Local Politics

Ex-Easley aide to serve time in Florida

A top aide to former Gov. Mike Easley will serve his sentence for federal income tax evasion in a prison in Pensacola, Fla.

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Ruffin Poole leaves courthouse
RALEIGH, N.C. — A top aide to former Gov. Mike Easley will serve his sentence for federal income tax evasion in a prison in Pensacola, Fla.

Ruffin Poole, 39, was supposed to report to prison Friday, but authorities moved his reporting date back to July 26 after the U.S. Bureau of Prisons changed his assignment from Bennettsville, S.C., to Pensacola.

Poole pleaded guilty last year to tax evasion, shortly before he was scheduled to go to trial on 57 public corruption-related charges, including extortion, bribery and money laundering.

The charge stemmed from $30,000 Poole made on a coastal investment and didn't report in 2005. It was uncovered during a two-year federal investigation into Easley's dealings with friends and contributors while in office.

Federal authorities alleged that Poole became known among Easley's top contributors as "Little Governor" because he was the person tasked with resolving any problems donors faced with state regulators and with lining up appointments for them to serve on state boards and commissions.

In exchange for his work, the donors showered Poole with gifts. He also was allowed to invest in coastal real estate developments at the same time as he was working to secure permits for those projects from state regulators, according to federal indictments.

Wilmington developer Lanny Wilson allowed Poole to invest in the Cannonsgate development in Carteret County in 2005, and in an attempt to curry favor for permits and an appointment to a state board, Wilson quickly turned a $30,000 profit for Poole, prosecutors said.

Easley and his wife later purchased a waterfront lot in Cannonsgate at a below-market rate.

Poole was sentenced in May to 12 months and one day in prison and ordered to pay a $30,000 fine. He already has paid $16,629 in back taxes with penalties, authorities said.

Easley entered an Alford plea in state court in November to a felony charge of certifying a false campaign report in 2006. An Alford plea allows a defendant to plead guilty, while maintaining his innocence, because there is sufficient evidence to find him guilty.

Easley was ordered to pay a $1,000 fine, but he avoided any prison or probation time.

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