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Foreman's Bonusgate sentence to start in January
Saturday, December 18, 2010

HARRISBURG -- Jeff Foreman will get to spend Christmas at home but on Jan. 4 must begin a sentence of 111/2 to 23 months imprisonment for his admitted role in directing public resources to political campaigns.

Mr. Foreman was ordered to report to the Dauphin County Work Release Center, which allows inmates to leave daily to go to jobs in the community.

Mr. Foreman, 59, is unemployed but has been volunteering at an adult education center.

He could have been sentenced to as many as seven years.

Mr. Foreman is the former chief of staff to former state Rep. Mike Veon, who is serving six to 14 years.

During a sentencing hearing Friday, Mr. Foreman said he was ashamed of his actions and sorry for them.

"Being involved in public policy and civic activities meant the world to me and I wanted to make a positive contribution. I am remorseful that while I had the opportunity to contribute in a significant way I became involved in activities I should not have," he said.

Dauphin County Judge Richard A. Lewis said Mr. Foreman's contrition appears sincere but his crimes were serious enough to warrant incarceration.

During the trial, Mr. Foreman admitted campaigning on state time and forcefully ordering others to do the same. He also testified that he reviewed lists of proposed taxpayer-funded bonuses to be given to state workers as rewards for political work.

"You were not merely a foot soldier," but a close adviser who was "in the best position, as friend and counsel to Mr. Veon, to advise him against the scheme to award taxpayer dollars to individuals for campaign work," Judge Lewis said.

Defense attorney Royce Morris argued that Mr. Foreman was the victim of a Capitol culture where lines between political and legislative work often blurred.

Judge Lewis, though, said Mr. Foreman helped create that culture.

He said Mr. Foreman's political directives were "systematically repeated over a three-year period to such an extent that those actions became part of the landscape."

Three defendants, all associated with the House Democratic caucus, were found guilty in the corruption scheme while seven others, including Mr. Foreman, pleaded guilty and cooperated in the investigation.

Mr. Foreman originally had been charged with 24 crimes but, as part of a cooperation agreement, pleaded guilty to four, all third-degree felonies.

During the investigation, Mr. Foreman provided detailed information that allowed prosecutors to be "intimately versed in exactly what happened within Mr. Veon's Capitol staff," Deputy Attorney General Frank Fina told Judge Lewis. "He never sought to diminish his responsibility or in any way to mask or hide his own acts."

Mr. Foreman is cooperating in other investigations as well and is expected to testify in February in another case involving his former boss. Mr. Veon and the former manager of his Beaver Falls district office, also convicted in the Bonusgate case, are accused of misusing state grants given to Beaver Initiative for Growth, a nonprofit they ran.

Mr. Veon represented Beaver County in the Legislature for 22 years.

Tracie Mauriello: 1-717-787-2141 or tmauriello@post-gazette.com.

First published on December 18, 2010 at 12:00 am