham. The commission has taken action
against 21 other individuals.
Pelham said those individuals allowed themselves to be used
as conduits for the illegal contributions.
"These are very serious violations," she said. "You don't
get off the hook by saying, 'I didn't do the reimbursing.'
They were part of the overall scheme."
With the penalty against Valdez, the Ethics Commission
alone has imposed $218,500 in fines in the O'Donnell case,
the fourth-highest in the agency's history, Pelham
said.
The penalties are among the largest ever imposed in Los
Angeles for laundering of political contributions.
Los Angeles voters have limited the amount that any
individual can give directly to candidates for city office.
The maximum contribution in a citywide race is $1,000 per
election, except in certain circumstances.
It is illegal to make political contributions in the name
of others.
In February, O'Donnell pleaded no contest to five
misdemeanor counts of using a false name in making
political contributions to the Hahn campaign. A Los Angeles
Superior Court judge sentenced O'Donnell to three years'
probation, ordered him to pay $155,200 in fines and
penalties, and barred him from participating in any
political fundraising for three years.
The State Bar of California is evaluating whether to take
disciplinary action against O'Donnell, a nationally known
trial lawyer.
In March, the Ethics Commission levied a $147,000 civil
fine after O'Donnell admitted that he made the
contributions under assumed names. O'Donnell used $25,500
in personal funds to reimburse the contributions made by
employees of his law firm, their relatives and other
associates, including his personal trainer.
The same month, the state Fair Political Practices
Commission fined O'Donnell $72,000 in connection with the
laundered donations.
The Ethics Commission staff had recommended that
O'Donnell's secretary, Dolores Valdez, be fined $61,500 for
her role in soliciting and reimbursing 21 of the
contributions. But the commission scaled back the penalty
Tuesday after her attorney, Michael J. Proctor, argued that
Valdez was not in a position to challenge her powerful
boss.
Valdez is the last to be fined in connection with the
laundered contributions, said Ethics Commission Executive
Director LeeAnn Pelham. The commission has taken action
against 21 other individuals.
Pelham said those individuals allowed themselves to be used
as conduits for the illegal contributions.
"These are very serious violations," she said. "You don't
get off the hook by saying, 'I didn't do the reimbursing.'
They were part of the overall scheme."
With the penalty against Valdez, the Ethics Commission
alone has imposed $218,500 in fines in the O'Donnell case,
the fourth-highest in the agency's history, Pelham said.
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