Probe eyes gifts given to ex-Pa. liquor officials
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A central Pennsylvania district attorney said today his office will review findings from state ethics investigators that three former top officials at the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board accepted thousands of dollars in gifts, liquor, dinners and golf trips.
Dauphin County District Attorney Ed Marsico said he expects to get the case because Attorney General Kathleen Kane has a conflict of interest. Kane’s husband’s family company has a long-standing business relationship with the Liquor Control Board, handling its Scranton-area distribution center and its mid-Atlantic inbound trucking contract. The contracts are worth more than $12 million a year, according to the Liquor Control Board.
The Pennsylvania State Ethics Commission on Monday ordered the three former officials — chairman Patrick Stapleton III, chief executive Joe Conti and marketing director James Short — to pay the state more than $23,000, the approximate value of the gifts, according to ethics investigators.
The commission, however, is not a criminal investigative agency, and it sends its orders to the attorney general’s office for its review, said Robert Caruso, the ethics commission’s executive director.
Pennsylvania state law does not allow Liquor Control Board members and staff to accept any gifts from the industry it regulates.