Hubbard defense reiterates apology by former Alabama speaker
OPELIKA, Ala. A former Alabama House speaker imprisoned for felony ethics convictions really is sorry for what he did and is not a danger to society, defense lawyers said in urging a judge to disregard prosecutors' objections to an early release.
Attorneys for one-time Republican leader Mike Hubbard told a court in legal arguments filed Wednesday that the state attorney general's office was wrong to discount a letter Hubbard wrote last month apologizing for his actions and asking a judge for leniency.
Prosecutors' "veiled portrayal of (Hubbard's) apology as crocodile tears or anything other than completely honest is conclusory, speculative, and simply erroneous," the defense told Lee County Circuit Judge Jacob Walker. While the state compared Hubbard to an arsonist seeking forgiveness after a fire, they said, an arsonist is a danger to society and the 59-year-old Hubbard is not, they argued.
Hubbard has served more than a year of a 28-month prison sentence after losing appeals that challenged his 2016 conviction for violating the state ethics law, including using his public office for personal financial gain. Prosecutors accused Hubbard of leveraging the Speaker's office to obtain clients and investments for his businesses.
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Former governor Don Siegelman was kept in prison for seven years even though there were concerns about prosecutorial misconduct. Hubbard can stay behind bars for the remainder of his 28 month sentence.