Miller was born on July 24, 1939, in
Brooklyn, New York. He graduated from
Brooklyn College in 1961 and the
New York University School of Law in 1964. Following his admission to the New York bar later that year, he became a member of the
New York County Lawyers Association. He also taught at the
CUNY Graduate Center and at the
John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He was a
Democratic member of the
New York State Assembly representing
Kings County from 1971 to 1991, and sat in the
179th,
180th,
181st,
182nd,
183rd,
184th,
185th,
186th,
187th,
188th and
189th New York State Legislatures. He was
Speaker from 1987 to 1991. He was responsible for the Fiscal Reform Act of 1990.
Conviction Upon being convicted on 8 out of 19
felony charges in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, he lost the speakership on December 13, 1991 and was replaced by majority leader
James R. Tallon as acting speaker until the election of
Saul Weprin to the speakership on December 16, 1991. In the case, which did not involve his work in government, Miller and his Assembly aide and onetime law partner, Jay Adolf, were charged with cheating legal clients out of some of the profits from investments in cooperative apartments. They acknowledged receiving a total of about $250,000 in three deals, but denied defrauding clients. The
jury convicted each defendant of six charges of
fraud, one of
conspiracy and one of using an assumed name, all involving one scheme to secretly buy and resell eight apartments in a Brooklyn building. The jury found that they had deprived their clients of the right to buy the apartments and receive the profits.
Reversal In 1993, Miller's convictions were overturned on appeal.
Later career He was widely recognized as an authority on public finance and the state budgetary process, and as one of the founders of Bolton St Johns, he served as senior consultant to the firm.
Death He died in Manhattan from lung cancer on March 8, 2019. ==Sources==