Richard Kelly (politician)


Richard Kelly was an American politician from Florida. He was a Republican. He was convicted of taking bribes in the 1980 Abscam scandal.

Early life and career

Kelly was born July 31, 1924, in Atlanta, Georgia, his mother abandoned him in an orphanage at an early age. He attended a one-room school in Crystal Springs. He served in the United States Marine Corps from 1942 to 1946, attended Colorado State College of Education and Vanderbilt College of Law, and graduated from the University of Florida College of Law in Florida with a Juris Doctor in 1952.
While in Colorado, he married for the first of five times. He was admitted to the Florida bar the same year and practiced in Zephyrhills. In 1953, he became city attorney of Zephyrhills and worked from 1956 to 1959 as senior assistant to the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Kelly was appointed circuit judge of the sixth judicial circuit of Florida and served from 1960 to 1974, when he was elected to the United States House of Representatives as a Republican.
He served three terms in the House of Representatives, starting in 1975. He opposed Food Stamps, aid to
the failing Chrysler Corporation and financially troubled New York City.

Abscam scandal and later life

In 1980, Kelly was involved in the FBI undercover Abscam scandal and failed to win renomination, losing to Republican Bill McCollum.
Kelley was convicted of taking $25,000 in bribes. He claimed he had conducted his own undercover operation and spent part of the money to maintain that cover, but was convicted and served thirteen months of a 6 to 18 month sentence at the federal prison camp at Eglin Air Force Base. He was released from a halfway house in 1986.
Kelly died August 22, 2005, in Stevensville, Montana after suffering for years with Pick's disease.