Philadelphia ex-Rep. Michael J. Myers returns to prison at 79

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Philadelphia ex-Rep. Michael J. Myers returns to prison at 79

A former congressman from Philadelphia who went to prison over the 1970 s-era Abscam scandal was sent back to prison Tuesday at age 79 in a ballot stuffing case.

Former democratic U.S. Rep. Michael J. Ozzie Myers was sentenced to 2 years in prison by a judge who questioned whether he had learned any lessons over the years. Myers said he had worked with election officials to pad the vote tallies of his political consulting clients. Some were running for city judgeships.

Myers would ask money from his clients in the form of cash or checks as consulting fees and then use portions of these funds to pay election officials to tamper with election results, U.S. Attorney Jacqueline Romero said in a statement after the hearing.

Voting is the cornerstone of our democracy. She said that if a vote is wrong or if the integrity of just one election official is compromised, it diminishes faith in the process.

Myers pleaded guilty in June to charges of corruption, conspiracy, bribery and obstruction for his work on behalf of Democratic candidates from 2014 and 2018. His lawyer said that there was no evidence that the crimes changed the outcome of any election.

The people of Philadelphia should feel safe that the elections are fair and free, and when they happen they are found out, said defense lawyer Noah Gorson, who said that there were rare instances of election fraud in the city.

Myers'family, including his elderly wife, became upset when U.S. District Judge Paul S. Diamond revoked his bail Tuesday and ordered him to prison straightaway.

They were unprepared for that because the government had agreed that they had no objection to his self-surrendering, and he is an elderly man, Gorson said. Myers was convicted in the Abscam sting of bribery and conspiracy for taking money from FBI agents who posed as Arab sheiks. He served more than a year in prison and was expelled from Congress in 1980.

Myers served six years in the Pennsylvania House before his 1976 election in Congress.