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Tragic Figures: Gallagher Latest Queens Elected To Rise High And Crash Low
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| Dennis Gallagher, Allan Jennings, Jr., Brian McLaughlin, Sheldon Leffle and Donald Manes.
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By MICHAEL CUSENZA
Dishonored City Councilman Dennis Gallagher (R-Middle Village) and his wife, Donna, bobbed and weaved hand-in-hand along Queens Boulevard late Friday morning, doing their best to avoid the zealous media mob like a weary prizefighter cheating the knockout blow.
Couple that scene with the surreal image of Gallagher, 43, being escorted into Queens County Supreme Court in handcuffs by four tight-lipped detectives stuffed in suits earlier that morning and you have quite the sensational, if sad, setting.
But this is not a novel sight to some Queens residents and local political pundits. Dennis Gallagher simply is the latest in a line of elected Queens community leaders to be at the center of scandal.
Gallagher’s Scandal
Gallagher, a father of two teenaged boys, surrendered Friday morning to the NYPD Queens Special Victims Squad at the 112th Precinct in Forest Hills. A grand jury handed down a 10-count indictment that charged the 30th District councilman with various counts of rape, criminal sexual act and assault.
Bail was set at $200,000, which Gallagher immediately posted with the aid of his brother. His next scheduled court date is Sept. 28.
The indictment is the result of an investigation into a 52-year-old Middle Village grandmother’s claim that Gallagher sexually assaulted and physically abused her on a Sunday night in early July in a second-floor room at his district office on Metropolitan Avenue.
Gallagher has repeatedly refuted the woman’s claims, saying the encounter was consensual and the he will be “vindicated in the end.”
Gallagher was officially charged with three counts of first-degree rape, three counts of third-degree rape, one count of criminal sexual act in the first degree, one count of criminal sexual act in the third degree and one count each of second and third-degree assault.
The most serious charges – first degree rape and criminal sexual act in the first degree, both violent felonies – carry maximum sentences of 25 and 20 years, respectively, and require the convicted to register with their local precinct as a sex offender.
“The charges are clear: there was no consent in this case,” said Queens DA Richard Brown, who characterized the indictment as proof that “no one is above the law.”
“The thing that troubles me most is that we’re dealing with the actions of a public official,” Brown lamented.
As a result of the criminal developments, Gallagher informed City Council Speaker Christine Quinn Friday afternoon that he would be stepping down from his leadership position as Minority Whip, his position on the Budget Negotiating Team and asked that he be temporarily removed from his Council committee assignments.
Due to term limits, Gallagher is set to relinquish his Council seat in 2009.
The Queens Buzz
This isn’t the first time Dennis Gallagher has stumbled into the scandalous spotlight. In 2001 he was accused of selling pornography – believed at the time to be comprised of vintage issues of Playboy and Penthouse magazines – from a fourth-floor office that he rented from Christ the King Regional High School in Middle Village. Gallagher was investigated but cleared of any wrongdoing.
Some have speculated in recent reports that Gallagher’s marriage has been troubled for some time, and that part of it stems from his alleged affinity for spirits and frequenting neighborhood watering holes like Woodhaven House on Woodhaven Boulevard and Danny Boy’s on Dry Harbor Road on a regular basis; the latter is where Gallagher is said to have met the complainant on the night in question.
That a Queens politician is no saint is, unfortunately, not stop-the-presses fare in this city. Sex scandals, fraud, embezzlement and bribery are just some of the issues that have recently managed to make headlines and seep into the fabric of the borough’s proud political lore.
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Brian McLaughlin
Less than a year ago, Queens Assemblyman Brian McLaughlin was indicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. Once the president of the New York City Central Labor Council, the largest municipal labor council in the country, McLaughlin stands accused of defrauding the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 3, receiving bribes and embezzling funds from a number of sources, including a local Little League, to the tune of $2.2 million.
He did not run for re-election and was replaced in the Assembly this year. He currently awaits trial and works as an electrician in the union he’s accused of defrauding.
Sheldon Leffler
Sheldon Leffler, a former city councilman from Queens Village, was convicted in late 2003 of campaign fraud. Leffler violated campaign finance law when he filed false claims for public matching funds for the 2001 race for Queens Borough President. He was sentenced to five years probation, 540 hours of community service and a $5,000 fine.
Allan Jennings
The City Council voted in April 2005 to censure former District 28 Councilman Allan Jennings, Jr., after an investigation found that he sexually harassed staff members. He was fined $5,000, ordered to attend anger management and sexual harassment therapy classes and forced out of his committee assignments.
As reported by the Tribune, Jennings was infamous for his bizarre behavior. He took out an ad in an Asian newspaper professing his love for Asian women, compared his dilemma to Christ’s crucifixion when he lost his Council parking spot and threw a hammer head at a television news reporter.
Donald Manes
Of all the salacious and sensational stories of political intrigue, perhaps none is more tragic than that of former Queens Borough President Donald Manes. Under investigation for several bribe-and-reward schemes, one of the most lucrative involving the City’s Parking Violations Bureau, Manes committed suicide in 1986 in the kitchen of his Jamaica Estates home by plunging an 8-inch knife into his chest several times. This was Manes’s second attempt on his own life that year. The first brought a wave of controversy as Manes initially claimed to police officers that pulled him over on the Grand Central Parkway that cuts and blood on his arms were the result of a carjacking gone awry. He later admitted from his hospital bed that he had tried to kill himself.
Left Behind
Every borough of New York City has had its share of political scandal. Queens is no exception. The Dennis Gallagher saga, sure to stretch into next year, is one that has a lot riding on it.
What is at stake is a family, and a man whose once bright future now seems like a distant memory.
But what is also at stake are the interests of the people of Ridgewood, Glendale, Middle Village and Maspeth, and the issues that affect them right now. Lost in all the sensational details of this case are the present and future of the 30th District, the land elected officials for decades swore to protect and lead.
The land that has become to many simply the scene of another scandal.
The land Dennis Gallagher calls home. |
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