As the Denver Post reports:
Republican operative Scott Shires is accused of helping the head of an illegal-gambling ring hide the nature of his business, according to a state indictment.
Shires is alleged to have advised Jeffrey Castardi on how to disguise money laundering at Mario N Wongs, a restaurant Castardi owned.
Castardi and six others were indicted last month on allegations they ran an illegal-gambling operation and other rackets. Shires is not charged in the case.
Shires denied involvement in the scheme. He said he was not aware of what Castardi was doing during the period that his company, Shires Financial Group, handled bookkeeping matters for him…
Our readers will recall that Shires had a major role in shady financing in 2006 and figured prominently in a damaging story last year, related to then-GOP Senate candidate Bob Schaffer’s service on the board of what was later determined to be a fraudulent enterprise bilking the federal government out of millions of grant dollars.
Shires says he didn’t know anything about that either. It’s all in the, ah, plea bargain if you want to read it. Back to the present crime, the Post continues:
Shires was among a list of people who “feloniously and knowingly conducted or participated, directly or indirectly, in the enterprise,” the indictment said. [Pols emphasis]
Rob Shapiro, Colorado’s first assistant attorney general, who is handling the case, didn’t return calls for comment.
Shires has brushed up against the law before. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of filing false tax returns in connection with a case against his one-time employer, Octane International Limited.
He was sentenced in June to a year’s probation and a $3,450 fine in the case.
Shires is well-connected in Colorado GOP circles and has run tax-exempt 527 political committees formed to influence elections in the state, including the Colorado League of Taxpayers and the Coalition for Energy.
At some point, Republican moneymen will probably figure out that this guy isn’t exactly, you know, the guy you want handling your books. Until then, Democrats will no doubt be glad to let him remain tied firmly around the GOP’s neck–like an ankle bracelet that baggy pants won’t cover up.
Rep. Dave “The Resume” Balmer, on the other hand, finds this whole conversation entirely too judgmental. “Who among us is without sin?” we can picture him asking, unaware of the irony.
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Not good.
Please. Read the article. Scott is clearly guilty of nothing and terminated the agreement as soon as he became suspicious.
I pointed out that he is a bonus member of the Arapahoe County Republican Central Committee. On top of that, the party allowed him to remain an elected party offical after he plead guilty to a misdemeanor in federal court last year.
Mr. “Republican 36” – what personal issues you may have with Scotty?
Because nowhere in our by-laws does it say we run background checks on members of the party running for organizational positions.
Now I’m not saying I’d necessarily oppose such action — I’m just saying we don’t require whistle clean backgrounds of our activists. If we did — I’d bet most of the kooks would fail to meet such a standard.
It is amazing that you seem to think it is ok for him to continue serving as a bonus member after he plead guilty to a federal misdemeanor. He was plead to more than a parking ticket.
You bet, nothing to see here! Jesus, you people really can’t help yourselves, can you?
The article says that Shires was not charged in the indictment, yet the indictment went on to accuse Shires of knowing felonious conduct? If Shires were thought to be guilty of such conduct, why wasn’t he charged? I’m confused.