Pubdate: Mon, 12 Feb 2001
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Los Angeles Times
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Author: Stephen Braun, Richard A. Serrano, Judy Pasternak, Times Staff Writers

L.A. POLITICIANS URGED PARDON OF COCAINE DEALER

WASHINGTON -- President Clinton released a convicted Los Angeles cocaine 
dealer from federal prison after influential congressmen and city leaders 
personally lobbied the White House and the Justice Department to secure his 
commutation, it was learned Sunday.

The concerted effort to free Carlos Vignali included a series of personal 
contacts between California Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Los Angeles) and the 
White House, and correspondence from former California Assembly Speaker 
Antonio Villaraigosa. Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles and Los 
Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca also wrote letters.

The letters, some written as early as 1996 and others sent last year, 
suggested that Vignali was wrongly convicted and that his case deserved a 
careful review by the White House.

Their view conflicted sharply with the position of federal law enforcement 
authorities, who insisted that Vignali deserved his 15-year prison sentence 
for his central role in a narcotics operation that stretched from Los 
Angeles to Minneapolis, delivering more than 800 pounds of cocaine.

Clinton commuted Vignali's sentence, and he was freed from prison on Jan. 
20 after serving six years. On his last day in office, Clinton issued 140 
pardons and 36 commutations. Clinton spokesman Jake Siewert, asked about 
cases such as Vignali's, said he did not remember any specific cases but 
added: "We tried to make a judgment on the merits."

The Times reported Sunday that law enforcement authorities were indignant 
that the convicted cocaine dealer had been freed and suggested that he 
never would have been released without political intervention.

Vignali's request for clemency went first to the Justice Department and 
then to the White House with a recommendation that has not been determined. 
Former President Clinton has not fully explained why he pardoned 140 
individuals and commuted the sentences of 36 others on his last day in 
office. Vignali's father, Horacio Vignali, is an affluent Los Angeles 
businessman with deep ties in the Latino community who became a major 
political contributor to top state and federal officeholders after his son 
was convicted and imprisoned in 1994.

Both Becerra and Villaraigosa are candidates for mayor of Los Angeles. On 
Jan. 19, Clinton's last night in office, Becerra said he phoned the White 
House and the Justice Department to find out if Vignali had a chance of 
being pardoned.

The call was only the most recent of a series of contacts with the White 
House that Becerra pursued to bring Vignali's case before Clinton, Becerra 
acknowledged Sunday night.

Becerra conceded that the Vignalis were not his constituents but added that 
the father had been a major contributor and a friend of five years. 
However, the congressman denied that he was helping the son in return for 
the father's political contributions. Vignali had donated at least $11,000 
to Becerra's political action committee over the last three years.

The congressman said he never investigated the accuracy of the father's 
description of his son's case. "They [the Vignali family] believed to the 
depths of their heart he was innocent," Becerra said.

Becerra said Horacio Vignali had repeatedly asked him since 1996 to help 
him win his son's release. But the congressman insisted his intervention 
was aimed only at finding out about the son's case--not securing his freedom.

"I told him [Horacio Vignali] I thought it was a longshot to do this," 
Becerra said. "I said I'd try to find out what it looked like."

In a Nov. 21, 2000, letter to Clinton, Becerra said: "Mr. Vignali's parents 
are dear friends of mine and solid, upstanding members of the Los Angeles 
community. They have made it their personal crusade to clear their son's 
record and bring him home.

"They believe their son to be innocent and, in any case, feel strongly that 
he has paid his debt to society," Becerra wrote.

Becerra then noted that a number of influential Los Angeles area leaders 
"have weighed in on behalf of Mr. Vignali."

"I respectfully urge you to take a thoughtful look at this case. The 
Vignali family's efforts deserve your careful consideration," he concluded.

Starting in mid-December, Becerra said, he had a series of telephone 
conversations with Deputy White House Chief of Staff Maria Echaveste about 
Vignali's case.

"I at one point raised it with her," Becerra said. "When we got close to 
the closing of the [congressional] session, I asked, 'Are you familiar with 
the request for commutation on this particular case?' She said she didn't 
know anything about it. I said, 'Would you mind checking?' "

Becerra said Echaveste "got back to me within a week. She said there's no 
word on any particular progress on the case."

Echaveste said Sunday night that she recalled the phone conversation and 
that Becerra was only calling to check on the status of the case. "I simply 
referred the matter to the White House counsel's office," she said.

The Becerra effort was part of a concerted campaign to sway Clinton's 
decision on a commutation that included letters from Mahony, Baca, former 
U.S. Rep. Esteban Torres and Villaraigosa. Becerra said that the letters 
were prompted by lobbying from the father--who told The Times last week 
that he asked no one to work on behalf of his son.

Torres wrote two letters on behalf of Vignali in 1996. The first was to 
Atty. Gen. Janet Reno and the warden at the Colorado federal prison where 
Carlos Vignali was incarcerated.

In the letter to Reno, Torres wrote, "I am asking that you carefully review 
Mr. Vignali's case and give this matter your every consideration." Torres 
told the warden of the Federal Correctional Institute in Florence, Colo., 
Joe W. Booker Jr., that Vignali should be housed closer to his family in 
Los Angeles.

Vignali eventually was transferred to a federal prison in southeastern 
Arizona, from which he was released in January.

In 1998, Torres wrote a third letter on Vignali's behalf, this one to 
President Clinton. "I would appreciate your careful review and your 
immediate consideration of approval of his petition" for a commutation, 
Torres wrote.

Torres could not be reached for comment Sunday night.

A similar letter from Villaraigosa in May 1996 went to the U.S. pardon 
attorney's office.

"I am convinced that he has been falsely linked to a drug ring . . . ," he 
wrote. "In the interest of justice I urge you to give Mr. Vignali's case 
prompt and thorough consideration."

Villaraigosa was phoned repeatedly, but he, too, could not be found for 
comment Sunday night.

Mahony also wrote the pardon office in 1996. He noted that Torres, 
Villaraigosa, state Sen. Richard G. Polanco and L.A. City Councilman 
Richard Alatorre "had reviewed this case very carefully and each one has 
concluded that the facts in this case merit a full evaluation and review . . .

"I now wish to add my voice recommending that all of the process, the law 
and the facts in this case be reviewed fully to determine if justice has 
been achieved in the case of Mr. Carlos Vignali Jr." the cardinal wrote. 
Calls to Mahony's office went unanswered Sunday night.

Baca, then a county sheriff's chief, wrote in 1996 to the U.S. probation 
office in Minnesota urging Vignali's transfer to a penitentiary closer to 
Los Angeles.

Baca declined to comment, according to his spokesman.

According to a Times analysis of political contribution records, Horacio 
Vignali gave Polanco $26,000 and made donations worth $2,795 to 
Villaraigosa. The Times' analysis found no contributions from Horacio 
Vignali to Torres.

Times Staff Writers Joe Mozingo and Beth Shuster in Los Angeles contributed 
to this report.
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