Amazing !!By Lauren Pack, Staff Writer 12:07 AM Sunday, June 24, 2012
In 2009, Mike Fox, the longest-serving state lawmaker
in Butler County history, was charged with federal charges accusing him of
abusing his political authority, defrauding the public out of hundreds of
thousands of dollars and financially benefiting from county contracts from
2000-08.
Earlier this year, he was sentenced to four years in
prison after pleading guilty to complicity to commit mail and wire fraud and
filing a false tax return. To this day, Fox said he believes he did nothing
wrong.
According to a statement of facts filed with Fox’s
plea agreement, he accepted approximately $460,000 in 2002 when he was a
commissioner in what the government deems a bribe or kickback from Robert
Schuler. At the time, a company owned by Schuler, NORMAP, held a
multi-million-dollar contract with Butler County to install a fiber optic
communications network throughout the county.
Fox failed to disclose the $460,000 he received from
Schuler in an attempt to hide the improper financial relationship, federal
authorities said.
“His corruption threatened the integrity of state and
local governments and, thereby, the trust of those whom are governed,” Assistant
U.S. Attorney Jennifer Barry said in court records.
The Oxford resident, who was born and grew up in
Hamilton, was driven to the Federal Medical Center in Lexington, Ky., on Friday
afternoon to serve a four-year federal prison tern. The 63-year-old spent his
last weeks of freedom rehabbing a knee after undergoing surgery before beginning
his time behind bars and pursuing his passion of writing and recording
music.
He also will miss his 35th wedding anniversary to
wife MaryAnn in December.
“But when you are dealt a bad hand, you play it as
well as you can,” Fox said. “Life is not fair or just at times, but the one
foundation in life that has carried me though is my faith and it will now.
The charges Fox admitted to came to light following
an FBI investigation into whether the Dynus Corp. took out millions of dollars
in loans in the county’s name without its approval for the operation of a
fiber-optics system.
The investigation into the company led to the
convictions of former Dynus executives, former county Auditor Kay Rogers and
eventually Fox.
Fox admitted guilt to the charges last year, but did
not plead to any corruption charges — specifically accepting bribes and
kickbacks — originally pursued by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
“I do not believe I broke the law,” Fox said. “If I
did, I did not do it knowingly.”
Commissioner Charles “Chuck” Furmon made the call in
2005 to the FBI and asked the agency to look into whether Dynus took out a
multimillion-dollar loan in the county’s name without approval.
That investigation led to Rogers pleading to
falsifying documents and going to federal prison. It also turned the spotlight
on Fox.
Facing 20 years, Fox said he took the plea deal. He
was offered a shorter sentence earlier in the case, but he said he refused
because he would have had to admit to corruption charges.
“I would have spent the rest of my life in prison
before I admitted to something that wasn’t true,” he said. “I want people to
know charges against me were not true and I will bite the bullet and do what I
have to do to get to the next phase in my life.”
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