Found to have committed conduct unbecoming a member of the General Court "by collecting money from persons he knew interested in legislation before said General Court"
Failing to substantiate the accusation he made on a television program that bookmakers had an influence the state legislature.[8] House voted to revoke the censure two years later.[9]
References
^"Senate Gives Nutting Place". The Boston Globe. March 10, 1937.
^Turner, Robert L. (April 5, 1977). "DiCarlo banished from the Senate". The Boston Globe.
^"The Case of Joseph Hiss". The New York Times. May 10, 1855.
^"Gethro Is Expelled". The Boston Daily Globe. June 22, 1906.
^"Massachusetts House Expels Frank J. Gethro". The New York Times. June 22, 1906.