America’s Most Corrupt States

8. Michigan
> Overall grade: F (58%)
> Public access to information: D
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

Michigan received a grade of F in 10 of the 14 categories measured, including accountability in all three branches of government as well as in redistricting, lobbying and political financing. Michigan is one of just three states that still lacks financial disclosure rules for lawmakers and governors. According to Chris Andrews, author of the State Integrity Investigation report on Michigan, the state does not fall prey to much of the widespread corruption that has been seen in Detroit. The report’s findings indicate, however, that the state has no system in place to monitor state lobbying, which is among the most corrupt in the country. This, according to Andrews, “has allowed wealthy individuals and powerful PACs to funnel huge amounts of money into campaigns.” The state also has a “gift loophole” for lobbyists, which allows gifts from interested parties to elected officials like sports tickets or meals.

7. North Dakota
> Overall grade: F (58%)
> Public access to information: C
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

North Dakota got an F in eight of the 14 categories, including redistricting, ethics enforcement agencies, lobbying disclosure and political financing. According to the report, these problems with accountability can lead to conflicts of interest. For example, there are no laws in place preventing civil servants from entering any part of the private sector after leaving office. The state has had a Republican governor in place since Ed Shafer took office in December, 1992. With Republicans holding 75% of legislature seats and philosophically opposing more regulation, as State Integrity Investigation reporter Terry Finneman explains, they tend to “protect the machine.” Last year, they overwhelmingly voted against a bill to create an ethics commission.

6. South Carolina
> Overall grade: F (57%)
> Public access to information: F
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: D-
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

South Carolina received nine failing grades in areas including executive, judicial and legislative accountability. State Integrity Investigation notes that the budget of South Carolina’s State Ethics Commission has been cut a total of six times in the past three years. In September 2010, all regulations on limiting contributions to political parties were eliminated. Additionally, many contributors to individual candidates abuse loopholes to avoid limitations on donations. There is also an antagonistic relationship between office-holding politicians and the press. Specifically, the report says, Governor Nikki Haley’s administration has used a policy of deleting important emails.

5. Maine
> Overall grade: F (56%)
> Public access to information: F
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: D+
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

Maine received F grades in nine of the 14 measured categories, including legislative accountability, lobbying disclosure and public access to information. The State Integrity Investigation identifies the existence of possible conflicts of interest and corruption. According to the report, there is no law in place, for example, to force Democratic State Senator Jim Brannigan to disclose that the organization that he was a director of received $98 million in Maine government contracts. On February 1, Republican State Representative David Burns was arrested for violating campaign finance laws such as falsifying records and misusing funds.

4. Virginia
> Overall grade: F (55%)
> Public access to information: F
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

Among Virginia’s ethical failings are poor government oversight, weak consumer protections and poor separation between politicians and big business. Overall, it receives nine Fs. One of the state’s greatest offenses is its exemption of its State Corporation Commission — a regulatory agency that is responsible for overseeing all businesses, utilities, financial institutions and railroads in the state — from its Freedom of Information Act. While Virginia has a General Assembly Conflict of Interests Act, the law has proven incredibly inefficient. Only one legislator has ever been prosecuted for violating it — 26 years ago. The state is also weak on enforcing disclosure laws. In 2004, it was discovered that former Democratic Governor L. Douglas Wilder failed to file disclosure reports for his gubernatorial election campaign. Worst still, approximately $169,000 from his campaign account was unaccounted for. Consequently, L. Douglas Wilder, Jr., the former governor’s son and one-time campaign treasurer, pleaded guilty to two election law misdemeanors in 2007, resulting in a $1,000 fine and a suspended one-year sentence.

3. Wyoming
> Overall grade: F (52%)
> Public access to information: F
> Legislative accountability: D-
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

The state of Wyoming received a grade of F in nine of the 14 categories measured by the State Integrity Investigation. The state’s mechanism for self-governance is extremely poor. According to the report, there is no hotline, website or other method for state employees to report corruption. The state also has had the same political machine in place for some time. Wyoming’s two U.S. senators both have been Republicans since 1977. In 2006, the state legislature, which is primarily Republican, overrode a veto from the governor and ruled themselves exempt from open records laws. This means bills in draft can be kept secret, as can all communications with staff, until a bill is proposed.

2. South Dakota
> Overall grade: (50%)
> Public access to information: D+
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

South Dakota, which has the second-highest corruption risk score, has nine failing grades out of 14 categories, and three Ds. The state, which has among the lowest population density in the country, does not have “comprehensive state ethics laws,” an ethics commission or satisfactory transparency laws, as Denise Ross writes for the State Integrity Investigation. The state does little to require public officials, other than judges, to disclose their income and assets. State law features a loophole that makes it possible for individuals to make unlimited political donations. The state has made major improvements in its integrity by making many state records available online in recent years.

1. Georgia
> Overall grade: F (49%)
> Public access to information: F
> Legislative accountability: F
> Political financing: F
> Ethics enforcement agencies: F

Georgia has the worst levels of corruption risk and lack of accountability of any state in the country. The state scored a D or worse in 12 of the 14 categories. The state’s biggest problem is the absence of a strong ethics enforcement agency. Republican governor Sonny Perdue managed to get an ethics bill through the legislature, but by the time it passed, his proposals to ban gifts to state workers and clearly define appropriate campaign spending had been stripped out. According to State Integrity reporter Jim Walls, while Georgia has provisions to prevent certain kinds of corruption in campaign finance and lobbying, the state is full of unaddressed loopholes and lax enforcement. “About 2,000 Georgia officials, including one in five sitting legislators, have failed to pay penalties for filing their disclosures late, or not at all.”

Michael B. Sauter, Charles B. Stockdale

Read more: America’s Most Corrupt States - 24/7 Wall St. http://247wallst.com/2012/03/22/americas-most-corrupt-states/#ixzz1pr3jiKrZ
 

windingtrailgal

Active member
Very interesting. Clicking on the links within in the article gave a lot of useful information as well.

You can imagine my SHOCK that Illinois didn't make the cut on corruption. I was thinking maybe just threw it out so as not to skew the statistics?!

Glad to see IL made it on at least ONE list - #3 on "Six states where taxes are soaring." I would have felt a little left out if they didn't make the cut on at least ONE of these lists.

Again...interesting. Thanks for sharing and scaring! :eek:
 

indybru

Member
Piggybacking on Fishcrib, I can't believe Illinois is not #1 . We are the bottom or close to the bottom in everything else, concerning the state of our state.
 

dcsnomo

Moderator
Interesting, but I have a couple of issues with it.

1) According to the intro in the article it says "Earlier this week, the Center for Public Integrity released a report detailing the risk of corruption and lack of accountability in all 50 states." So, if the report is to detail the risk of corruption, but not the actual corruption, then the claim that these are America's most corrupt states is false. The claim is that these are the states most AT RISK for corruption. Big difference because:

2) Any report that ranks the most corrupt states in the US and does not put Illinois in the top 8 is inherently flawed. Illinois is actively corrupt and nearly bankrupt because of this corruption. In the study, Illinois received a C in a four-way tie for 10th nationwide, with Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Hawaii. Really? Two consecutive governors in federal prison and you get a C?

3) The report is skewed against states with small populations because they don't have the watchdog agencies. True, but maybe they don't have the corruption, either. The report itself admits that states with a history of corruption (CA, NJ) score well because their corruption actually caused the creation of the watchdog agencies. I would maintain that the acts of corruption should score higher than the absence of a preventative agency.

But, to be fair, the report scores the "risk" of corruption, rather than the actual acts, which the article tends to overlook. While it may be true that the risk of corruption is higher in ND than IL, NJ or CA, I would maintain that the actual corruption is higher in IL, NJ, or CA.

Therefore, the existence of the agencies is not fundamentally relevant to the corruption levels, meaning they measured the wrong thing (correlation is not causation), and the study is rendered moot.

Wow, I am on a roll this morning! Thanks for posting, brain is awake and fully engaged!
 

wags

New member
Their survey is definitly wrong, How could Illinois not be #1 on the list. Here is just a small sample of some of the most current Illinois Politicians who are currently doing time or who have done time in the "BIG HOUSE" and when I say small sample this is only a sliver of what I have found.


Governors

Former Ill. Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Blagojevich was convicted on 17 corruption counts this past summer, and another one in 2010 – totaling a maximum prison sentence of 305 years.


George Ryan: Governor from 1999-2003, Illinois secretary of state from 1991 to 1999. Found guilty in 2006 on 18 federal counts regarding actions during time as secretary of state and as governor. Sentenced to 6½ years, imprisoned from 2007 to present, with an estimated release date of July 4, 2013.

Otto Kerner: Governor from 1961-1968, federal appeals court judge from 1968 to 1974. Found guilty in 1973 on 17 federal counts regarding actions during time as governor. Sentenced to 3 years, but imprisoned for less than a year (from 1974 to 1975) because of poor health.

Dan Walker: Governor from 1973 to 1977. Pleaded guilty in 1987 to three federal counts regarding actions occurring after he left office. Initially sentenced to seven years, but released after a year and a half (from 1988 to 1989) because of health concerns.

Other Illinois politicians

Dan Rostenkowski: Congressman from 1959 to 1995. Pleaded guilty in 1996 to two federal counts regarding actions during time in Congress. Sentenced to 17 months, imprisoned for 15 months, from 1996 to 1997.

Mel Reynolds: Congressman from 1993 to 1995. Found guilty in 1995 on state counts related to having sex with a minor. Sentenced to five years. Then found guilty in 1997 on 15 federal counts regarding actions during campaigns for Congress. Sentenced to six and a half years. President Clinton commuted his sentence in 2001.

Betty Loren Maltese: Cicero town president from 1993 to 2002. Found guilty in 2002 on six federal counts regarding actions during time as town president. Sentenced to eight years, imprisoned for seven years, from 2003 to 2010.

Jim Laski: Chicago city clerk from 1995 to 2006. Pleaded guilty in 2006 on one federal count regarding actions during time as alderman and city clerk. Sentenced to two years, imprisoned for less than a year, from 2007 to 2008.

Tom Keane: Alderman from 1945 to 1974. Found guilty in 1974 on 18 federal counts regarding actions during his time as alderman. Sentenced to five years, imprisoned for less than two years, from 1976 to 1978.

You can add Miriam Santos Chicago treasurer, Ed Vrdolyk aldeman, Paul Powell secretary of state and countless others. Over 1000 according to a University of Illinois report.
 

united

Active member
"2) Any report that ranks the most corrupt states in the US and does not put Illinois in the top 8 is inherently flawed. Illinois is actively corrupt and nearly bankrupt because of this corruption. In the study, Illinois received a C in a four-way tie for 10th nationwide, with Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Hawaii. Really? Two consecutive governors in federal prison and you get a C?"

Agree, this report is inherently flawed if it is actually ranking corruption not risk. Two Illinois governors CURRENTLY serving federal prison time and Illinois is not even in the top 8. This must be a joke or a seriously flawed analysis.
 

polarisrider1

New member
Get real. We all know it is Illinois. They are so corrupt, hang on my door bell is ringing......... Got to have a body to have a crime.....................girl scout cookies???? Heard they even get a take on those.
 

bearrassler

Well-known member
It sounds political to me, ND gets bad marks because we have had Republican governers since 92 and our legislators are 75% Republican. I can't remember any scandals and I have lived here since 1975. A few years ago some eastern paper said we had the most corruption cases in the US but when people here checked it out 95% of it was in the Tribal governments.
 

Grant Hoar

New member
Illinois is not on the list, because it is not fair to rank the professionals along with the amateurs.

If corruption were a professional sport, Illinois would win the World Series, Super Bowl, Stanley Cup, etc every year
 

ezra

Well-known member
Center for public integrity is now and always has been a left wing so called news outlet.so are you really supprised IL was not at the top .
The real unreported story of the week IMHO is Obama to bypass congress and give 1billion to 1.5billion to Muslim brotherhood.GREAT IDEA .
 

mjkaliszak

New member
Do these politicians lose their pension benefits ( life time salary ) once convicted or do WE the people just send them to the can, let them back out and pay them full " pension " till they die ?
 
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