
Jul 26, 2008 2:13 pm US/Eastern
Former Atantic City Mayor Sentenced For Lying
CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) ―
The judge's tone was sympathetic, bordering on sorrowful.
He listened as the former mayor of Atlantic
City described how he assisted an elite unit behind
enemy lines during the Vietnam War, insisting it was real, that he was there,
and lived through it.
But before and after
Robert Levy spoke in a federal courthouse Friday, U.S. District Court Judge
Jerome Simandle cited evidence from prosecutors and Department of Veterans
Affairs officials that it couldn't have happened, that Levy was making up
important parts of it.
That's what got Levy in
trouble in the first place. He admitted last fall that he had lied about his
Vietnam War service, embellishing it to include dangerous exploits with elite special
operations forces in order to fatten his veterans benefits check.
Simandle let Levy off
without a prison term, although the disgraced former mayor will have to repay
the $25,198 he wrongly got from the government, plus a $5,000 fine, and serve three
years of probation.
"This case is
ultimately a sad case of human failure that was provoked and promoted by being
asked as a 17-year-old to do some very difficult and dangerous duty on behalf
of their country," Simandle said.
Known as the "missing
mayor" because he dropped out of sight for two weeks last fall, Levy later
admitted to lying about what he did in the war in order to obtain the extra
veteran's benefits.
He stepped down as
mayor in October, after admitting his two-week absence was to attend a clinic
for treatment of substance abuse and mental health issues.
During Friday's
hearing, Simandle said Levy unquestionably suffers from post-traumatic stress
disorder.
The judge said Levy
continues to exaggerate his military service, specifically by saying he did
work for an elite pathfinder unit, which set up landing zones during the war
and made other combat preparations in enemy-controlled territory.
Levy insisted he had
done several missions with the unit even though he was not a member of it.
"I wasn't no hero,
running around like Rambo," Levy said. "I was scared to death. I was running
around with a radio on my back, doing the best I can."
But Simandle noted that
Veterans Affairs officials interviewed commanders and members of the special
unit Levy claimed to have served with, and none remembered him.
The judge said
afterward that "there's no record and no recollection of his service (with the
special unit) other than Mr. Levy's."
"The V.A. is saying it
couldn't have happened this way," the judge said.
Yet Levy insisted that
he had helped the pathfinder unit from time to time.
"I didn't go out all
the time," Levy told the judge. "I never parachuted in. There were some
(missions), but not that many.
"Being young, 17 years
old, I wanted to help and do whatever I could for my country," Levy said. "I
just volunteered and went. There were no
orders; I picked up my M-16 and my radio and went along. On occasion, they
would ask me, and I said yes. I was 17 -- young, strong and dumb."
Levy's lawyer, Edwin
Jacobs, said Levy got permission from his parents to enlist as a 17-year-old.
Levy is now unemployed, without an income (the Veterans Benefits Administration
has stripped him of all benefits, including those he had been receiving for
physical injuries) and still dealing with mental health issues from the war.
Simandle repeatedly
praised Levy's service, which included two tours in Vietnam that left him with serious
psychological ailments that went untreated for years. The judge said Levy
continues having trouble determining what is real and what is not.
Jacobs said Levy
emerged from the war "with severe psychological wounds."
Since leaving the Army
in 1984, Levy has grappled with anxiety and depression, Jacobs said. Those
problems worsened after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks.
The stress of running
for and serving as mayorhe falsely claimed in campaign literature to have
served with the Green Berets -- also took its toll.
"He couldn't function
as mayor," the judge said. "All the other stuff was catching up to him. What he
went through was a crisis. He didn't come out of it well."
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