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Politicians in New Jersey and Massachusetts allegedly received special treatment for Bruce Springsteen, World Series tickets

By Alfred Branch Jr.

(This story was updated at on Wednesday, April 7, 2010 at 3:37pm EST to add comments from John Samerjan, spokesperson for the New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority.)

In separate instances, politicians in New Jersey and Massachusetts allegedly received sweetheart deals on Bruce Springsteen, U2, Jonas Brothers and World Series tickets, and in the New Jersey case the preferential treatment reportedly came after the state had sued several ticket brokers for their alleged practices.

The New Jersey case allegedly centers around former Gov. Jon Corzine's office receiving a total 57 tickets during a four-month period in 2009 for Springsteen, U2 and Jonas Brothers shows at Giants Stadium and the nearby IZOD Center, both of which are run by the New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority (NJSEA). Corzine did not use any of the tickets himself, and according to a NJSEA spokesperson, those who received the tickets paid face value for them.

However, the tickets were specially set aside for the officials and not available to the public, a common practice by the NJSEA, which said that less than 1 percent of tickets to events at its facilities are withheld for public officials.

Paula Franzese, chairperson of the New Jersey Ethics Commission, is calling for an investigation into the matter, she told Bloomberg News. "The means by which the tickets are secured has everything to do with undue access and using official position to secure an unfair advantage."

She added, "The public can't help but feel violated when the perception is some are entitled to special treatment, but not others."

The ticketing deal came to light during discovery phase for a case involving the state's Attorney General's office against several ticket brokers, who allegedly listed tickets for sale on Web sites before they had the tickets in hand. Among the entities being sued include Select-A-Ticket of New Jersey and Connecticut-based TicketNetwork.

John Samerjan, spokesperson for NJSEA, told TicketNews that the NJSEA policy concerning ticket holdbacks has been in effect for 33 years and is no secret to the state ethics commission.

"We understand that people get frustrated, but this has been an open book for 33 years, but we're happy to sit down with them if they have questions," he said.

Samerjan added, "If they're concerned about tickets, they should look at the disreputable secondary ticket market, because that's what hurts the public, with brokers selling tickets to seats that don't exist." Among the allegations made by the Attorney General's office is that some tickets the brokers were selling were allegedly for phantom seats.

The issue of ticket holdbacks has simmered in New Jersey and other states over the past couple of years because it remains a closely held system by artists, promoters, venues, sponsors and others involved in the concert industry. The practice has been criticized by some because fans are in the dark about how many tickets are actually available to the public for a specific event. State legislatures, such as in Connecticut, have sought to open up the practice and have concert producers disclose how many tickets are available to the public when an event goes on sale.

While not addressing the New Jersey matter directly, U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr. said through a spokesperson that more transparency and accountability are needed in the ticketing industry. Pascrell is the lead sponsor of the Better Oversight of Secondary Sales and Accountability in Concert Ticketing Act (BOSS ACT), one of two separate bills in the House designed to regulate the ticketing industry.

“Rep. Pascrell continues to push his legislation to require transparency and accountability in the concert and sports ticketing industry. Following a huge debacle in selling tickets to Bruce Springsteen shows in February 2009, provisions in his BOSS ACT were designed to shine a light on deals that raise ticket prices and limit availability for fans everywhere,” Paul Brubaker, spokesperson for Rep. Pascrell, told TicketNews.

In the Massachusetts matter, Pittsfield Mayor James Ruberto was offered two premium tickets to a 2004 Boston Red Sox World Series game by former team general manager Dan Duquette, while he and Ruberto were negotiating for Duquette's minor league baseball team to play games at a town-owned stadium.

Ruberto paid face value for the tickets, $190 each, which he said he used for himself and his father to attend the World Series game, a lifelong dream of his father's, according to the Boston Globe.

The Massachusetts State Ethics Commission charged Ruberto and Duquette with conflict of interest. At the time, similar Red Sox World Series tickets were selling for $2,000 to $3,000 each on secondary market.

During an ethics commission hearing this week, Duquette's attorney said his client sold Ruberto the tickets simply to get rid of them so they would be used, the Globe reported. Duquette no longer owns the minor league team, which is mostly composed of collegiate players.

The tickets were to Game 2 of the 2004 World Series, a 6-2 victory by the Sox over the St. Louis Cardinals, and a few months later Duquette's former team, the Berkshire Dukes, signed a lease agreement with Pittsfield. Other town officials testified that they did not feel pressured by Ruberto or other officials to sign the deal.

TicketNetwork is the parent company of TicketNews.

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Anonymous's picture
Anonymous (not verified)

John Samerjan is taking the Ticketmaster approach and blaming brokers for something completely out of their hands. These people need to start taking accountability for their actions and stop using brokers as a scapegoat.

Anonymous's picture
Anonymous (not verified)

I don't really see the big controversy...the Yankees gave Giuliani great seats every year and do the same for Bloomberg. These are publicly funded stadiums, so public officials should have special access to a small amount of tickets. As long as no one is re-selling them, giving them the chance to purchase them at face value doesn't jump out to me as a conflict of any sort.

Anonymous's picture
Anonymous (not verified)

so if there are any tickets reserved, shouldn't they be reserved for those who actually paid for the stadium? the general public?

Anonymous's picture
Anonymous (not verified)

"These are publicly funded stadiums, so public officials should have special access to a small amount of tickets. As long as no one is re-selling them, giving them the chance to purchase them at face value doesn't jump out to me as a conflict of any sort."

the public or the press didn't bring up the notion that promoters/brokers/band members etc should distribute tickets fairly the politicians did...So the ball is in the politicians court to explain why they are doing exactly what they are supposedly fighting against....If the politicians never said it was wrong for bands to hold back seats, brokers to buy seats, promoters to sell seats at auction etc.....then it would just be a simple logical fallacy called poisoning the well, BUT it's not...Are the politicans going to write up a law that puts themselves in jail for using old school bots i.e. getting tickets put aside before they can even be bought buy a bot?

Anonymous's picture
Anonymous (not verified)

Obviously the Governor of New Jersey felt the special treatment that elected officials receive, warrants a review. "Ralph Marra, a former acting U.S. Attorney for the state who now serves as the chief attorney for NJSEA, will conduct the review, which reportedly will focus on the "appropriateness and ethical implications" of the NJSEA's policy of holding back event tickets for use by state officials."
Those elected official's receive enough special privileges, what makes them so special that they are allowed to jump in line in front of the consumers. Then they have the audacity to turn around and rip on the brokers. Hypocrites... Their special privileges kept seats out of the "real fans" hands.
I wonder how often Sen Chuck Schumer gets these perks to shows. It would be interesting to know. The man that wants to push the BOSS ACT. Where does he get his seats. Does he get on the computer like the rest of us, or does he have a connection at lienation and ticketbastard. Azoff probably gave him some of those overpriced beagles tickets.
They are elected to serve the people not for the perks.

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