DETROIT (AP) — A businessman portrayed himself Wednesday as a personal purveyor of luxury for then-Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, providing free round-trip flights on private planes, a $6,000 watch during a New York shopping spree and courtside basketball tickets to the NBA Finals — all to keep favor with the leader of the troubled city.
Tony Soave told jurors that he was uncomfortable with the arrangement but didn't want to cross the mayor and jeopardize any work with Detroit. He was a government witness on the 35th day of a corruption trial, a sweeping case of alleged extortion, bribery and rigged contracts during Kilpatrick's nearly seven years in office.
"It's hard to turn a mayor down," said Soave, the head of Soave Enterprises, based in Detroit. "I didn't want to get on the wrong side of him. I wanted to keep him happy."
Soave said Kilpatrick, sometimes accompanied by family, took 20 round-trip flights aboard his planes to destinations that included the Bahamas, Florida, New York and Texas. He said he finally asked about being reimbursed for the travel, which was worth $389,000.
Kilpatrick "said he would look into it," Soave recalled. "I was getting concerned. It was getting to be more than a little bit."
But the mayor never paid, said Soave, who also paid for a $6,000 Cartier watch, a $1,200 purse and an $800 pair of shoes during a New York shopping trip. He said Kilpatrick gave the watch to his father, Bernard Kilpatrick, as a Christmas present.
Soave said he paid $10,000 for two courtside seats for Kilpatrick at the 2004 NBA Finals between the Detroit Pistons and Los Angeles Lakers. Three years later, he said he paid at least part of a $9,300 tab for a five-day stay at a Ritz-Carlton hotel in Naples, Fla.
Soave said he met Kilpatrick in 2002, after the newly elected mayor took office, and asked why the city was holding up a $50 million sewer contract awarded to his company.
"He told me I had the wrong subcontractor," Soave testified. "I think I asked, 'What's the right one?' He told me Ferguson was the right one. I told him, 'OK, I'll make a change.'"
Soave was referring to Kilpatrick's pal, Bobby Ferguson, who also is on trial along with Bernard Kilpatrick. Speaking slowly but bluntly, Soave didn't hide his scorn for Ferguson in front of the jury.
"He was a troubling contractor for us. He wanted more work, more money, more things all the time. ... I mentioned to the mayor, 'Is Bobby Ferguson still your guy? He said, 'Yes, he's still my guy,'" Soave said.
When Ferguson, who had an excavating business, proposed they become 50-50 partners on future public projects, Soave said he rejected the idea with a four-letter expletive. Defense attorneys will get a chance to cross-examine him Thursday.
Earlier Wednesday, an Internal Revenue Service agent said Bernard Kilpatrick deposited $605,000 in cash in his bank account while his son was mayor. Bernard Kilpatrick is accused of shaking down businesses that wanted deals from the city.
Agent Rowena Schuch conceded that she didn't know the specific source of his cash. Defense attorney John Shea said the elder Kilpatrick "gambled all the time" and may have deposited his winnings. Schuch, however, was skeptical.
"It's not uncommon for gamblers to hoard cash," Shea said during cross-examination.
Kwame Kilpatrick, a Democrat whose mother is former U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, was elected mayor in 2001. He resigned in 2008 and pleaded guilty to obstructing justice by lying in a civil case about having sex with an aide. He subsequently served 14 months in prison for violating his probation in that case.
Michigan
Businessman: Kilpatrick got free flights
Witness told jurors about getting then-mayor luxury goods
-
-
Work done at ex-brownfield site on Detroit River
Major environmental restoration work has been completed on a former industrial site along the Detroit River, officials announced Saturday.
Continued ... -
Audit questions use of state petroleum tax
Millions of dollars from a petroleum tax have been diverted to plug holes in the state budget and pay interest on debt, Michigan’s auditor general said Friday.
Continued ... -
Lawmaker wants to change fireworks law
A lawmaker has proposed changes following a slew of complaints, safety concerns and confusion about a law that made powerful fireworks legal in Michigan.
Continued ... -
Hope College plans new art museum
Hope College in western Michigan announced Friday that it’s planning a new art museum to provide exhibition space and house the college’s permanent collection.
Continued ... -
Michigan in Brief: 05/17/2013
Michigan may get $2.3M in drug claims; Albion is closing its public high school; Long line already for one tough mayorship.
Continued ... - May 16, 2013
-
Sole survivor of plane crash breaks silence
Cecelia Crocker’s body provides her with a constant reminder of the most traumatic event of her life — one that she doesn’t otherwise remember.
Continued ... -
Michigan in Brief: 05/16/2013
Bricks from MSU building to be sold; Cruise ship will stay in Marquette.
Continued ... -
Surplus may go to roads
There was no dearth of ideas about what to do with the state’s newfound $483 million surplus on Wednesday after Michigan budget experts made the dollar figure official.
Continued ... -
Families in Ohio cancer cluster suing Whirlpool
Families whose children have been among dozens sickened in an Ohio cancer cluster for more than a decade are hopeful that they’ve come up with a cause.
Continued ... - May 15, 2013
-
Report card: Great Lakes still have big problems
A decades-old effort to nurse the battered Great Lakes to health has made progress toward reducing toxic pollution and slamming the door on invasive species, but the freshwater seas continue to face serious threats, a U.S.-Canadian agency said Tuesday.
Continued ... -
Bing won't seek re-election as Detroit mayor
A visibly frustrated Detroit Mayor Dave Bing announced Tuesday that he won’t seek a second term and ripped Michigan officials for not giving him enough time to solve the financially strapped city’s problems on his own.
Continued ... - May 14, 2013
-
Saudi man traveling with pressure cooker arrested
A Saudi man was arrested at Detroit Metropolitan Airport after federal agents said he lied about why he was traveling with a pressure cooker, but his nephew said Monday that it was all a misunderstanding about a device he simply wanted for cooking.
Continued ... - May 13, 2013
-
Memorial wall comes with some tough calls
Deciding which police officers killed in the line of duty belong on a national memorial usually is driven by facts and presents few obstacles.
Continued ... -
Lawmakers debating merit pay for teachers
Michigan teachers’ performance in the classroom would play a bigger role in the amount they get in their paychecks under a proposal being debated in the Republican-controlled state House.
Continued ... - May 12, 2013
-
Road funding talks stuck at a standstill
High-level talks over fixing Michigan's deteriorating roads are at a standstill in the Capitol, with Republican and Democratic leaders still unable to agree much on how to even start.
Continued ...
-
Work done at ex-brownfield site on Detroit River



