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  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    7:28am, EDT

    Six NY politicians to be arraigned in corruption cases

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Six politicians are slated to be arraigned Tuesday in a case that alleges, among other charges, a scheme to buy one lawmaker a spot on New York City’s mayoral ballot.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Defense lawyers announced Monday that all six defendants, including embattled state Sen. Malcolm Smith, are expected to plead not guilty at Tuesday’s arraignment. 

    Smith is accused of conspiring with New York City Councilman Daniel Halloran, a Republican, to bribe county Republican leaders for a place on the GOP mayoral ticket. The indictment alleges that two top Republican operatives, Joseph Savino and Vincent Tabone, accepted tens of thousands of dollars in exchange for supporting Smith's political bid, NBCNewYork.com reported.

    Smith never formally launched a campaign to replace outgoing New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. According to NBCNewYork.com, Smith, a Democrat, would have required authorization from three of the city’s five GOP county chairmen to run as a Republican candidate.

    Halloran stands accused of agreeing to siphon off City Council funds to a private company in exchange for additional bribes.

    “That’s politics, it’s all about how much,” Halloran is quoted as saying in the indictment, according to The Associated Press. “Not about whether or will, it’s about how much, and that’s our politicians in New York, they’re all like that.”

    Reuters / Mike Segar

    New York State Senator Malcolm Smith makes his way through a crush of media to a waiting car after appearing in United States Court in White Plains, New York on April 2.

    Smith, Halloran, Savino and Tabone were arrested by the FBI on April 2, following an extensive federal probe.

    The corruption investigation also concerns Spring Valley Mayor Noramie Jasmin and Deputy Mayor Joseph Desmaret, who are accused of accepting funds and property to sign off on a prospective real estate project. That charge is unrelated to Smith’s and Halloran’s alleged bribery plot.

    U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, who announced the complaint against the officials three weeks ago, announced Monday that he has met with the FBI to “discuss expanding our corruption efforts." 

    “It seems that a culture of corruption has developed and grown, just like barnacles on a boat bottom,” Bharara said. “And just as with barnacles on a boat bottom, when a growth is permitted to spread and grow unchecked, it unsurprisingly takes an unrelenting, collective effort to clean up.”

    A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday found that 48 percent of New Yorkers view corruption as a “very serious” issue – the highest share since the poll began posing the question in 2003, according to The Associated Press.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    43 comments

    Smith is accused of conspiring with New York City Councilman Daniel Halloran, a Republican, Now see Dems and Reps can work together after all.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mayor, corruption, new-york-city, politicians, nbcnewyork, malcolm-smith, daniel-halloran
  • 18
    Mar
    2013
    10:19am, EDT

    Luck of the draw: Utah town pulls its mayor’s name from wicker basket

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    Sometimes a little luck goes a long way in politics. The new mayor of a small town in Utah was sworn in last week after his name was drawn from a wicker basket.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Ed Chavez Jr. took over as mayor of Helper, a town of 2,000 about 110 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, after his name was picked in a blind draw.

    "I was kind of shocked that I was the one whose name was drawn," Chavez told NBC affiliate KSL.

    Helper's current mayor, Dean Armstrong, resigned from office Feb. 23 after he was arrested in his second drunken driving offense during his term, KSL reported.

    Helper's City Council tried to pick a mayor to complete Armstrong's current term Thursday night, but with Chavez and City Councilman Kirk Mascaro deadlocked at two votes each, the wicker basket came out.

    KSL reported that each candidate's name was written on a slip of paper and placed in the basket. Helper's municipal attorney then made the pick, with Chavez coming out the winner.

    KSL said he'll serve out the remainder of Armstrong's term, which runs until January 2014. Chavez retired from the Carbon County Sheriff's office recently after 25 years. He previously served on the City Council in nearby Wellington for 15 years and was chairman of the Carbon County Democratic Party for five years, KSL said.

     

     

    15 comments

    It's kinda like how we pick our President. The only difference is that we have to reach into a toilet bowl instead of a wicker basket.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mayor, politics, salt-lake-city
  • Updated
    11
    Mar
    2013
    1:33pm, EDT

    Ex-Detroit mayor Kilpatrick convicted of range of corruption charges

    Rebecca Cook / Reuters file

    Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick gets into a vehicle in front of the federal courthouse in Detroit on Feb. 12.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was convicted Monday of a raft of federal corruption charges, a verdict that all but ensures a return to prison for a man once considered a rising political star.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Jurors found Kilpatrick guilty of 24 criminal counts, including racketeering, extortion and bribery, after a trial in which prosecutors said he presided over a breathtaking profit machine that turned City Hall into “Kilpatrick Incorporated.”

    The racketeering count alone carries up to 20 years in prison.

    Prosecutors said that Kilpatrick, 42, steered $83 million in city work to a friend and contractor, Bobby Ferguson, in exchange for hundreds of thousands of dollars in kickbacks. Jurors also returned guilty verdicts Monday against Ferguson and against Kilpatrick’s father.

    A fundraiser also testified that she gave Kilpatrick a $200,000 personal cut of his political donations and pulled cash from her bra during private meetings.

    Kilpatrick, a Democrat, was just 31 when he was elected mayor in 2001. His tenure was scarred by allegations of cronyism, nepotism and out-of-control spending, coinciding with the continued decline of the city itself.

    Kilpatrick pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in 2008 for lying in a civil trial during which he denied having an affair with his former chief of staff and plotting with her to fire the deputy police chief.

    He resigned and spent three months in jail. He later spent more than a year behind bars for violating probation.

    The former mayor was found not guilty of three charges, and jurors said they were unable to reach a verdict on three more. Kilpatrick appeared surprised as the verdict was read. He did not speak to reporters as he left court.

    Detroit’s current mayor, Dave Bing, said in a statement that “we can finally put this negative chapter in Detroit’s history behind us.” He called for a renewed commitment to transparency and ethics in city government.

    Ferguson, who owned an excavating company, was convicted of racketeering. Kilpatrick’s father, Bernard, was convicted of submitting a false tax return.

    A judge set a hearing later Monday to determine whether Kilpatrick would be detained immediately or whether he would be released until he is sentenced.

    Kilpatrick’s lawyer told jurors that Kilpatrick never extorted anyone and that he only helped Ferguson win city business because he knew Ferguson would hire people who live in Detroit.

    Defense lawyers also argued that the government’s witnesses lied to win favor with prosecutors in their own corruption cases.

    Prosecutors said Kilpatrick abused a nonprofit fund that he created to help distressed people in Detroit. Evidence at trial showed that he used it to pay for yoga lessons, golf clubs and camp for his kids.

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 11, 2013 10:00 AM EDT

    743 comments

    This man is a criminal and continues to keep getting away with stuff....I hope they put him away for a very long time...and YES I'm a Michigander!!!!!

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    Explore related topics: mayor, trial, detroit, kwame-kilpatrick, updated
  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    6:19pm, EST

    FBI monitors investigation of gay mayoral candidate's killing in Mississippi

    The McMillian Campaign / Reuters

    Marco McMillian, a candidate for mayor of the Mississippi Delta city of Clarksdale, is shown in this undated campaign photograph released to Reuters on Feb. 27, 2013.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The FBI said Thursday that it was monitoring the investigation into the killing of a black and openly gay mayoral candidate in Mississippi whose burned and beaten body was found on the Mississippi River levee outside town last week.

    Marco McMillian, a candidate for mayor of Clarksdale, population about 20,000, was found dead last Wednesday. His family said he was beaten, dragged and set ablaze -- a death that "was not a random act of violence," they said in a statement. 

    Authorities have arrested Lawrence Reed, who is also black, and charged him with murder in connection with the case. They say the killing is not being handled as a hate crime, though the FBI could determine whether to file a federal hate crime charge, which covers acts motivated by bias against sexual orientation, The Associated Press reported.

    Mississippi’s hate crimes law does not cover acts motivated by sexual orientation.

    After learning of the circumstances surrounding McMillian's death, special agents from the FBI's Jackson division made contact with the local sheriff's department and the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation last Friday.

    "In this case, the FBI will continue its ongoing dialogue and sharing of information with the local and state agencies, and will continue to monitor this investigation for any indication that a potential violation of federal law exists," Daniel McMullen, special agent in charge of the FBI for Mississippi, said in a statement.

    Related: Mayoral candidate's death shocks Mississippi town 

    The candidate's sport-utility vehicle was involved in a head-on collision in Coahoma County in the Mississippi Delta early last week. Reed had been driving when the accident occurred, but McMillian was not in the vehicle, triggering a search for him, according to media reports.

    McMillian had moved back home from Memphis in January to vie for office as a Democrat. He was one of the first viable openly gay candidates to run for office in Mississippi, according to the Victory Fund, a national organization that supports gay and lesbian candidates.

    Friends said his sexual orientation was known and was not an issue, according to a local newspaper, The Clarion Ledger.

    On Sunday, McMillian's family said in a statement his body was “beaten, dragged and burned,” indicating that he had been pulled behind a car. 

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    16 comments

    "Blutowski 4.0 Could be gang related or a drug debt. It could also be the family of some one he molested. Or crooked cops. This story has all the makings of a Lifetime Movie of the week." You're an idiot.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fbi, mayor, investigation, gay, mississippi, candidate, murder, mayoral
  • 27
    Feb
    2013
    9:04pm, EST

    Mississippi mayoral candidate found dead; person taken into custody

    marcomcmillian.com

    Marco Millian, 34, was widely noted as one of the first openly gay candidates for public office in Mississippi.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    The body of a candidate for mayor of Clarksdale, Miss., was found about 15 miles west of town Wednesday, and a person was in custody, sheriff's officials said.

    Authorities had been searching for Marco McMillian, 34, since Tuesday morning, when his sport-utility vehicle was involved in a head-on collision in Coahoma County, the county sheriff's office said in a statement.

    But McMillian wasn't in the vehicle, authorities said. The driver of his vehicle, identified as Lawrence Reed, 22, of Clarksdale, was airlifted to a hospital in Memphis, Tenn., about 60 miles away, NBC station WMC of Memphis reported.


    There was no immediate report on the cause of death, according tothe Coahoma County coroner's office.

    The sheriff's department declined to say whether Reed was the "person of interest" who was taken into custody or whether the action was taken in connection with McMillian's death or as a separate part of the accident investigation. The department said no further information would be immediately provided "due to the fact this is an ongoing investigation."

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    McMillian — who was chief executive of MWM & Associates, a consultant to nonprofit organizations — was widely noted as one of the first openly gay candidates for public office in Mississippi.

    His campaign spokesman, Jarod Keith, told the Clarion-Ledger newspaper of Jackson, Miss., that McMillian's sexuality was never an issue in the campaign.

    The Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a national advocate for gay political candidates, tweeted Wednesday:


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Our hearts go out to the family and friends of Marco McMillian, one of the 1st viable openly #LGBT candidates in Mississippi."

    In a statement Wednesday, McMillian's campaign said: "Words cannot describe our grief at the loss of our dear friend, Marco McMillian. The shocking news of Marco's death is beyond difficult for us to process."

    Two of McMillian's opponents — who, like McMillian, are Democrats — said they, too, were shocked and saddened by the development.

    "He was a very articulate, clean-cut young man," Bill Luckett, a former candidate for governor, told the Clarion-Ledger. "It's a bizarre and tragic situation." 

    Another candidate in the race, state Rep. Chuck Espy, whose father is the current mayor, told the newspaper that he had known McMillian for many years and considered a dynamic and energetic candidate with numerous ideas about how to change Clarksdale.

    Clarksdale, population 20,000, is the county seat.

    Espy offered his thoughts and prayers to McMillian's family.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    387 comments

    oh boy, here comes the racists with their pom-poms !

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    Explore related topics: mayor, politics, crime, featured, lgbt, clarksdale-ms, marco-mcmillian
  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    7:04am, EST

    'Irrepressible icon': Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch dies at 88

    One of the city's most outspoken politicians, Ed Koch was known for his no-nonsense, colorful personality. A lifelong Democrat, he became New York's 105 mayor, a job he said he wanted for life. He died of congestive heart failure Friday morning at the age of 88. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Former New York City Mayor Edward Irving Koch, a man as colorful as the city he helped save from financial ruin, died Friday of congestive heart failure. He was 88.

    His brashness and thumbs-up confidence – and “How’m I doin?” greeting – became symbols of Gotham chutzpah over his three terms at the city’s helm. And while New Yorkers did not always answer Hizzoner’s trademark question in the affirmative, Koch couldn’t have cared less as he tried to govern a city that many thought was ungovernable. He finally left City Hall in 1989.

    “I’m the sort of person who will never get ulcers,” he told reporters in 1978. “Why? Because I say exactly what I think. I’m the sort of person who might give other people ulcers.”

    Reverend Al Sharpton, who locked horns with Koch through his time as mayor, praised the man he criticized as forthright in a statement on his passing.

    “He would not patronize or deceive you,” said Sharpton, an MSNBC host, remembering that his first arrest for civil disobedience was at a 1978 sit-in protesting a Koch policy. “He said what he meant. He meant what he said. He fought for what he believed in.”

    Born in the Bronx in 1924, Koch and his family soon decamped to Newark, New Jersey, where he spent his childhood. After graduating from high school at the age of 16, Koch returned to the city he loved and enrolled at the City College of New York, but his undergraduate studies were interrupted by World War II when he was drafted in 1943.


    After serving as an infantryman in Europe, Koch enrolled at New York University Law School. He built up a law practice before he entered politics to support Adlai Stevenson’s presidential campaign in 1952.

    Koch’s own political career began in earnest in the early 1960s, organizing for the Democratic party in Greenwich Village on Manhattan’s west side. In 1963, he ousted Tammany Hall chief Carmine DeSapio, winning a post as a district leader.

    Slideshow: Ed Koch: 1924 - 2013

    Ed Koch served 12 years as mayor of New York, from 1977-1989. He passed away on Friday at the age of 88, succumbing to congestive heart failure.

    Launch slideshow

    From 1969 to 1977, Koch served as a congressman representing New York’s 17th Congressional District. He mounted an unlikely run for mayor in 1977, ultimately defeating better-known candidates including incumbent Abraham Beame and congresswoman Bella Abzug.

    Throughout his career, Koch was known for his Bronx-flavored bon mots. “If you agree with me on nine out of 12 issues, vote for me,” Koch once said. “If you agree with me on 12 out of 12 issues, see a psychiatrist.”

    And he brought his forceful personality and attention to detail to the job of mayor, said New York City historian Fred Siegel.

    “His campaign slogan was ‘Why not try competence?’ and he demonstrates it. He really knows the budget, he’s on top of things,” Siegel said of Koch’s first years in office. Later, however, Koch “lost interest in the details of running the city,” Siegel said.

    Koch’s aspirations went beyond the five boroughs, but more illustrious offices eluded him. A bid for governor in 1982 was felled by Mario M. Cuomo.

    Yet the same personality that helped bring Koch national fame also divided some New Yorkers against him over time.

    In 2012, Koch recalled walking to the Brooklyn Bridge during a 1980 transit strike to exhort commuters. “I began to yell, ‘Walk over the bridge! Walk over the bridge! We’re not going to let these bastards bring us to our knees!’” Koch recalled.

    “His mouth got in the way of his policies,” said investigative journalist Wayne Barrett, who chronicled the Koch years.

    The mayor, however, remained forever close-lipped about the most private areas of his personal life, even as some speculated about his sexuality.

    While opponents occasionally tried to make political hay of the whispers, Koch responded with silence: “Whether I am straight or gay or bisexual is nobody’s business but mine,” he wrote in his 1992 autobiography.

    Koch’s final term was tarnished by corruption, as a scandal involving Queens Borough President Donald Manes threatened to ensnare the mayor, but never did. He lost a shot at a fourth term to the more reserved David Dinkins.

    “The people have spoken,” Koch said on the occasion of his losing, “and they must be punished.”

    But Koch, who became the first city mayor to host Saturday Night Live in 1983, did not allow his national profile to dim after losing the luster of the mayoralty. He also published a collection of newspaper columns critical of Rudy Giuliani in 1999 titled “Giuliani: Nasty Man.” And for two years in the late Nineties, he wore a black robe on the television show “People’s Court.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    On Friday, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo – the son of former governor Mario -- paid tribute to the man who won’t be leaving New York, even in death. (Koch bought one of Manhattan’s last burial plots for $20,000 in 2008.)

    “No New Yorker has – or likely ever will – voice their love for New York City in such a passionate and outspoken manner than Ed Koch,” Cuomo said. “Mr. Mayor was never one to shy away from taking a stand that he believed was right, no matter what the polls said or what was politically correct.”

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement that the city had lost “an irrepressible icon, our most charismatic cheerleader and champion.”

    Senator Charles Schumer lauded Koch as a man of whom New Yorker’s could be proud: “Every atom in his body lived, breathed, spoke, and exuded the city. He helped save the city and, perhaps most important of all, gave it confidence when it was beginning to doubt itself, which helped pave the way for the growth and prosperity we’re still experiencing today.”

    Koch died around 2 a.m. Friday after battling a variety of illnesses. He had been hospitalized in September with anemia and in December with a respiratory infection, before his final hospitalization this week.

    A funeral service will be held on Monday.

    MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski reports that Ed Koch, the former three-term mayor of New York City, died of congestive heart failure, at the age of 88.

    243 comments

    God Bless and keep you Ed. My condolences to his friends, family and many admirers.

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  • 9
    Nov
    2012
    7:35pm, EST

    FEMA-funded rapid reconstruction program to begin in NYC, mayor says

    David Friedman / NBC News

    City sanitation workers pick up debris from Superstorm Sandy outside the Breezy Point community polling place at St. Genevieve Church on Tuesday, Nov. 6, in Breezy Point, N.Y.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    NEW YORK – The city is embarking on an unprecedented reconstruction program to swiftly repair homes damaged by Superstorm Sandy, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday. The program will be mostly paid for by the federal government and aims to get some people home early next week, he said.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    The program, called New York City Rapid Repair, will deploy general contractors who will oversee the work in the hard-hit areas. Those contractors will manage electricians, plumbers, carpenters and others to complete the repairs, Bloomberg said. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is supporting the project and will pay for most if not all of it, he added.

    “For a homeowner to go off on their own and find somebody who was available and willing to show up is a daunting task,” he said at a news conference. “We’re changing the game. Today, we’re launching a program that will start returning people to their homes as early as next week. … Its goal is to get as many New Yorkers as possible back in their homes by the end of the year.”


    Some 90,000 households in New York City and Long Island remained without power Friday. Some homes need simple repairs to get up and running, while others will need major work.

    The program will begin with the easiest houses to fix, with those that have received a green card -- indicating they are sound -- from the buildings department, Bloomberg said. The buildings department has already examined some 80,000 homes.

    To register, people must either visit one of the city’s restoration centers, call the information line (311) or sign up online. They must call FEMA to get an identification number. Bloomberg said. The first wave of applicants must have received a green card and be on a street where power has been restored.

    Signup begins Tuesday. Work will start soon afterward.

    Bloomberg said the program, which is optional, was unprecedented and “will save the city, state and federal government a lot of money and that’s because contractors will be able to work on multiple buildings at once and not just one house at a time.”

    Contractors will work over the weekend with the buildings department to identify the homes that will be in the first wave of repairs.

    The program “will go a long ways in our recovery, but I will say it won’t fix everything,” Bloomberg said. “In the hardest hit places like Breezy Point, homes were completely destroyed and some of the buildings that are standing will need major structural work before they can be lived in again. For those families, we’re working on housing options that we’ll have more to say about next week.”

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    80 comments

    When this rebuilding team finishes rebuilding NY, please head for New Orleans they have been waiting 10 years for a little help.

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  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    2:30pm, EDT

    South Texas mayor killed in apparent donkey attack

    A Texas mayor is killed by an aggressive donkey. WOAI's Darlene Dorsey reports.

    By NBC News staff

    The mayor of the South Texas town of Hollywood Park has died after apparently being attacked by a 500-pound donkey on his ranch, officials said Wednesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The body of Mayor William "Bill" Bohlke, 65, was found Monday night during a search by Atascosa County Sheriff’s deputies and relatives, according to the sheriff’s office.

    Chief Deputy David Soward told The Associated Press that Bohlke apparently was attacked on Monday morning by an aggressive male donkey on his ranch.


    A written statement from the family, published on the Hollywood Park town website, said Bohlke suffered “a fatal injury while taking care of his prized cow herd near Pleasanton.”

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    “Bill, your mayor, dearly loved serving you, our community, and we only wish he was here to continue doing so,” the family's statement said.

    Bohlke, who was retired from the Air Force and had been a decorated B-52 pilot and squadron commander in the Vietnam War, was found about 50 yards from his truck, the San Antonio Express-News website reported.

    “They can become very aggressive, very mean, sometimes triggered by a female in heat,” Soward told the paper. “We'll probably never know what triggered it, but it was evident that this particular donkey was involved, based on the evidence at the scene and what we saw on this donkey.” Soward did not elaborate.

    Hollywood Park is a town of about 3,300 people north of San Antonio. Mayor Pro Tem Steve Phillips will step in as acting mayor, according to the AP.

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    206 comments

    That's what I have been trying to avoid my whole life...a headline that says, "killed by an @$$!"

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  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    4:05am, EDT

    Newark Mayor Cory Booker helps save neighbor from fire: 'I felt terror'

    Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker gave new meaning to the term "public servant" when he rescued a neighbor from a burning building. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Updated at 11:35 a.m. ET Friday: Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker suffered second-degree burns and smoke inhalation as he helped rescue one of his next-door neighbors from a burning building Thursday.


    Follow Ian Johnston

    “There was a time when I didn’t think we’d make it out of there,” Booker told media at a news conference Friday morning, describing the rescue as his "proverbial 'come to Jesus' moment."

    “I didn’t feel bravery; I felt terror," he said, adding: "There was a moment I felt very religious."

    Booker returned home to his home in the Upper Clinton Hill neighborhood of Newark Thursday evening to find the building next door was on fire, the The Star-Ledger newspaper said.

    "We got everybody out of the house, but their daughter’s screaming, ‘I’m upstairs!’" he told the paper.

    He went in, followed by his security detail, and heard cries for help from upstairs. When he got to the second floor, he was engulfed in flames and smoke.

    Newark Mayor Cory Booker holds a press conference to answer questions about Thursday's fire rescue, where he helped save a neighbor from a burning building. Booker said he "did what most neighbors would do."

    "I suddenly had the realization that I can't find this woman," Booker told The Star-Ledger newspaper. "I look behind me and see the flames and I think, 'I'm not going to get out of here.' Suddenly I was at peace with the fact that I was going to jump out the window."

    Twitter on fire with #CoryBooker stories

    Then he heard the woman's voice again from another bedroom.

    "I just grabbed her and whipped her out of the bed," Booker said.

    They got downstairs, but then collapsed, Booker said.

    The paper reported a total of five people went the hospital: the mayor, three members of his security detail, and the woman from the house.

    Rescued woman has back, neck burns
    The woman was listed in stable condition in the hospital, the Star-Ledger said. She had burns to her back and neck.

    Newark Mayor Cory Booker suffered second-degree burns and smoke inhalation after rushing into his neighbor's burning building and carrying her down from the engulfed second floor. WNBC-TV reports.

    Fire Chief John Centanni told The Star-Ledger that the mayor may have saved the woman's life.

    On Friday, Booker said he used to think he had problems. "Now everything seems so small in my life."

    Booker was treated for burns on his hand and for breathing in smoke, the paper added.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "Thanks 2 all who are concerned. Just suffering smoke inhalation. We got the woman out of the house. We are both off to hospital. I will b ok," Booker said in a message on his Twitter account.

    "Thanks everyone, my injuries were relatively minor. Thanks to Det. Alex Rodriguez who helped get all of the people out of the house," he added on Twitter.

    Another Twitter user, Alethea Felton, said in a message responding to Booker's tweet, "@CoryBooker Wow...I can't wait until you're PRESIDENT oneday-YOU ROCK! God bless you for your devotion & humility to those you serve."

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    235 comments

    Thank God for the Mayor's bravery and that of his security force.May he and all others be healed and safe.Amen.

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  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    6:11am, EST

    New mayor of Sunland Park, New Mexico, can't legally enter City Hall

    Pat Vasquez-Cunningham/ Albuquerque Journal file / Zuma

    It is not clear what will happen to mayor-elect Daniel Salinas, as an investigation is underway of voter fraud, in addition to other pending charges. If Salinas is convicted of a felony, he cannot hold public office.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    SUNLAND PARK, New Mexico - A man facing extortion charges involving a stripper, and who is forbidden from entering City Hall, has been elected mayor of Sunland Park, New Mexico.

    Daniel Salinas was accused of trying to blackmail a mayoral opponent, Gerardo Hernandez, to drop out of the race with a tape showing Hernandez receiving a lap dance from a topless stripper, New Mexico State Police spokesman Robert McDonald said.


    He was arrested in late February for extortion, McDonald said. Salinas was later released on $50,000 cash bond on condition he not enter City Hall or contact city workers.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    But his name remained on the ballot. On Tuesday, he won the election with an unofficial tally of 637 votes for Salinas and 553 for Hernandez.

    "My attorney is looking into changing some of those restrictions so I can go back to work," Salinas told the Las Cruces Sun-News."I am very grateful and very happy for this support."

    Setup or sleaze? Would-be mayor of Sunland Park, NM, caught with lap dancer

    It is not clear what will happen to mayor-elect Salinas, as an investigation is under way of voter fraud, in addition to the pending charges. If Salinas is convicted of a felony, he cannot hold public office.

    "They're still arresting people for voter fraud so it's all ongoing, rolling into one big investigation," McDonald said.

    City Manager Jaime Aguilera was arrested along with Salinas and both men are charged with extortion, conspiracy to commit extortion, tampering with evidence and alleged blackmail of Hernandez.

    The election on Tuesday was to replace former mayor Martin Resendiz, who resigned last year after admitting to signing contracts while drunk.

    Speaking to the Sun-News, Hernandez said that Salinas should resign.

    "Ethically, there is not an option to run City Hall from the outside," he said. "If I were in his place, I would step down."

    Salinas told the newspaper that he had no plans to quit.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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