A Democrat, Silver was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison in July 2021 on corruption charges and died at the Otisville Correctional Institution in Orange County on Monday, Jan. 24, officials announced.
Silver, who at one point represented most of Manhattan, was found guilty of two counts of honest service wire fraud, two counts of honest services mail fraud, two counts of extortion under the color of official right, and one count of engaging in illegal monetary transactions in 2018.
He was found guilty of the same charges in November 2015, but that conviction was overturned.
Prior to his death, Silver wrote a letter to the judge sentencing him pleading to not die in prison, a wish that was not fulfilled. He was also reportedly among the list of people outgoing President Donald Trump was considering pardoning on his way out of office, but it never came to be.
“Your Honor, I do not want to die in prison,” Silver wrote to his judge. “This case has been going on for more than five years, but I feel like I have aged 15 or 20 years. My fate is in your hands.”
Silver resigned as the Assembly speaker in 2015 after 21 years following his initial conviction. His lawyers had sought a sentence of home confinement and community service, citing Silver’s age, health, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
He was temporarily furloughed during the pandemic, but quickly was sent back behind bars.
Federal officials said that for more than two decades, while serving as the speaker, Silver “used this immense power – including, in particular, his power over the real estate industry and his control over certain health care funding – to unlawfully and corruptly enrich himself.”
Silver was found guilty of soliciting client referrals worth millions of dollars in exchange for official acts and then attempted to disguise that money as legitimate income earned from his work as a private attorney.
"When he assumed his powerful position at the top of New York State government, Sheldon Silver took an oath to do the work of the people,” prosecutors said at the time of his conviction. “Instead, he leveraged his tremendous influence to pad his bank account and line his pockets.
"We hope today’s fittingly stiff sentence sends a clear message: brokering official favors for your personal benefit is illegal and will result in prison time,” they added. “I thank the career prosecutors of this Office for their perseverance in this important case for the people of New York.”
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