11252020 - News Article - Former Portage mayor says delays justify dropping his federal bribery case
11252020 - News Article - Feds oppose move to dismiss former Portage mayor's bribery case
11252020 - News Article - Retrial in ex-Portage Mayor James Snyder’s case pushed to March due to concerns about holding a jury trial amid pandemic
11202020 - News Article - Former Portage mayor's new bribery trial postponed by COVID pandemic
11132020 - News Article - Bribery retrial for former Portage Mayor James Snyder pushed to January
11132020 - News Article - ‘A dark cloud over the city’: After 4 years, Portage still awaits resolution in former mayor’s bribery case
11112020 - News Article - Federal judge opts to keep former Portage mayor's bribery case in latest twist
11102020 - News Article - Judge recuses herself from Portage mayor's bribery retrial
11092020 - News Article - Judge backs out less than a week after setting bribery trial for former Portage mayor
11092020 - News Article - Judge in ex-Portage Mayor James Snyder’s bribery case recuses herself; trial was to start Dec. 7
11072020 - News Article - Ex-Northwest Indiana Mayor Faces Retrial On Bribery Charge
11072020 - News Article - Ex-northwest Indiana mayor faces retrial on bribery charge
11052020 - News Article - Bribery retrial set for former Portage Mayor James Snyder
11022020 - News Article - New trial for former Portage Mayor James Snyder set for Dec. 7
10222020 - News Article - Judge denies motions to dismiss bribery charge against disgraced former Portage mayor
A judge denied Thursday two motions to dismiss a soliciting bribes charge former Portage Mayor James Snyder will be retried on, according to court records.
U.S. District Court Chief Judge Theresa Springmann, in Hammond, denied a motion to dismiss the bribery charge on double jeopardy grounds and another motion to dismiss the bribery charge on supervisory power of the court. Springmann ordered a Nov. 2 conference in the case.
Snyder’s attorneys argued that the double jeopardy standard applies in this case because brothers Robert and Steve Buha, former owners of Great Lakes Peterbilt, were granted immunity with “no-notice, mid-trial” following a grand jury testimony that took “the Court completely by surprise," according to court records. With their testimony, according to documents filed by Snyder’s legal team, “there is a strong likelihood that Mr. Snyder would have been acquitted.”
Additionally, Snyder’s attorneys argued in the filing that the court should use its supervisory power to acquit him because the prosecutors “deprived Mr. Snyder of eyewitnesses as to what happened between him and the Buhas ... much of the evidence he had expected to place before the jury.”
On Thursday, Springmann issued an order denying the motion to dismiss the charge on double jeopardy grounds because there is no proof of misconduct in how the prosecution handled the Buha brothers' testimony.
In arguing that the court should dismiss the charge based on supervisory power of the court, Snyder’s attorneys compared the case to a federal case where a witness was intimidated through written and verbal communication. But, Springmann ruled “the two cases are incomparable."
Springmann ruled that Snyder’s attorneys do "not contend (prosecutors) attempted to threaten or intimidate the Buha brothers by meeting with them or sending them messages or other communications,” according to court records.
Springmann ruled that prosecutors stated that the government “does not believe that (the Buha brothers) have been truthful," which “fall short of the obviously threatening conduct that other courts have deemed to be witness intimidation,” according to court records.
Additionally, Springmann said that the prosecutor made that statement during a sidebar “which ... is a rather inefficient medium for conveying a threat to a witness," according to court records.
Snyder declined to comment and his attorneys did not immediately return requests for comment.
Snyder, who was indicted in November 2016, was convicted of taking a $13,000 bribe in exchange for contracts to sell five garbage trucks to the city and using a shell company to hide income assets from the IRS while owing back personal and business taxes. The jury acquitted Snyder of a third count that alleged he took a $12,000 bribe to get a company on Portage’s tow list.
Snyder, 42, has agreed to forfeit $13,000 to the federal government, documents show.
Federal prosecutors said Snyder allegedly solicited money from co-defendant John Cortina, of Kustom Auto Body in Portage, and “Individual A” and gave them a towing contract for Portage.
Cortina, 81, in January 2019 pleaded guilty to a charge that he paid bribes to Snyder to get a spot on the tow list. Cortina did not testify during the trial.
Cortina was sentenced Jan. 22 to time served and a $12,000 fine.
10192020 - News Article - Do or die ruling expected this week in former Portage mayor's public corruption case
07072020 - News Article - Lawyers set to argue if new trial's in the case for Snyder
07062020 - News Article - Snyder friend fined $12,000 in case that took down mayor
08132023 - News Article - Former Portage Mayor James Snyder asks US Supreme Court to consider his case
Former Portage Mayor James Snyder asks US Supreme Court to consider his case Chicago Tribune Aug 13, 2023 https://www.chicagotribune.com/...
-
Facebook post referencing Holocaust museums used to explain why portrait of disgraced Portage mayor still hangs in city hall POST-TRIB...
-
Portage Board of Works seeks to recoup surety bond on Clerk-Treasurer Chicago Tribune October 25, 2019 https://www.chicagotribune.co...
-
Former Portage mayor's new bribery trial postponed by COVID pandemic NWI Times November 20, 2020 https://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/c...