Quantcast

Rosen out over Kruger corruption charge

Rosen out over Kruger corruption charge
By Howard Koplowitz

A shake-up is underway at Jamaica Hospital and its parent company, MediSys, after the entities removed President and Chief Executive Officer David Rosen from the two posts following federal allegations that he paid bribes to two state legislators.

Rosen was replaced after a vote by the boards of directors of MediSys and Jamaica Hospital installed Bruce Flanz, who had served as executive vice president and chief operating officer of Jamaica Hospital since 1980, the hospital announced.

Rosen, who used to run Jamaica, Flushing and Peninsula hospitals, and former Parkway Hospital CEO Dr. Robert Aquino were charged last Thursday in a bribery conspiracy scheme after they allegedly made payments to state Sen. Carl Kruger (D-Brooklyn) in exchange for Kruger taking official acts on their behalf, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara announced.

Rosen was also charged with making payments to state Assemblyman William Boyland Jr. (D-Brooklyn), who worked for MediSys before being elected to the Assembly in 2003, as part of the scheme and receiving $3,000 a month as a no-show consultant, Bharara charged.

Kruger and Boyland were also charged with theft of honest services.

In a news conference at the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office, Bharara referred to the constant stream of corrupted elected officials that his office has had to prosecute, including two once-prominent Queens legislators: the late Assemblyman Anthony Seminerio and disgraced ex-Assemblyman Brian McLaughlin.

“Every single time we arrest a state senator or assemblyman, it should be a jarring wake-up call,” Bharara said. “Instead, it seems that no matter how many times the alarm goes off, Albany just hits the snooze button. Maybe this time they will get the message.”

Rosen allegedly had MediSys pay $390,000 in sham consulting fees to Seminerio, who died in January while serving time in a North Carolina prison on corruption charges.

Rosen was also charged last Thursday with paying Boyland $177,368 for a no-show consulting job — $3,000 a month — from 2006-11, according to the federal complaint.

The head of MediSys was also charged with conspiring to bribe Kruger in exchange for Kruger’s backing of MediSys to take over Mary Immaculate and St. John’s hospitals in Queens. Both hospitals closed in early 2009.

Aquino allegedly contacted Kruger for the same reasons, as Rosen and is accused of giving $60,000 to Salomon Kalish, a Brooklyn health-care consultant, with half that amount eventually being funneled to Kruger, Bharara said.

Bharara said the funds were given to Kruger in exchange for him to lobby on behalf of Aquino to acquire Mary Immaculate and St. John’s.

Rosen and Aquino face up to 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine if convicted on the charge of conspiracy to deprive New York state and its citizens of their legislators’ honest services.

The U.S. attorney would not comment on whether Seminerio or McLaughlin — who was a confidential informant against Seminerio — cooperated with authorities in the case unveiled last Thursday.

Also charged was lobbyist Richard Lipsky, who allegedly gave $252,000 to a shell company called Olympian Strategic Development Corp., run by Brooklyn resident Michael Turano, who was described by Bharara as a close associate of Kruger.

While Lipsky is currently the lobbyist for Willets Point United, a group compromised of property owners, it is not alleged that he did anything illegal on the group’s behalf.

But Lipsky was charged with funneling $252,000 to Kruger through Olympian in exchange for Kruger’s backing bills that would help Lipsky’s clients and steering money to the clients, Bharara claimed.

An FBI raid of Lipsky’s office and home March 7 uncovered $102,000 from a safe within a closet in his home as well as $4,000 from the pocket of his suit, the criminal complaint said.

Reach reporter Howard Koplowitz by e-mail at hkoplowitz@cnglocal.com or by phone at 718-260-4573.