Starkly different portrayals of Maryland Sen. Ulysses Currie’s relationship with a local grocery chain were presented to jurors on Tuesday as they began weighing federal bribery and extortion charges against the 74-year-old legislator in a federal courtroom in Baltimore.
A prosecutor used her opening statement to walk jurors through a series of instances in which she said Currie (D-Prince George’s) conspired with two corporate executives to provide government favors to Shoppers Food Warehouse for more than five years without disclosing $245,000 in payments.
“This is a case about a politician who took bribes,” Kathleen O. Gavin, an assistant U.S. attorney, told jurors at the outset of her presentation. “He sold his office for almost a quarter of a million dollars.”
Attorneys for Currie and the two executives countered that what unfolded looked nothing like bribery as most people understand it. Currie and Shoppers had signed a consulting contract, the lawyers said. Currie paid state and federal taxes on his income from Shoppers. And his work was hardly a “secret bribery relationship,” a defense lawyer said. Currie appeared in public at store openings across the region.
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