California mayor pleads not guilty in
strip poker scandal
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[August 19, 2016]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - The mayor of Stockton,
California, pleaded not guilty on Thursday to criminal charges stemming
from a strip poker game he is accused of playing while furnishing beer
to minors at a summer camp he hosts for underprivileged children.
Anthony Ray Silva, 41, was arraigned in Amador County Superior Court on
a felony eavesdropping charge and three misdemeanor counts -
contributing to the delinquency of a minor, child endangerment and
supplying alcoholic beverages to underage persons.
Silva, who is free on $20,000 bond, entered not guilty pleas to all four
charges. His next court date was set for Sept. 7.
Outside the courthouse in Jackson, California, about 125 miles northeast
of San Francisco, the mayor and his lawyers repeated their assertion
that the case was fabricated in a bid by Silva's political opponents to
destroy his reputation ahead of a close runoff election in November.
Silva, a Republican who was elected mayor of Stockton in 2012, months
after the northern California city filed for bankruptcy, was arrested by
FBI agents on Aug. 4 at the summer camp the town leases from the U.S.
Forest Service in the Sierra mountains.
The mayor hosts a special camp session for 75 to 100 disadvantaged
youths, aged 5 to 17, every summer. Young adults work there as camp
counselors.
Silva is accused of playing strip poker with several young people,
including a 16-year-old boy, inside his camp cabin last summer, and
serving alcohol to at least six individuals under the legal drinking age
of 21.
Prosecutors said Silva used his cellphone to make an audio recording of
the game without the consent of others, the basis of the eavesdropping
charge.
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Mayor Anthony Ray Silva of Stockton, California, U.S. is shown in
this booking photo released by the Amador County Sheriff's Office
August 4, 2016. Courtesy Amador County Sheriff's Office/Handout via
Reuters
His attorney, Mark Reichel, said there was no evidence from photos
or video clips seized from Silva's cellphone that anyone present at
the gathering in question was younger than 21, or that anyone under
age was drinking.
"He didn't start and he didn't participate in a strip poker game
with minors," Reichel told Reuters by telephone. He also said that
eyewitness accounts cited by authorities as evidence that Silva
served minors beer have since been recanted.
Amador County District Attorney Todd Riebe disputed the notion that
his prosecution of Silva was politically motivated and said he was
not interested in politics in San Joaquin County, where Stockton is
located, reported the Sacramento Bee newspaper.
If convicted of the charges, Silva could face up to three years in
prison.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Perry)
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