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US hotelier Sant Singh Chatwal avoids jail in illegal donations case

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Indian-American hotelier Sant Singh Chatwal on Thursday avoided jail time and was sentenced to three years probation and a US $500,000 fine on charges of illegally donating thousands of dollars to political campaigns.

Chatwal, 70, a Padma Bhushan awardee and major fundraiser for former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, had pleaded guilty in April this year to violating the Federal Election Campaign Act by making more than US $180,000 in campaign donations to three candidates through straw donors and to witness tampering. He was sentenced on Thursday by US District Judge I Leo Glasser in the Eastern District of New York federal court here.
Chatwal was accompanied by his wife and son Vikram along with several friends and family members. He repeatedly apologised to the judge for his behaviour and said he had been humbled by the experience.

"I apologise for what I have done to my family. I have let them down terribly," Chatwal told the judge. The judge imposed a sentence of probation of three years and the US $500,000 fine and said Chatwal should continue doing the community service that his friends and family have detailed in nearly 300 letters of support to the court. After the sentencing Chatwal told PTI that he is very happy with the verdict.

"The judicial system in this country is very fair," he said adding that he has worked to strengthen Indo-US relations and people-to-people contact and will continue to do so. Ahead of the sentencing, Chatwal's lawyers had submitted a memorandum seeking leniency, urging the court to weigh Chatwal's age and "lifetime of contribution" to others and the impact imprisonment would have on his family and community in sentencing him.

They had requested that a sentence of probation with substantial community service be imposed on Chatwal to enable him to "make amends by continuing to serve others and take care of his sons," Vivek and Vikram who depend on him to an "exceptional degree" due to their medical disabilities. Chatwal "comes before this court humbled — filled with remorse and shame for what he has done, knowing that he broke the law and, as a consequence, disappointed the many people who depend on and look up to him," the lawyers had said asking the court to recognise that he is a "good man, albeit one who erred, whose life has been distinguished by a devotion to this country — his adopted home — and a commitment to protecting and uplifting others". 

Prosecutors however asked the court to reject Chatwal's plea for leniency saying that he should be sentenced to 46-57 months as set forth in the plea agreement he entered with the government, saying that he knowingly sought to "undermine" the American government's transparent electoral system and the criminal justice system. "Given Chatwal's background and his conduct, his pleas for leniency only underscore the seriousness of his offence conduct and serve to perpetuate the corrosive perception that there is one set of rules for the rich and powerful and another for everyone else," they said.

While the charges carried a maximum prison sentence of 25 years, a plea deal with the government ensured Chatwal's prison term would be less than five years. He had also agreed to forfeit US $1 million to the US government. Among the letters submitted in court is a November 2008 letter by then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who expressed his "sincere appreciation" for Chatwal's "personal efforts" in working for the successful conclusion of the Indo-US civil nuclear initiative.

Chatwal had been free on a US $750,000 bail and had surrendered his passport. According to court filings, from 2007 to 2011, Chatwal used his employees, business associates and contractors who performed work on his hotels to solicit campaign contributions on Chatwal's behalf in support of various candidates for federal office and political action committees, collect these contributions, and pay reimbursements for these contributions.
Chatwal and his associates induced straw donors to make the campaign contributions, promising them that they would be reimbursed. A straw donor is someone who illegally uses someone else's money to make campaign contributions in his or her own name. 

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