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San Francisco Corruption Scandal: Lefty O'Doul's Owner Expected To Plead Guilty To Federal Wire Fraud Charges

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) -- Lefty O'Doul's owner Nick Bovis was scheduled to appear before a federal judge Thursday to plead guilty to two counts of wire fraud in a case connected with a corruption probe of San Francisco's former public works director.

Bovis, 56, was initially charged in January along with then-Public Works Director Mohammed Nuru with one count of honest services wire fraud in an alleged scheme to bribe a San Francisco International Airport commissioner in 2018.

The scheme to obtain the commissioner's aid in obtaining a restaurant concession was never completed, according to the Jan. 15 criminal
complaint. Nuru resigned from office in February and the charge against him remains pending while he is free on a $2 million bond.

Last week, Bovis promised in a plea agreement to cooperate with prosecutors and to plead guilty to revised charges of one count of honest
services wire fraud plus one count of wire fraud.

He is scheduled to enter the plea before U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco at 1:30 p.m. Thursday.

The part of Bovis's plea agreement that describes the conduct underlying the two counts was sealed, and U.S. Attorney's Office spokesman
Abraham Simmons said he does not expect it to be disclosed Thursday.

"The facts supporting the Bovis guilty plea have been filed under seal, and I don't expect they will be made public at the plea hearing,"
Simmons said.

In the Jan. 15 criminal complaint, the honest services wire fraud charge lodged against both Nuru and Bovis was defined as using wire
communications, including phone calls, text messages and emails, to arrange meetings and discuss the supposed scheme to deprive the public of the honest services of the unnamed airport commissioner.

The two counts to which Bovis plans to plead guilty each carry a maximum possible sentence of 20 years in prison, but the judge is expected to consider federal sentencing guidelines as well as any potential prosecution request for a lesser sentence.

The arrest of Bovis and Nuru in January led to over two dozen subpoenas against individuals and businesses the following month during a widening public corruption investigation.

Several San Francisco Supervisors have called for an independent investigation into the corruption allegations.

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