U.S. District Judge Larry J. McKinney also ordered Plowman to serve two years of supervised release following his prison term. Plowman, 48, was convicted by an Indianapolis jury in September 2011 of attempted extortion and soliciting a bribe between Aug. 11, 2009, and Dec. 22, 2009, while serving as a member of the city-county council.
“Mr. Plowman used his elected office for personal financial gain, betraying the trust placed in him by the people of Indianapolis,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “Today’s sentencing shows that public corruption has a steep price. It weakens democratic institutions and undermines the public’s confidence in government. We are determined to continue holding accountable those officials who abuse their positions.”
“Today’s sentencing serves as a warning throughout Indianapolis and across Indiana that our public offices are not for sale,” U.S. Attorney Hogsett said. “Although this tragedy saddens us all, it would be an even greater tragedy if such violations of the public trust went undiscovered and unpunished.”
According to evidence presented at trial, Plowman solicited an undercover FBI agent to pay $5,000 in cash and to make a $1,000 campaign contribution for Plowman’s benefit. In exchange for the payments, Plowman offered official actions and influence to facilitate the opening of a strip club in Indianapolis. At the time of the crimes, Plowman was a member of the metropolitan development committee of the city-county council. He was also a major with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
Evidence at trial also showed that Plowman had previously accepted bribes from an existing strip club that was part of a national chain; in exchange, he provided official acts and influence against legislation to ban smoking at clubs in Indianapolis. The evidence showed that the chain feared that legislation would become a model for other jurisdictions.
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