Ex-L.A. Mayor Hahn Denies He Knew Whether Wong Took Bribes
He testifies at the trial of ex-Commissioner Leland Wong, accused of taking $100,000 in exchange for influence.
By Victoria Kim, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Former Los Angeles Mayor James K. Hahn, testifying at the
only trial stemming from "pay to play" allegations that
dogged his administration, said Wednesday that he didn't
know whether one of his top commissioners was taking
bribes.
While serving as airport commissioner and later water and
power commissioner under Hahn, prosecutors say, former
power broker Leland Wong pocketed $100,000 in payments from
the Evergreen Group, a Taiwan shipping conglomerate, in
exchange for exerting influence on the company's behalf at
City Hall.
Prosecutors questioned Hahn about his 2002 trade mission to
Asia, during which he and his deputies negotiated with
Evergreen on its lease at the Port of Los Angeles. Deputy
Dist. Atty. Max Huntsman showed the former mayor a
handwritten letter from Wong to Hahn's deputy mayor
pressing for a deal.
"At the time you were on that trip, conducting the
negotiations, did you know whether or not Mr. Wong was
being paid by any Evergreen company?" Huntsman asked.
"No, I did not," Hahn said. "I would have liked to have
known if he was being paid by the Evergreen company and if
he wrote a letter like this."
Wong's attorneys say that the $5,000-a-month payments
deposited to his Hong Kong bank account were consulting
fees and that the former commissioner had filed public
documents about his consultant position with Evergreen.
Hahn, in a dark blue suit and salmon-colored tie, appeared
detached as he testified and rarely looked at Wong, a
longtime acquaintance. Hahn testified that the city relies
entirely on officials to raise concerns themselves when
there is potential for a conflict of interest and has no
other system in place to detect such a conflict.
"When the commissioners are initially appointed, the ethics
commission looks at their statement of economic interest .
. . but there doesn't seem to be any follow-up to that," he
said, adding that there was "certainly no way to notify the
important authorities, in this case me, the mayor, that
circumstances had changed."
Wong is also charged with conflicts of interest, perjury,
tax evasion and embezzlement from his former employer,
Kaiser Permanente. Wong was asked to resign from his later
position on the city's Water and Power Commission when
Kaiser alerted city officials to suspicions raised from
internal investigations there.
Allegations of "pay to play" between city contractors and
city officials became a major issue in the last two years
of Hahn's administration. Amid the controversies, he was
defeated for a second term by Antonio Villaraigosa.
Authorities have not accused Hahn of misconduct. But the
sweeping criminal investigations into contracts and
campaign contributions were considered significant in his
defeat.
Wong is the only city official to be charged in connection
with the probe.
After leaving office, Hahn, a former city attorney, joined
the real estate and banking firm Chadwick Saylor & Co.
This year he left that firm to join Alternative Resolution
Centers.
Hahn is expected to resume his testimony this morning. Also
testifying in the trial will be Hahn's deputy mayor, Troy
Edwards, who in return for immunity provided a grand jury
with details about his relationship with Wong, saying he
treated him to massages involving sexual favors and charged
the bill to Kaiser.
Outside court, Hahn told reporters that Wong should have
known his actions were problematic.
"He was a commissioner under Bradley, he was a commissioner
under Riordan," he said, referring to former mayors Tom
Bradley and Richard Riordan. "He should've known the
rules."
victoria.kim@
latimes.com
See the article on Los Angeles Times website