The most corrupt states in America

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell’s indictment on charges that he accepted illegal gifts, vacations and loans from a major campaign contributor who sought special treatment is so shocking, in part, because McDonnell is the first governor in the history of the Commonwealth to face criminal charges. Unlike plenty of other states, Virginia doesn’t have a long history of scandals and ethics abuses.

Which states are more used to corruption? Well, depending on how you define corruption, it could be Florida, or Louisiana, or Tennessee, or New York, or Georgia. And then there’s the District of Columbia.

Here’s how each of the above won its dubious distinction:

Georgia: In March 2012, the Center for Public Integrity released a report tracking 330 separate ethics, transparency and accountability metrics in each state. The results showed Georgia had some of the laxest ethics rules in the country and lacked a strong ethics enforcement agency to enforce the laws on the books. More than 650 government employees accepted gifts from vendors doing business with the state between 2007 and 2008, the report showed.

Other big losers in the Center for Public Integrity study included South Carolina, Maine, Michigan, South Dakota, Wyoming — and, yes, Virginia. All seven states earned F grades.

Here’s CPI’s map:




Tennessee: The Daily Beast used FBI arrest records to take a more concentrated look at wasteful spending, embezzlement and convictions for public corruption and ties to organized crime among the states in the decade between 1999 and 2008. Tennessee ranked number one overall, thanks to its top-10 rankings in fraud, forgery and counterfeiting and embezzlement.

Rounding out the top five: Virginia (We’re starting to challenge that idea of an ethical state), Mississippi, Delaware and North Carolina. In all five states, police and prosecutorial corruption and scourges like Medicare fraud help boost their rankings.

Florida: Between 1998 and 2007, 824 public officials in Florida were convicted on public corruption charges at the local, state and federal level. According to a tally compiled by the New York Times, that was more than any other state. New York came in second place, with 704 public officials locked up, while Texas, Pennsylvania, California, Ohio and Illinois all saw more than 500 officials convicted.

Here’s the New York Times’ chart:



New York: Another watchdog group called Integrity Florida pointed to older data that show 1,762 individuals have been convicted on public corruption charges in Florida — an average of 50 people per year. That’s a lot, but it’s not as many as New York, which saw 2,522 officials convicted over the same stretch. More than 2,300 California officials went to jail over the same period, the group said.

A University of Illinois at Chicago study from February 2012 found corruption cost the taxpayers of Illinois an estimated $500 million per year. Between 1976 and 2010, the study showed, the Northern District of Illinois, which covers Chicago, scored 1,531 convictions in the 35-year window, more than any other jurisdiction. The Central District of California, which covers Los Angeles, the Southern District of New York, which covers Manhattan, and the District of Columbia all won more than 1,000 convictions over the same time frame.

Here’s UIC’s chart:



District of Columbia: Few cities have experienced the rash of corruption charges that the District has faced. In just the last two years, three city council members, Michael Brown, Kwame Brown and Harry Thomas Jr., have resigned and pleaded guilty to corruption or embezzlement charges (And there’s an ongoing investigation into Mayor Vincent Gray’s 2010 campaign). Per capita, according to the same New York Times survey, no other state comes anywhere close to the number of officials convicted.

Because of their small populations, the Virgin Islands and Guam rank near the top of the charts, too. North Dakota, Alaska, Louisiana and Mississippi have all seen more than seven convictions per million residents, a little more than one-tenth the conviction rate in Washington, D.C.

Here’s the per capita chart:



Louisiana: Throw out the District and the territories and use some more recent data from the FBI, and Huey Long’s home state reaches the top spot. Louisiana had nearly nine convictions for every 100,000 people, the data show, trailed closely by North and South Dakota, Kentucky and Alaska.

Business Insider crunched those numbers. Here’s their chart:



Lest we dwell solely on the bad news, here’s the good news: States such as Washington, Oregon, Minnesota, Utah, Nebraska and New Hampshire consistently show up near the bottom of the corruption lists. Generally speaking, those states have stronger ethics boards, tighter rules on lobbyist and vendor gifts and more transparent reporting systems for political contributions.

Perhaps Virginia will join them soon: Both Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) and House of Delegates Speaker William Howell (R) say McDonnell’s indictment will spur them to make ethics reform a top priority of this year’s legislative session.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/govbeat/wp/2014/01/22/the-most-corrupt-states-in-america/
 

Nutes and Nugs

Well-Known Member
Too bad Pada believes in the liberal media.
Uncle Buck likes charts from liberal sources as well.
He also changes the graphs with Paint Shop so buyer beware.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Too bad Pada believes in the liberal media.
Uncle Buck likes charts from liberal sources as well.
He also changes the graphs with Paint Shop so buyer beware.
You buy, and reiterate FOX news talking points. I just posted an article outlining political corruption, both blue and red.

Tell me again how I buy into the "liberal media", dipshit.

Left, right, center, all the same. You accept the bullshit right wing talking points from the right and spend most of your time at RIU bitching about Obama, his citizenship, Benghazi and the left in the politics section, never once have I heard you criticize someone on the right, ever.


It's interesting, if you look at it objectively, left leaners tend to also criticize the left, because ya know, they have working brains n shit, they know whey they're being fucked over, even by someone claiming to be "friendly". Right wingers don't. You simply suck it up hook, line n sinker. "Conservative!? YES MASTER!" is your motto. I'd bet if the conservative leadership got openly caught on video performing homosexual acts so your lying eyes couldn't deny it, you would defend them with whatever pea brained justification your inferior mind could muster at the time, then say sucking dick relieves nonbelievers of sin, swallowing the climax is the literal meaning of "swallowing the seed of Jesus", just to get some more perceived, coerced action, because ya know, you stupid fucks haven't figured it out yet..
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
You buy, and reiterate FOX news talking points. I just posted an article outlining political corruption, both blue and red.

Tell me again how I buy into the "liberal media", dipshit.

Left, right, center, all the same. You accept the bullshit right wing talking points from the right and spend most of your time at RIU bitching about Obama, his citizenship, Benghazi and the left in the politics section, never once have I heard you criticize someone on the right, ever.

It's interesting, if you look at it objectively, left leaners tend to also criticize the left, because ya know, they have working brains n shit, they know whey they're being fucked over, even by someone claiming to be "friendly". Right wingers don't. You simply suck it up hook, line n sinker. "Conservative!? YES MASTER!" is your motto. I'd bet if the conservative leadership got openly caught on video performing homosexual acts so your lying eyes couldn't deny it, you would defend them with whatever pea brained justification your inferior mind could muster at the time, then say sucking dick relieves nonbelievers of sin, swallowing the climax is the literal meaning of "swallowing the seed of Jesus", just to get some more perceived, coerced action, because ya know, you stupid fucks haven't figured it out yet..
Says the Obama cock-gobbler...
 

Nutes and Nugs

Well-Known Member
You buy, and reiterate FOX news talking points. I just posted an article outlining political corruption, both blue and red.

Tell me again how I buy into the "liberal media", dipshit.

Left, right, center, all the same. You accept the bullshit right wing talking points from the right and spend most of your time at RIU bitching about Obama, his citizenship, Benghazi and the left in the politics section, never once have I heard you criticize someone on the right, ever.

It's interesting, if you look at it objectively, left leaners tend to also criticize the left, because ya know, they have working brains n shit, they know whey they're being fucked over, even by someone claiming to be "friendly". Right wingers don't. You simply suck it up hook, line n sinker. "Conservative!? YES MASTER!" is your motto. I'd bet if the conservative leadership got openly caught on video performing homosexual acts so your lying eyes couldn't deny it, you would defend them with whatever pea brained justification your inferior mind could muster at the time, then say sucking dick relieves nonbelievers of sin, swallowing the climax is the literal meaning of "swallowing the seed of Jesus", just to get some more perceived, coerced action, because ya know, you stupid fucks haven't figured it out yet..
I haven't seen Fox news for years.
I push what I think is right and disagree with the republicans and democrats on a daily basis.

Your buddy Buck should examine this post for Freudian slips.

How you can start off bitching about Fox news and end talking of penises and Jesus I'll never know.
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
"Fuck Obama." (watch this retard still call me an Obama supporter)

-Padawanbater2 (12:56am, 7/27/2014)

How does it feel to eat those big, black, envious words?




Lol

Check dat sig to see "what's right", Idioooooooooooooot!
Dont say that, your boyfriend might not let you gobble Kenya-cock anymore if you hurt his feelings...
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Dont say that, your boyfriend might not let you gobble Kenya-cock anymore if you hurt his feelings...
Delicious then? Lol, that's what I thought.. You personally should be pleasantly surprised! There's plenty to go around for you! We know how you like it to be touched by the help before it ever arrives!

I've got plenty more for ya! Prepare your esophagus!

The hilarious thing is, I'd gladly "gobble Kenya-cock" if I were gay, and shove it right in your homophobic face (actually making your mouth water in jealousy), and only care about consent, because that's what America was founded on, the freedom of choice, the freedom of/from religion. You'd suppress it till you climbed a clock tower and proved to the world how "non-gay" you are... Or by joining a public marijuana growing forum to explicitly state, multiple times, in many different threads, how non gay you are. It totally convinces everyone you don't secretly love the cock.
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
Delicious then? Lol, that's what I thought.. You personally should be pleasantly surprised! There's plenty to go around for you! We know how you like it to be touched by the help before it ever arrives!

I've got plenty more for ya! Prepare your esophagus!

The hilarious thing is, I'd gladly "gobble Kenya-cock" if I were gay, and shove it right in your homophobic face (actually making your mouth water in jealousy), and only care about consent, because that's what America was founded on, the freedom of choice, the freedom of/from religion. You'd suppress it till you climbed a clock tower and proved to the world how "non-gay" you are... Or by joining a public marijuana growing forum to explicitly state, multiple times, in many different threads, how non gay you are. It totally convinces everyone you don't secretly love the cock.
I never said if I was gay or not, although unless gay couples can birth children out their assholes I guess its implied that Im not.

I dont like to label myself tho, unlike the Democratic Cock-Gobbler Rape-fetishist Padawan(master)bater.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
I never said if I was gay or not, although unless gay couples can birth children out their assholes I guess its implied that Im not.

I dont like to label myself tho, unlike the Democratic Cock-Gobbler Rape-fetishist Padawan(master)bater.
Oh, hilarious! You thought that since you couldn't debate the point being made, you'd instead argue the person making the point!

A common technique applied by absolute bitches with no logical retort to their stupidity (and they know it) .. They ~you~ resort to media coverage to keep you relevant because nothing else will. You're like the 43 year old fighter still dreaming about a comeback championship, LOL!

Accept it.. you're done. Your camp is shit
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
The first question that occured to me is what are the real percentages... Maybe in some states the politicians are smarter and get caught less or the prosecutors are more lenient and do not press charges...
 

Nutes and Nugs

Well-Known Member
Oh, hilarious! You thought that since you couldn't debate the point being made, you'd instead argue the person making the point!

A common technique applied by absolute bitches with no logical retort to their stupidity (and they know it) .. They ~you~ resort to media coverage to keep you relevant because nothing else will. You're like the 43 year old fighter still dreaming about a comeback championship, LOL!

Accept it.. you're done. Your camp is shit
Damn son.
Why are you so angry tonight?
 

Red1966

Well-Known Member
Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell’s indictment on charges that he accepted illegal gifts, vacations and loans from a major campaign contributor who sought special treatment is so shocking, in part, because McDonnell is the first governor in the history of the Commonwealth to face criminal charges. Unlike plenty of other states, Virginia doesn’t have a long history of scandals and ethics abuses.

Which states are more used to corruption? Well, depending on how you define corruption, it could be Florida, or Louisiana, or Tennessee, or New York, or Georgia. And then there’s the District of Columbia.

Here’s how each of the above won its dubious distinction:

Georgia: In March 2012, the Center for Public Integrity released a report tracking 330 separate ethics, transparency and accountability metrics in each state. The results showed Georgia had some of the laxest ethics rules in the country and lacked a strong ethics enforcement agency to enforce the laws on the books. More than 650 government employees accepted gifts from vendors doing business with the state between 2007 and 2008, the report showed.

Other big losers in the Center for Public Integrity study included South Carolina, Maine, Michigan, South Dakota, Wyoming — and, yes, Virginia. All seven states earned F grades.

Here’s CPI’s map:




Tennessee: The Daily Beast used FBI arrest records to take a more concentrated look at wasteful spending, embezzlement and convictions for public corruption and ties to organized crime among the states in the decade between 1999 and 2008. Tennessee ranked number one overall, thanks to its top-10 rankings in fraud, forgery and counterfeiting and embezzlement.

Rounding out the top five: Virginia (We’re starting to challenge that idea of an ethical state), Mississippi, Delaware and North Carolina. In all five states, police and prosecutorial corruption and scourges like Medicare fraud help boost their rankings.

Florida: Between 1998 and 2007, 824 public officials in Florida were convicted on public corruption charges at the local, state and federal level. According to a tally compiled by the New York Times, that was more than any other state. New York came in second place, with 704 public officials locked up, while Texas, Pennsylvania, California, Ohio and Illinois all saw more than 500 officials convicted.

Here’s the New York Times’ chart:



New York: Another watchdog group called Integrity Florida pointed to older data that show 1,762 individuals have been convicted on public corruption charges in Florida — an average of 50 people per year. That’s a lot, but it’s not as many as New York, which saw 2,522 officials convicted over the same stretch. More than 2,300 California officials went to jail over the same period, the group said.

A University of Illinois at Chicago study from February 2012 found corruption cost the taxpayers of Illinois an estimated $500 million per year. Between 1976 and 2010, the study showed, the Northern District of Illinois, which covers Chicago, scored 1,531 convictions in the 35-year window, more than any other jurisdiction. The Central District of California, which covers Los Angeles, the Southern District of New York, which covers Manhattan, and the District of Columbia all won more than 1,000 convictions over the same time frame.

Here’s UIC’s chart:



District of Columbia: Few cities have experienced the rash of corruption charges that the District has faced. In just the last two years, three city council members, Michael Brown, Kwame Brown and Harry Thomas Jr., have resigned and pleaded guilty to corruption or embezzlement charges (And there’s an ongoing investigation into Mayor Vincent Gray’s 2010 campaign). Per capita, according to the same New York Times survey, no other state comes anywhere close to the number of officials convicted.

Because of their small populations, the Virgin Islands and Guam rank near the top of the charts, too. North Dakota, Alaska, Louisiana and Mississippi have all seen more than seven convictions per million residents, a little more than one-tenth the conviction rate in Washington, D.C.

Here’s the per capita chart:



Louisiana: Throw out the District and the territories and use some more recent data from the FBI, and Huey Long’s home state reaches the top spot. Louisiana had nearly nine convictions for every 100,000 people, the data show, trailed closely by North and South Dakota, Kentucky and Alaska.

Business Insider crunched those numbers. Here’s their chart:



Lest we dwell solely on the bad news, here’s the good news: States such as Washington, Oregon, Minnesota, Utah, Nebraska and New Hampshire consistently show up near the bottom of the corruption lists. Generally speaking, those states have stronger ethics boards, tighter rules on lobbyist and vendor gifts and more transparent reporting systems for political contributions.

Perhaps Virginia will join them soon: Both Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) and House of Delegates Speaker William Howell (R) say McDonnell’s indictment will spur them to make ethics reform a top priority of this year’s legislative session.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/govbeat/wp/2014/01/22/the-most-corrupt-states-in-america/
All that data could only indicate who does the best job of detecting and prosecuting corruption. The majority of corruption goes undetected or prosecuted. Terry McAuliffe is one of the worst liars there are, yet your article portrays him as one of the good guys.
 

Red1966

Well-Known Member
never once have I heard you criticize someone on the right, ever.
We could say the same about you and the left


It's interesting, if you look at it objectively, left leaners tend to also criticize the left, because ya know, they have working brains n shit, they know whey they're being fucked over, even by someone claiming to be "friendly".
Objectively? Left leaners tend to defend the left. You have no idea what"objective" means. Show us just one quote where you have criticized the left. Just one.
 
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