Lawyers lay out cases in D.C. trial


Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, is accused of not having paid for work done on his home.

McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Sen. Ted Stevens used one of Alaska’s biggest employers as his “own personal handyman service” and never paid Veco Corp. for hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of work done on his home, a federal prosecutor charged Thursday as she outlined the government’s case for finding the Alaska Republican guilty of lying on financial disclosure forms.

“You’ll learn that the defendant never paid Veco a dime for the work on the chalet. Not a penny,” the Justice Department’s lead prosecutor, Brenda Morris, told jurors in the opening minutes of Stevens’ trial.

Stevens’ lawyers countered that the senator is not guilty and that “every bill submitted was paid.” Attorney Brendan Sullivan blamed Veco and its chief executive officer, Bill Allen, for allowing costs to escalate without telling Stevens what the expenses would be or even showing him all the bills. Allen also installed fancy add-ons — such as a Viking gas grill and gaudy but pricey Christmas lights — that were unnecessary and unwanted, Sullivan said.

“When you see the evidence ... you’ll see he had no intent to violate the law, no intent to conceal anything,” Sullivan said. “He didn’t want these things, he didn’t ask for these things. He told some of them to take them back. He never once hid anything.”

Sullivan also hinted that the jurors would hear some uncomfortable and intrusive details about the relationship between the 84-year-old Stevens and his second wife, Catherine Stevens, whom Sullivan said opened the bank account they established to pay for home renovations expenses.

“Catherine ran the financial part of the renovation,” he said. “She was the person who opened the account, reviewed the bills; she was the person who wrote the check.”

But the jury also will hear from many of the people who did the work on Stevens’ home in Girdwood, Alaska, Morris said, referring to the A-frame cabin as a “chalet,” as the senator did. Morris said the workers will describe how even though Stevens paid subcontractors with whom he didn’t have a personal relationship, he never paid Veco for its work, thanks to his close connections to the company’s chief executive officer, Allen.

“If the defendant needed an electrician, he contacted Veco. If the defendant needed a plumber, he contacted Veco,” she said. “We reach for the Yellow Pages; he reached for Veco.”

Jurors also will hear about a 2006 conversation between Stevens and Allen, who already was cooperating with federal authorities at that point. In the conversation, Stevens told Allen that the worst that could happen to them if anyone found out what the company had done for him was that they’d have to spend a lot of money on lawyers — and perhaps serve a little jail time. In the conversation, Stevens said they wouldn’t “be killed,” meaning that it wasn’t a matter of life or death.

Stevens knew he was doing wrong, Morris said, and contractors who the government alleges worked for free on the senator’s home will testify that they were told not to talk about the work they were doing.

“One of the guys will tell you that he was told by Bill Allen to keep it quiet, that it would be bad if the public found out,” Morris said.

“This is a simple case about a public official who took hundreds and thousands of dollars’ worth of free financial benefits, and then took away the public’s right to know that information,” Morris said.

Stevens, the longest-serving Republican U.S. senator, faces seven felony counts of making false statements on his Senate financial-disclosure forms. The 84-year-old Stevens is up for re-election this year and is locked in a tight battle with his Democratic opponent, Mark Begich, the mayor of Anchorage.