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The three men pleaded guilty in August to several felonies.
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Lewis Reed and Jeffrey Boyd both admitted to multiple felonies connected to a scheme in which they accepted cash, campaign contributions and other gifts from a developer in exchange for helping him get incentives.
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John Collins-Muhammad is the first of three former aldermen charged with bribery to plead guilty in the scheme, which saw the men take cash and other gifts in exchange for helping a developer get incentives.
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Lewis Reed, the former president of the St. Louis Board of Aldermen, had originally been scheduled to be in court Tuesday for a pretrial hearing.
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Former St. Louis Alderman Jeffrey Boyd is also facing a second federal indictment alleging insurance fraud connected to his used car lot.
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John Collins-Muhammad and two other former aldermen are accused of accepting cash, cars and other gifts in exchange for helping a developer get incentives.
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The St. Louis Development Corporation is on the lookout for a consultant that can help improve its internal workings. That's weeks after a federal grand jury indicted a St. Louis alderman for allegedly pressuring agency staff to sell property to a businessman in exchange for a bribe.
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The city’s charter says that unless a vacancy occurs within six months of a general election, a seat on the Board of Aldermen must be filled by a special election within 90 days.
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Special edition of Politically Speaking details indictments that led to the resignation of Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed and two aldermen.
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Federal prosecutors Thursday charged St. Louis Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed, 22nd Ward Alderman Jeffrey Boyd, and former 21st Ward Alderman John Collins-Muhammad with bribery for accepting cash, cars and other gifts in exchange for pushing forward development deals.