Probation for businessman in Pa. cop computer scam


PITTSBURGH (AP) — A businessman and ex-friend of the city's former police chief was sentenced Tuesday to three years' probation for bribing a city official to get a $327,000 contract to put radios and computers in city police cars.
Arthur Bedway Jr., who pleaded guilty in August, was also ordered to pay a $30,000 fine. He again blamed many of his troubles on the former chief, Nathan Harper Jr., who faces sentencing in federal court next month on unrelated charges stemming from a city police slush fund and failing to file federal tax returns.
"Thirty years of friendship put me on these steps today," Bedway said outside the U.S. District Court building after his sentencing. "Don't trust your friends."
Bedway, 64, contends Harper came up with the idea to rename a security firm owned by Bedway as Alpha Outfitters so the company could bid on the 2007 contract.
Bedway contends Harper received $9,000 for his role in the scheme, a claim Harper's attorneys have repeatedly denied. Bedway made similar comments following his guilty plea, and his attorney, Martin Dietz, filed a presentence memorandum this month claiming Harper hatched the scheme and recruited Bedway to join it.
Harper's attorney, Robert DelGreco, again denied that Thursday, even after U.S. District Judge Cathy Bissoon told Bedway she found his explanation "credible, albeit not excusable" in sentencing him to probation instead of 12 to 18 months in prison, as recommended by federal sentencing guidelines.
"Does the government have any evidence that what Mr. Bedway says about how he became involved in this scheme is untrue?" the judge asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Lee Karl.
"No," Karl said.
Bedway's attorney seized on those statements in comments after the sentencing.
"She found it credible that Bedway got involved in this behavior because Nate Harper recruited him," Dietz said, adding later, "He was facing a jail guideline-range sentence and she imposed probation."
Karl and Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Cessar, who also prosecuted the case, referred comment to U.S. Attorney David Hickton. Hickton, through his spokeswoman, declined to comment.
But DelGreco said if prosecutors could prove Bedway's claims about Harper were true, "then I think they would have, and they would have filed charges, which they have not."
The only other person charged in the scheme, an ex-city employee named Christine Kebr, faces sentencing next month. Kebr pleaded guilty to taking $6,000 from Bedway to make it appear Alpha Outfitters was owned by a woman to take advantage of set-asides for such businesses.
Harper resigned in February and was indicted in March on charges he conspired to set up a secret $70,000 police slush fund using fees collected from bars and other businesses that hire city officers to work off-duty security details. Harper has pleaded guilty to spending more than $30,000 from the fund for personal reasons and to not filing federal tax returns from 2008 to 2011.
Dietz said he believes Harper hasn't been charged in the Bedway scheme because he's helped in federal investigations against unspecified individuals. DelGreco denied that.
"There's been a lot of discussion about some cooperation agreement. That simply does not exist," DelGreco said. "The chief does not have a plea bargain for his present matters, and never has there been a discussion about leniency or a pass on any charges in exchange for his cooperation."
Last week, Hickton confirmed that an ongoing federal investigation in which former Mayor Luke Ravenstahl's police bodyguards and others have been subpoenaed by a grand jury began only after Harper was charged.
Ravenstahl, whose term expired last month, dropped his re-election bid three weeks before Harper was indicted.
The former mayor has repeatedly denied wrongdoing and has yet to be charged. Ravenstahl's bodyguards have said they were questioned about their pay and expense records, particularly pertaining to instances when the 33-year-old divorced mayor would be out at night.