Jury convicts ex-Assembly leader in public corruption trial
NEW YORK — A jury convicted former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver of public corruption charges Friday, dashing the 74-year-old Democrat’s second attempt to avoid years in prison after a decades-long career as one of the most powerful politicians in state government.
The verdict, which came on the first full-day of deliberations, was a repeat of the outcome in Silver’s first trial in 2015.
That conviction and a 12-year prison sentence were tossed out by an appeals court as a result of a recent Supreme Court ruling that tweaked the legal boundaries of what constituted corruption.
Silver could again be facing a long prison term when he is sentenced on June 13.


