ALASKA'S NEWSPAPER

| Updated: 3:43 PM

Bill Allen arrives in Anchorage federal court on Wednesday morning, October 28, 2009, for his sentencing.

Erik Hill / Anchorage Daily News

Bill Allen arrives in Anchorage federal court on Wednesday morning, October 28, 2009, for his sentencing.

Veco men stand for sentencing today

ALLEN: Prosecutors ask 46 months for executives guilty in corruption cases involving alaska officials.

With his delays exhausted, Bill Allen, the central figure in Alaska's public corruption scandal, is due to be sentenced this morning on bribery, conspiracy and tax charges.

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Allen, 72, once ran the leading oil-field business in Alaska, Veco Corp. He used that position and his wealth to help elect politicians and keep them on his side whenever issues important to him -- oil taxes, resource development and labor matters -- arose in the state Legislature.

But court-ordered wiretaps and a tiny FBI camera in his hotel suite in Juneau laid bare his efforts to go beyond verbal persuasion by giving cash, jobs, vehicles and other illegal benefits to elected officials.

Five state legislators and U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens were charged with crimes related to their dealings with Allen. Three were convicted by juries, two pleaded guilty and one is awaiting trial. Stevens, one of those convicted, was freed when a judge said prosecutors engaged in misconduct in his trial.

Whatever punishment he and a former Veco vice president, Rick Smith, will receive in the federal courtroom of District Judge John Sedwick will be tempered by their extensive cooperation with prosecutors and the FBI. In 2007, when Allen testified against one of the legislators he bribed, former Rep. Pete Kott of Eagle River, he said he expected to get 10 to 11 years in prison.

But last week, prosecutors said they would ask for only 46 months, and Allen's lawyers said they would ask for six months.

Prosecutors are seeking 42 months for Smith, while Smith's lawyers said he should get a year.

Allen and Smith pleaded guilty May 7, 2007, but their sentencings were delayed to allow them to give evidence against others and reap the benefits of their cooperation. But in July, Sedwick called a halt to the delays and said it was time for the men to face justice.

Veco ceased to exist when Allen and his family sold most of its assets to the international engineering and construction company CH2M Hill in September 2007.

Allen's sentencing hearing is scheduled to start at 8:30 a.m. and Smith's at 10 a.m.

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