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Money cleanses: a Bloomberg anecdote

There's a very interesting passage in City Hall's profile of Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance:
Vance succeeded at mending the once-fractured relationship his office had with Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Unlike Morgenthau, who was insulated from political pressure by dint of age and a half-centuryā€™s worth of political clout, Vance needs Bloombergā€™s help. A key part of his platform, a family justice center, is still unfunded. A bill increasing domestic violence penalties that Vance hoped would pass the state Legislature fell prey to partisan infighting in the State Senate.
His officeā€™s $91 million budget depends on a variety of sources, including the cityā€™s budget, controlled by Bloomberg, and discretionary funds from both the City Council and the borough president.
But Vance also seemed to make a key decision deferential to the mayor.
The office prosecuted John Haggerty, a consultant to Bloombergā€™s 2009 reelection campaign, who was convicted of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the mayorā€™s campaign. Vanceā€™s prosecutors took the unusual step of granting Bloomberg immunity in exchange for his testimony.
Experts wondered why Haggerty was the only person tried in a case where it seemed Bloombergā€™s campaign had skirted campaign-finance lawsā€”though Vance did score a much-needed victory when the jury convicted Haggerty of felonies.
Asked whether heā€™d deliberately courted the mayorā€™s favor to mend their relationship, Vance said, ā€œIt always is better to have people on your side than opposite you when youā€™re trying to achieve an objective.ā€
It's not clear whether that's an admission in response to a question about selective prosecution or a more general question.

But it does suggest how power works in New York City.

Money cleanses, as with Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov. So does power.

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