Sunday, March 15, 2009

Mayor Bloomberg awaits ok from Department of Justice for third term run

Adam Lisberg
Related News
Articles

Mayor Bloomberg has wriggled free of every force that tried to block his bid for a third term, but he still hasn't heard from one body he can't sweet talk, bulldoze or buy off.

The Department of Justice's section for voting rights must decide by Tuesday whether the October term limits extension will hurt minority voters.

If it does, every two-term incumbent in the November elections would be suddenly ineligible - sending Bloomberg and a boatload of other politicians on a retirement cruise.

The city Law Department filed 1,789 pages with Justice to make sure that doesn't happen, saying that "term limits by definition affect all candidates and their constituencies in precisely the same manner" without any racial overtones.

Norman Siegel and Randy Mastro - lawyers on the other side of the issue - sent their own sheaf of paper to Justice pointing out what should be glaringly obvious to anyone who looks at the City Council: Without term limits, incumbents stay in their seats.

"Since 1993, no minority candidate has ever unseated a white incumbent for any municipal office in New York City," Mastro said. "It's a textbook case of a civil rights violation."

Granted, white challengers also have a hard time ousting white incumbents, which is why we have term limits in the first place. And Mastro has already lost a separate lawsuit to block the term limits law.

He may be on to something, though. Three of New York's representatives in Congress - Ed Towns and Gregory Meeks, who are black, and Nydia Velazquez, who is Hispanic - have written Justice to say the law is discriminatory.

The funny thing is nobody quite knows whether their political pressure will help or hurt.

Career lawyers in Justice's voting rights section mutinied when they felt pressured by the Bush administration to slant their decisions his way.

They now report to a Democratic President and an attorney general who believe Justice should still oversee changes that affect the Voting Rights Act.

Bloomberg, meanwhile, never showed President Obama much electoral love on the campaign trail - and he acknowledged last week that he hasn't spoken to the President since before the inauguration.

But Justice lawyers may also feel newly empowered to ignore political pressure from all sides, whether from a mayor with plenty of Washington tentacles or from Congress members who see minority voting rights being in peril.

"There's always political pressure, but historically, the Justice Department has fought that," said Joseph Rich, who headed Justice's voting rights section from 1999 to 2005. "It should make no difference. They should be looking at whether this third term hurts black voters."

alisberg@nydailynews.com

Friday, March 13, 2009

Bloomberg Turns Over His Next Campaign to Blagojevich's Ex-Deputy

By Wayne Barrett

Tuesday, March 10th 2009 at 2:42pm

Tusk "never had anything to do with parts of that administration," Bloomberg told the Times. He knew this, he explained, because Tusk, Blagojevich's first-term Deputy Governor, had told him so, bringing it up himself "to make sure we were aware of the issues" before he was given the all-powerful campaign manager post.

Since Bloomberg made that announcement, he has derisively dismissed press questions about the campaign as if it were unconnected to him. The message from him is clear: The self-vetted Tusk is now in charge, handpicking, for example, the most expensive collection of advisers ever assembled under a single city campaign.

That team of seasoned consultants, including the face of Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, Howard Wolfson, now all report to the youthful Tusk, who has never worked on a campaign, even at the most junior level. Tusk's career—other than his four years as Blagojevich's top aide—consists of five years of leash law and litter policy at the New York City Parks Department, two years as a spokesman for Senator Charles Schumer, one year as a low-level adviser at the start of Bloomberg's first term, and nearly two years as a lobbyist for another 2008 debacle, Lehman Brothers.

Since the Blagojevich job is Tusk's only significant managerial experience, it oddly becomes the rationale for his hire, an uncomfortable reality for a mayor known to pick the best talent available. Having shunted aside Kevin Sheekey and Bill Cunningham, who steered Bloomberg's prior campaigns, the mayor settled on Tusk, says Wolfson, because he wanted "a fresh perspective." (Maybe it's the mayor who's grown stale.)

Tusk is now in charge of an operation that has promised—on the front page of the Times, no less—to spend $20 million on attack ads against anyone who dares get in the way of the mayor's trifecta. While many New Yorkers will never come to know who Tusk is over the course of the coming months, his message for Mike will be coming at us in our living rooms and mailboxes at a peak rate of millions of dollars a week.

If Tusk succeeds, his strategy will shape the city's public life for the next four crisis years. He's not the mayor, of course, but he is, right now, the second most important player in our politics, orchestrating the frontrunner's every move, dispensing a fortune in a time of scarcity, studying the best polls about our fears, and guiding our fingers invisibly toward whichever column carries Bloomberg's name on November's ballot.

That's why it's important to know all about the last sale Tusk made: helping to re-elect Rod Blagojevich in 2006 from his post at the helm of Blagojevich's government. And that's why Bloomberg's embrace of him—without any independent examination of his record in Illinois—raises questions about a mayor who increasingly appears to act and speak on impulse, having traded in the open mind for thoughtful detail that characterized him when he first ran for mayor.

Unlike so many other onetime Blagojevich supporters, Tusk has yet to say one critical word about the former governor. Though communications jobs have been a big part of his biography, he doesn't talk to the media now, an indication, perhaps, that there are too many questions that he prefers not to answer.

The Voice submitted several broad questions to Wolfson, and he eventually e-mailed a partial reply. He said that Tusk had done "policy, budget, operations, legislation, and communication" for Blagojevich, not "procurement, appointments, hiring, or grants," a separation so artificial that no one who has ever spent a day at a top executive level in a large government would make it. This story shows how misleading that answer is, and how the Blagojevich experience compromised the young Bradley Tusk.


The Chicago Sun-Times compared Tusk to Karl Rove, the Tribune called him "the center of gravity," Crain's said he was "as inside as you can get," and Republican State Senator Kirk Dillard called him a "junkyard dog protector of the governor" with "immense power and influence."

"Love him or hate him, Tusk was your governor in the first term. He made everything happen, and those of you on this committee who knew him knew that to be true," wrote Bob Arya in a nine-page letter to the Illinois House impeachment panel recently. Arya is an Emmy-winning television journalist who has covered Blagojevich and became his communications director shortly before Tusk left.

Even Tusk was less modest than he is now about the scope of the job that lured him away from Bloomberg's City Hall in 2003: "If anything, it ended up being bigger than I expected," he said in a departing interview at the end of 2006. "I don't know of any policy decisions that got made without me involved." And perhaps more disquieting, as late as 2005, he was telling reporters he was "pretty dedicated to this guy," adding that he and Blagojevich had "hit it off so well."

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Albany's Term-Limits Bill Passes Committee Without a Republican Vote

Jimmy Vielkind
There were no breakfast foods at the Senate Elections Committee.

ALBANY—With fireworks not normally seen in committee hearings, the Senate Elections Committee just voted along strictly partisan lines to approve a bill that would require a voter referendum on the repeal of term limits.

It was expected to pass the committee, but is not necessarily expected to get much further.

Republican State Senators Tom Morahan, Joe Griffo and Tom Libous voted against the bill, with Libous leading the charge and raising questions. He claimed that there was not enough time to pass the bill and hold a referendum by May.

"The bill is poorly drafted and it should be specific to New York City," he said. His questions were cut short due to time constraints, causing more ire.

State Senator Kevin Parker, the bill's sponsor, attended the hearing and fielded Libous' questions.

"I don't think that the democratic protections should be only for the people of New York City," Parker said. "By definition, democracy is the highest value we have in this state. Frankly I don't think we could put a price on that."

After the committee's vote—Chairman Joe Addabbo voted for the bill, as did Jose Serrano (by proxy), and both Martin Malave Dilan and Brian Foley voted yes but "without recommendation"—Parker claimed that the Republicans opposed the bill in "collusion" with Michael Bloomberg.

"They're in the pocket of Mayor Bloomberg," he said. "The amount of money that Mayor Bloomberg gave to stop us from taking the majority is well-documented." (Libous denied any collusion with the mayor.)

In the room I spotted Michael Avella, now counsel to the Bloomberg campaign; Michelle Goldstein, New York's top lobbyist; and Bloomberg's spokesman Matthew Gorton.

Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler told me earlier that this issue is "not on [his] agenda."

The bill will now go to the Senate Finance Committee. It is currently also sitting in the Assembly Ways & Means Committee, where Chairman Denny Farrell told me yesterday, "We're reviewing it."

Parker seemed confident it wouldn't have problems in the Senate Finance Committee. Libous vowed to bring up his concerns there.

Majority Leader Malcolm Smith has not taken a position on the bill.

Jimmy Vielkind can be reached via email at jimmy.vielkind@politickerny.com.

Watchdog group calls for investigation of Adolfo Carrion, Bronx pres. tapped as Obama's urban czar

By Greg B. Smith

Updated Thursday, March 12th 2009, 1:26 PM

Lombard for News

Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion Jr. gives his state of the borough address on Feb. 20, 2009, just before being tapped as President Obama's urban affairs czar.

A government watchdog group asked the U.S. attorney general's office Thursday to open a bribery investigation into White House urban czar Adolfo Carrión.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder in response to several Daily News reports about Carrión's dealings while he was Bronx borough president.

"If the era of pay-to-play politics is over, Adolfo Carrión did not get the message," said Melanie Sloan, executive director of the Democrat-leaning CREW.

The News' reported numerous developers made tens of thousands of dollars in campaign donations to Carrión around the same time he was considering approving their projects in the Bronx.

Carrión also hired an architect for one of the biggest projects to design a renovation of his home. The job was complete in February 2007, but Carrión has not paid the architect.

The White House has repeatedly declined to comment on the News' findings except to say Carrión should pay the bill, which is slightly over $3,600.

Crew asked Holder "to initiate an immediate investigation into pay-to-play allegations" outlined in The News.

"It appears Mr. Carrión routinely approved development projects in exchange for campaign contributions," Sloan said.

"In addition, Mr. Carrión personally benefitted by accepting free design work from an architect who needed his official assistance. This is exactly the kind of conduct that makes Americans skeptical of our politicians."

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

If Carrión Obama's Third Rail?

Conflict-of-interest issues grow for President Obama's new urban czar Adolfo Carrion

Updated Wednesday, March 11th 2009, 9:15 AM

President Obama's new urban czar, Adolfo Carrión, admitted Tuesday he has not paid an architect who designed a renovation of his Bronx home two years ago.

That presents conflict-of-interest issues because at the time the architect was a key player in a Bronx development that needed approval from Carrión, then the Bronx borough president.

In a statement to the Daily News, Carrión admitted he hadn't paid architect Hugo Subotovsky to design a porch and balcony for his City Island home.

The renovation occurred more than two years ago. The last document filed with the city Buildings Department is dated Feb. 2, 2007. The work permit on the job expired that same month.

Most documents stamped by Subotovsky on Carrión's house renovation date even further back, to October and November 2006, including a blueprint for the extensive work done on the front of Carrión's house.

In his e-mailed response to The News, Carrión claimed the architect spent 51.5 hours on the renovation for a total bill of $3,627.50, "based on their usual rates." That works out to about $71 per hour.

Carrión claimed he hadn't yet paid the bill on the two-year-old project because a "final survey" is not yet filed and approved.

"As is his practice for projects of this kind, the architect will present his bill and be paid after the final survey is filed and approved, when his work is complete. I anticipate the survey will be completed, filed and approved shortly, at which time the bill will be presented and paid in full."

Subotovsky did not return calls seeking comment. Carrión's response came five days after The News asked him for proof he paid the architect.

If it's determined the architect performed the work free, the work could be considered an unreported gift that could put Carrión on the wrong side of the law.

The White House again declined to comment Tuesday on Carrión's admission that he has yet to pay the architect or any other aspect of Carrión's unfolding problem.

Carrión started his job as director of the White House Office on Urban Policy on March 2.

In January 2007, at the same time Subotovsky was working on Carrión's house, a project he had designed called Boricua Village was submitted to Carrión's office.

The project, which includes nearly 700 units of affordable housing and a 14-story tower for Boricua College, needed Carrión's recommendation to go forward.

Two months later, in March 2007, Carrión recommended the project for approval to the City Planning Commission, which signed off on the project that May.

gsmith@nydailynews.com

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

John Stewart VS. Jim Cramer

Jon Stewart, whose pointed takedown of the network CNBC last week has already become legendary, returned to the subject Monday in response to host Jim Cramer's complaint that he was taken out of context during the segment.

Stewart began by clarifying that the "Daily Show" had planned to air its epic dissection of CNBC's follies before the now infamous Rick Santelli was scheduled to appear on the program, as opposed to having done so in response to him canceling on that appearance.

In regards to Cramer, Stewart addressed the host's suggestion that the "Daily Show" had used a particular clip from his show "Mad Money" to make it look as if he had recommended buying Bear Stearns stock a week before it collapsed.

Stewart conceded the point to Cramer, saying with a hint of mockery, "I apologize, that was out of context, technically you were correct, you weren't suggesting to buy Bear Stearns. That was something you did five days earlier, in your buy and sell segment." Roll the clip!




Also:
WATCH CRAMER'S RESPONSE TO STEWART ON THE "TODAY" SHOW

Possible conflict of interest surfaces for President Obama's new urban czar Adolfo Carrion

Exclusive

Tuesday, March 10th 2009, 1:55 AM

Schwartz for News

Adolfo Carrion (below) had architect oversee building of new porch and balcony.

President Obama's new urban czar renovated his Bronx home with help from the architect on a major development that needed his approval, a Daily News investigation has found.

Adolfo Carrión, who last week left his job as Bronx borough president to be director of the White House Office on Urban Policy, hired the architect to design a renovation of his Victorian two-family on City Island.

Weeks after the architect's work on Carrión's house was complete, Carrión approved the architect's project.

Carrión would not say how much he paid the architect, if anything. He also refused to provide copies of checks for the work.

"I hired an architect on an arm's-length commercial basis to draw up plans for a renovation, as required by city law," he said. "That was completely unrelated to my professional activities and entirely proper."

The White House declined to comment.

The possible conflict of interest surfaced Nov. 13, 2006, when, records show, Hugo Subotovsky was listed as architect of record overseeing the addition of a porch and installation of a second-floor balcony. Total job cost was estimated at $32,000.

At the time, records show, Carrión had at least $15,000 in credit card debt, was paying off two mortgages worth more than $500,000 and had $5,000 in revolving credit from Chase bank.

In the next few months, architect Subotovsky signed off on several documents necessary to complete the Carrión renovation. All were filed with the city Buildings Department, records show.

At the time, Subotovsky was part of a team seeking Carrión's approval of one of the biggest taxpayer-subsidized developments in the Bronx, Boricua Village.

As project architect, Subotovsky was involved in the design of a 14-story college building and 679 units of housing in Melrose.

The project involved zoning changes, so it needed approval from Carrión and the City Planning Commission.

Subotovsky, several top Boricua College officials and executives with the project's developer, Atlantic Development Group, gave a combined $74,000 to Carrión's campaign.

The two worlds came together Jan. 22, 2007. Subotovsky filed a work permit application and cost affidavit with the city for Carrión's house renovation.

The Boricua Village project was referred to Carrión's office the same day.

On March 26, 2007, Carrión recommended approval of the Boricua Village project.

Two days later, Subotovsky outlined the project to the Planning Commission, which approved it a month later.

Subotovsky did not return calls for comment. His partner, Ariel Aufgang, said the firm deals with Carrión and his staff on every project in the Bronx involving land-use issues.

Crucial questions include whether Carrión paid for Subotovsky's work on his home, how much he paid and when.

City employees can't take gifts from anyone seeking their approval as a city employee.

Such an unreported gift could be seen as Carrión using his position to benefit himself financially, a violation of the law. It could also be unreported income. Carrión did not report any such gift on his financial disclosure forms.

Carrión defended his legacy as a public official: "As the Bronx borough president, I built a reputation for integrity and dedication to my constituents."

The News reported last week that several developers seeking Carrión's approval for projects across the Bronx raised tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions for him.

One Police Plaza Saint Morg Never Forgets

NYPD Confidential - An Inside Look at the New York Police Department.  The New York City police department is the largest and most powerful law enforcement organization  in the country, if not the world. It is capable of both the greatest investigations and feats of bravery  as well as the most flagrant of abuses, both internal and external. While the media chronicles the  former, it often ignores or is unaware of the latter. NYPD Confidential, a weekly chronicle by police  columnist Leonard Levitt, is an insider's view of the department that the public rarely sees.

March 9, 2009

An irate Robert Morgenthau says this column erred last week when it implied that fourteen years ago the Manhattan District Attorney indicted a Mollen Commission informant as pay back for Mollen poaching a Morgenthau corruption case and turning it over to the feds.

“We didn’t have a clue he was working for the Mollen Commission,” said Morgenthau of the informant, who provided information about the 30th Precinct, where 33 cops were convicted of drug-related crimes. “We indicted him for perjury because a lot of innocent people went to jail.”

Morgenthau made his complaints [there were others, including this column’s depiction of the 1990 Palladium case in which two men were wrongfully convicted, which we won’t get into here.] in a telephone call to Your Humble Servant.

Anyone who thinks that the Morg, at age 89, has lost a step should consider himself lucky he wasn’t on the receiving end of that phone line, which crackled with his controlled, white-hot fury.

The last two weeks have been trying for the nation’s foremost prosecutor. He announced he would not seek reelection after 34 years, prompting the resignation of his chief aide Dan Castleman, one of whose supporters called Morgenthau a “Judas” because he refused to anoint Castleman as his successor.

Still, Morgenthau was concerned enough over the Mollen incident that occurred more than a decade ago that he wanted the record set straight. Or at least in the direction he wanted it set. [Despite his protestations, there are those who continue to feel he acted malevolently towards Mollen.]

One of Morgenthau’s more [or perhaps less] saintly qualities is that he never forgets. [Better listen up, Dan. That Judas crack sticks in the Morg’s craw.]

With that in mind, let’s move on to the race for Morgenthau’s successor, where the three candidates, sans Castleman, appeared together on WABC yesterday morning

First up, former Judge Leslie Crocker Snyder, who ran against Morgenthau in 2004 and made an issue of his age [He was 85 then.] She kept up her attack, maintaining that 34 years was too long for a person to remain in office and that over the last decade the D.A.’s office had become “stale.” Said Snyder: “At a certain point, you need fresh ideas from the top.”

Is it any wonder that the Morg is supporting the candidate who can best defeat her?

That brings us to Cyrus Vance Jr., son of the former secretary of state in the administration of President Jimmy Carter, whom Morgenthau reportedly favors.

Vance’s problem is that he has spent most of his career in Seattle, returning to New York in 2004. Though back in town for five years, he may still not fully appreciate the lay of the land.

On WABC he mentioned that he wanted to apply the police department’s accountability concept of COMPSTAT to the D.A’s office. That sounds like he has reached out to COMPSTAT’s founder, Bill Bratton, now police chief in L.A. [Yeah, yeah, its actual founder was Bratton’s deputy, the late Jack Maple, but COMPSTAT couldn’t have been instituted without Bratton’s imprimatur ]

Perhaps Vance was unaware that Bratton is close to the third candidate, Richard Aborn. Perhaps Vance is also unaware of the first lesson of New York City law enforcement: You can’t be friendly with Bratton and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly at the same time. Just ask the folks at the Manhattan Institute about their fifth anniversary 9/ll terrorism conference.

Lastly, there’s the dark horse Aborn, who has spent his law enforcement years in New York and whose campaign says raised more money in January than Snyder and Vance combined. Like Vance [and Snyder] he’s a veteran of the D.A.’s office and shares Vance’s [and Morgenthau’s] positions on such matters as term limits and the death penalty. [They’re opposed to both.]


Death Penalty. Unless Leslie Crocker Snyder gets some help fast, the death penalty issue is going to swamp her candidacy. In 2005, when she ran against Morgenthau, she supported it. Now she opposes it.

This is what she said yesterday: “My position was distorted. I feel I got smeared. … I am completely against the death penalty. I modified my position. Shouldn’t people evolve?”


Press Pass. Nearly two years to the day that the police department denied Your Humble Servant a press pass, it has finally granted me one. DCPI’s Lieu. Gene Whyte actually helped facilitate the application. In Whyte’s defense [Trying to save your reputation here, Gene.] there was nothing personal in his helpfulness. Two years ago, the same Lieu. Whyte denied my application.

So what’s changed? First, reporter Rafael Martinez Alequín and his attorney Norman Siegel threatened to sue the department. Second, Chris Dunn of the Civil Liberties Union threatened to sue on my behalf.

Lesson: You can fight — and beat — the NYPD [sometimes].


They Don’t Give Up. Under Rudy Giuliani, this column described the police department’s censorship as resembling that of the Soviet Union under Stalin because copies of this column were secretly passed around Police Plaza like samizdat.

Under Kelly, censorship more closely resembles that of Beijing. Sources say that access to NYPD CONFIDENTIAL is now blocked on all NYPD computers. Stated reason: "Social Networking and Personal Sites are filtered.”

We emailed Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne to ask if this was true. He did not respond.

Monday, March 9, 2009

New York’s Political Mob Wars

Monday, March 9, 2009

New York’s
Political Mob Wars
By Gary Tilzer

The leaders of New York’s Political Mob are the City’s party leaders who exist with the Tammany Hall power control template, unchallenged and unaccountable to the voters in New York’s broken down election system. Their soldiers are campaign consultants who also operate as lobbyists and are as accountable to the voters as Bernie Madoff was to his investors. In this war the 4th estate has limited itself to covering only the horse race and simply reprinting the candidate’s press releases. The press coverage of politics is amazingly similar to the SEC reviews of Madoff’s records over the years.

Lately it seems that the live and let live compact between the party leaders and lobbyists (so similar to the Mob’s Appalachian agreement in the 50’s), has broken down. One of the most aggressive party leaders Brooklyn’s Vito Lopez, was the first to make a hit when he supported the redistricting of a council district in the Queens leader’s territory. Last year he sent in his lobbyist Michael Tobman to take advantage of a split in the Asian community to support Grace Ming. The Queens machine is seen as the Godfather of all the leaders mainly because its late leader Congressman Manton was able to put together deals to elect the last two council speakers. The original deal made in 2001 to elect Gifford Miller still continues to this day. Last month Speaker Quinn supported a Queens representative, Michael McSweeney, to the highly political position of City Clerk, infuriating Lopez and the new leader of the Bronx Hestie.

This year Lopez and Tobman are widening their war to a new borough: Manhattan. Tobman is a consultant in the campaign of Leslie Crocker Snyder, who is running to replace Robert Morgenthau. The Manhattan establishment has hired Bill Lynch and probably George Artz to defend their territory with Cyrus Vance. According to many, Tobman ran a very well funded, sleazy, Karl Rove style campaign on behalf of Roger Adler for a civil court seat and yet lost.

Yesterday Lynch with his candidate for comptroller John Liu, organized a St Valentine’s Day type hit against many of the Queens Godfather political leaders and many of the other families of county leaders and lobbyists that run New York, when he openly said that city residents vote by race and ethic alliances, not by territory. And he is right. County leaders have used smoke and mirrors and a wimpy press for years to pretend that they control the vote. In spite of their failure to control the vote, they still have Tammany Hall-like powers in critical areas shaping the city’s politics - ballot access, picking judges and a petitioning process that lets them knock off challengers. As a result, they stay in their party positions unchallenged and unanswerable to the public. Many party positions are now helped by elected officials, making those positions more like pawns in an insider game than representative of the people registered in the party. Lynch knows that the party leader’s position has more to do with controlling the office than delivering the vote to a candidate and he has moved in to take over.

“The Democratic Party is weak in New York City — and it has no way to control people” said H. Carl McCall, a former Democratic state comptroller who ran for governor in 2002. “There is no loyalty and there are no sanctions for being disloyal.”

The Godfather Queens machine reacts to the Liu and Lynch hit in it’s own home, showing that it is clueless and out of touch.

"I don't know why [Liu] would do this," is what Mike Reich, executive director of the Queens County organization, told my Daily News colleague Liz Benjamin. "The more people there are from Queens in the running, the less likely it is that someone from Queens will win." By Reich's logic, Liu's run for controller will end up helping Councilman David Yassky of Brooklyn, the fourth candidate in the race. Seems Reich and his fellow Queens leaders have become fat on the millions they have made over the years in patronage and lobbying fees. What Lynch the young Turk knows is that with a generation of broken down political parties, race and ethnic background matter more than where someone lives when they vote.

Lynch is a lobbyist who has made a great living on his understanding of race and how people vote. He ran the successful Dinkins mayoral campaign. He has also been a leader in pay to play politics which destroy the neighborhoods and voters in New York.

Even Bloomberg tried and failed to weaken the control of campaign consultants who operate as lobbyists when he tried and failed to propose tougher limits on them. At that time the mayor criticized the overlapping interests of consultants who raise funds or dispense advice for public officials while lobbying them on behalf of special interests.

At yesterday’s announcement of the Liu candidacy not a single question was asked by the press about how Wall Street’s failing pension funds or the falling real estate market will affect city services. Not a word about the Cuomo investigation of the state controller’s office or how the city comptroller allowed fake non profits to exist in the City’s budget.

Even if the press and the Queens machine does not get it, there is a political mob war in New York and don’t be surprised if bodies all over town wind up buried in the mud. *** New York Needs A Sun Burn *** Organized Crime Politics Part 2 *** Organized Crime Politics Part 1 *** NY's Falling Voter Participation *** Tammany’s Ballot Control Again and Again *** The Real Campaign is to Suppress Challengers.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

A CRY FROM THE GRAVE


If there is a shred of truth to this story, it bears investigation. How could a small, New Jersey community avoid scrutiny by the officials? And if nothing is done, then we are all at fault.

The following letter was written by Lakewood, NJ bochur Shua Finkelstein weeks before his death from a drug overdose.

"There is thing called child molestation that we have all heard of we all know it happens in different places we all know maybe priests or that creepy uncle. Let me tell you a little about this thing and first hand what it can do to a kid.

A frum child is molested he knows nothing about tummah and kedusha all he knows is that he was violated that his body is a toy thats what gets engraved into his brain not that he is a person worthy of respect but that he is an object a tool.This kid grows up he knows nothing of sex all he knows is that he is dirty and that his rabbis say sex is bad he doesn't understand he thinks he is bad any mussar shmooz he hears it directly at him and this innocent kid begins to believe of himself as a bad person.

Nobody likes being bad he will look for a place with no expectations of him a place were he can be free to fit in a world where everybody is bad….Chances are he will either convince himself this is the normal and pass it in to another innocent child or he will resort to rebelling to prove to himself he is as bad as he thinks he is……Often he will find drugs to take him away to give him an escape from his horrible reality….That being said…Did you ever notice a support our troops symbol on the back of somebody's car? do you know what that represents? that means that thousands of miles there are people no different then yourself fighting a war and that we support them that gives them the morals they need to keep doing what they must do in order to protect us. I dont expect to see "save our kids" on the back of all of our cars but is it too much to ask that each and everyone of us do our part???

I will not mention names but there was one play group accused cased closed and dealt with. thats a start but that should send a chill down your spine theses are kids we are talking about…. there is another play group that is still open after over 5 cases have been brought against it!!!!! do you love your kids???? theses are the same kids that some vaad in lakewood will put in ad in the paper to protect from cellphone texting or god forbid a concert but did you see an ad saying Guard your kids!!!!? DO research!!!!!

If your in doubt dont send them there! A play group that has had 5 allegations against it is still open????? Of course its there parnasah we are so worried about…Maybe i should fill you in on some facts there is a jewish rehab whose name i will not mention that deals with kids whose lives are in danger i spoke to the intake administrator there about the cliental from Lakewood and i was told 99.% of all kids from lakewood Yes lakewood our holy town who doesn't allow text messaging were molested in this town!!!!! and that is what led to there addiction!

now some facts of this rehab which has a high success rate 50% dont stay clean and out of all the jewish kids there that leave and relapse there is an average of 3 jewish souls that die a year!!! Murdered by you and me and all of us unwilling to take a stand against these people in our community the rabbis are scared to do anything? its political?? how dare they say that?? this is life and death we are killing kids over here we are condemning them to a life of misery of lonely depression and god forbid of passing on this horrible sickness.

IT IS YOUR DUTY as a Jew, As a Human to find these people in our community and no longer let them live among us!!!! 'Oy le rosha Oy le schayno' I think over here we are all the reshoim if we sit back and do nothing!! and if you dare say you are worried that people in play groups will lose there jobs there is some math you may want to do. a rehab a 6 month program to give a molested kid a chance $5,000 per months totals $30,000 now this place on average has 20 kids per six months thats $60,000 do you want me to count in the average fee of therapy $150-per hour????? or maybe you want the numbers i got from the local funeral homes??????WAKE UP!!!!!!

Ask yourself honestly is it that you are truly concerned about this just isn't your place or do you just not know what to do? I think trying to be worried about innocent money just went the window….This cannot be hidden any more!!!!! you know something speak up!!! have you been thru this??? share your story, help create support groups Help publicize this letter share your story…. If you are an offender seek help it can be done your amends will not be easy but it can be done.

You can make one fatal mistake and that is to try and hide and think you will get passed by come out help fix the wrong before you will no longer have that chance EVER. If we all get together as a town to help weed this community it can be done with minimal damage. Anybody innocent who may receive slight setbacks because of this consider it your part in saving a life. "


ASHRECHA,Shua Finkelstein From 7fatcow.com
Leave Comment ---This article posted by Chaptzem : 8:10 AM21 comments

JAY RANT ON RUSH

Get Real's Jay DeDapper was among the first to say Rush Limbaugh was doing Barack Obama a big favor by opposing him so vocally. Now Jay lays out how Obama's plan for using Limbaugh has everything to do with influencing a very small group of people. Three to be exact.
GET REAL :: Rush Hour from Jay DeDapper on Vimeo.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Mayor Bloomberg: 'We love the rich people'; Doesn't want to over-tax NewYork's wealthy

Friday, March 6th 2009, 12:27 PM

Mayor Bloomberg stuck up for the upper crust Friday, saying proposed taxes on New York's highest earners would penalize the people who drive the city's economy.

"You know, the yelling and screaming about the rich - we want rich from around this country to move here. We love the rich people," he said on his WOR-AM radio show.

"People say, 'Oh, well, you know, if the income were redistributed throughout the system more fairly,' " Bloomberg continued.
"I don't know what fair means. You can argue that if you make more money, you deserve more money."

Rich people generate jobs and taxes with the expensive things they buy and the fancy restaurants where they eat, Bloomberg said - but they aren't making much money as the stock market collapses, and raising taxes on them will just drive them away.

Bloomberg's own proposed budget for next year doesn't touch income taxes. It hikes the sales tax by a quarter-percent, taking an estimated $894 million from New Yorkers' pockets.

"A very small percentage of people do account for a big part of our income," he said. "The first rule of taxation is ... you can't tax too much those that can move."

Bloomberg is New York's wealthiest man, worth an estimated $20 billion, and is on a first name basis with billionaires around the world.

The mayor spoke a day after thousands converged on City Hall to call for tax hikes on families earning $250,000 or more in order to stop painful budget cuts.

He had previously taken a more measured stance against tax-the-rich plans, like City Council Speaker Christine Quinn's proposal to raise taxes on families earning $500,000 or more.

"I hear the protesters, you know," Bloomberg said. "I think that deep down inside, I assume, they understand that we live in a different world."

Mexico condemns US 'corruption'

News Americas



Calderon's crackdown on the cartels has
sparked a wave of violence [

The Mexican president has blamed US "corruption" for hampering his nation's efforts to combat violent drug cartels.

Felipe Calderon also told the AFP news agency that the main cause of Mexico's drug gang problems was "having the world's biggest consumer [of drugs] next to us".

"Drug trafficking in the United States is fuelled by the phenomenon of corruption on the part of the American authorities," he said on Wednesday.

The Mexican president launched a massive assault on drug cartels after entering office in late 2006 but the cartels have responded with campaigns of violence and intimidation that left 6,000 dead in 2008 alone and around 1,000 in 2009 so far.

Calderon acknowledged some Mexican officials had helped the cartels but said the US should ask itself how many of its own officials were implicated.

"It is not an exclusively Mexican problem, it is a common problem between Mexico and the United States," he said.

"I want to know how many American officials have been prosecuted for this [corruption]."

Border concerns

Mexico has deployed thousands of troops in
a bid to quell drugs violence [Reuters]
Calderon, who has deployed more than 36,000 troops to the troubled Mexico-US border regions to crack down on violence, also said that the US must halt the flow of weapons into Mexico, where the police and security services are often outgunned.

But he said recent talks with Barack Obama, the US president, had provided "a clearer, more decisive response, one which matches the magnitude of the problem which we face," he said.

Mexican border cities, such as Ciudad Juarez have suffered the brunt of the violence
prompting concerns in Washington that the killings and attacks could cross over into the US.

On Wednesday at least 20 people were killed during a prison riot in the city sparked by violence between rival gangs.

Mexican authorities have said they plan to have around 7,500 troops deployed in Ciudad Juarez by the end of this week in a bid to quell the violence, along with 2,000 in the rest of Chihuahua state.

Calderon's comments come as Admiral Mike Mullen, head of the US military, is due to visit Mexico this week as the US is to step up military and other assistance to Mexico in its battle against the cartels.

In February the US department of justice said US and Mexican authorities had arrested 750 people over 21 months in an anti-drug sweep, including 52 members of Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel.


New York's Watergate: Who is Going to Jail?

Friday, March 6, 2009

Cover Up At City Hall Continues
by Gary Tilzer

MIKE PULLS COUNCIL MONEY FOR GROUPS
Sources said they have been informed by Quinn (D-Manhattan), her staff or others familiar with the US attorney's investigation that there would be "a scathing report but no indictments" in the slush-fund scandal, in which lawmakers funneled public money into fake charities.

Lulu of a bill: Speaker Christine Quinn's pay scheme makes case for Council reform The speaker's ability to, in effect, purchase support undermines representative democracy by giving individual lawmakers the incentive to vote on behalf of their wallets rather than in the interests of constituents. The way to end that conflict is to ban lulus, as good government groups have urged for years. Nearly two years after Queens Councilman Tony Avella requested a bill, the Council staff has now drafted a measure that includes such a bar. It will be ready for introduction today, fulfilling a commitment Quinn made a long, long time ago. *** Despite hard times, City Council members still get big stipends for leadership positions.

From True News January 26, 2009
Quinn's Con Game City Council speaker and her cohorts took your money and ran - Council took the pay raise recommended by a special mayoral commission but ignored the part of the report that urged lawmakers to enact reforms aimed at reducing self-dealing and favoritism. Key among the proposed reforms was a call to abolish so-called lulus - extra cash stipends doled out by the speaker to well-behaving sheep - and to rule out raises in the middle of a term.

From True News January 12, 2009
Inspector Clouseau Investigates Inspector Clouseau Investigates NYC Political CorruptionWhen a candidate for council was asked recently at a community meeting if she had been questioned about the investigation of the City Council member items slush fund scandal, she truthfully said no. A review of the member item scandal and other recent political corruption cases that made headlines reveals a very definite pattern. The investigations are more like shooting stars that flare for a second and then burn out and become forgotten by the prosecutors and the media after the headlines disappear. It is another third rail of politics that the media never reports on – the fact that the prosecutors in this one-party incumbent-protected city, must rely on those same elected officials and their political partners to get reelected.

From True News January 4, 2009
Member Item Slush Fund Cover Up What If There Had Been A Media Blackout On Watergate? The media, the prosecutors and even the challengers to the 29 incumbents who voted in favor of extending term limits have been strangely silent for months about the Council's criminal member item slush fund scandal - the earmarking of millions of dollars to fictitious organizations in the council's discretionary budget.

From Room 8 October 10, 2008
A Letter to Garcia: (Michael) Garcia U.S. Attorney Only one man can stop this elite gang of elected officials, party leaders, lobbyists and their clients from a complete takeover of New York City’s budget and political system: Michael Garcia, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009


Review this movie before it opens
in New York!


Directed by emerging auteur Sascha Paladino, THROW DOWN YOUR HEART is the enthralling journey through Uganda, Tanzania, The Gambia, and Mali of the American banjo artiste, Bela Fleck, to uncover the roots of the instrument that is now regarded as quintessentially American.

A multiple Grammy-winner for jazz, bluegrass and classical recordings, Fleck finds himself a wide-eyed novice in nations where the instrument may be fundamentally the same, but the language and rhythm of the music are essentially different. Fleck encounters a dizzying array of musicians who vary in skill and prestige, from superstars like the Malian diva Oumou Sangare, to humble families that make and play their own makeshift banjo, to one who has mastered a 12-foot xylophone.

As Henry Wadsworth Longfellow once remarked, “Music is the universal language of mankind,” which rings true for Fleck and his African counterparts. Although they might not find common words, their profound and spontaneous duets speak volumes about music's ability to connect people across superficial divides. THROW DOWN YOUR HEART is an enchanting and ecstatic celebration of music, and indeed makes you want to throw down your heart, get up and dance. Join us to see this amazing film.

AND COME EARLY! to hear Sylvain Leroux of the West African Fula Flute band talk about and perform selections from the new CD "MANSA" which features an unforgettable ode to Barack Obama.

Venue: Global Information Network / Africa Roundtable / Africana Meetup
146 W. 29th St Suite 7E

Time: 6:30 p.m.

Date: MARCH 11, 2009

Bring your favorite movie food! and please RSVP!


Lisa VivesExecutive DirectorGlobal Information Network146 West 29th Street Suite 7ENew York, NY 10001http://www.globalinfo.org/212-244-3123 (voice)212-244-3522 (fax)

Israel Ruiz Considering A SpecElec Run

Friday, February 20, 2009


One thing we’ve been doing around the office is tracking down the wide array of different potential candidates who have mentioned, at one time or another, that they might consider pursuing the borough presidency (with two confirmed, of course).


One such candidate is former State Senator and City Councilman Israel Ruiz, who told me on Friday that he was also interested in jumping into the special election.


“I’m exploring,” said Ruiz, who recently sent out a mailing looking for campaign contributions to former contributors.


Ruiz said that nothing is final, and that he is also considering a run for borough president or for City Council in the 14th District against incumbent Maria Baez.


Ruiz held that council seat until 1997, when he ran for borough president against Fernando Ferrer.


(Though, to be fair, Ruiz did not seek out a Ferrer contest. When Ruiz announced for borough president, Ferrer was planning a run for mayor against Rudy Giuliani. When Ferrer opted out of the mayoral race, Ruiz stayed in the beep race rather than finagle his way back to the City Council. Obviously, Ferrer won, and Ruiz’s former seat was filled by Adolfo Carrion.)


Ruiz was unsuccessful in 2001 and 2003 races against Baez for the seat. Ruiz also ran for his former State Senate seat in 2006 against Efrain Gonzalez Jr, a seat he had held until 1989, when he was convicted of lying on a loan application. Upon his release from jail, Ruiz was victorious in the City Council race.


Ruiz said he’s spoken about his potential return to a number of people, and all the response he has gotten is positive.


“People are saying they’d like to have a discussion about who should be the next borough president, and they want me to be a part of that discussion,” said Ruiz. “The Bronx is really hurting, and we have to come up with solutions.”


--John DeSio

A MUST SEE

NEW PLAY CAPTURES COURAGE OF WOMEN IN TIME OF WAR w/pix of Lynn Nottage

Mar. 2 (GIN) – African American playwright Lynn Nottage finds the courage and character of women living amidst war and the ever-present threat of sexual violence in her new play “Ruined,” now playing in a theatre in New York.

Based on interviews with victims of rape and mutilation from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nottage has produced a work of drama that tells of the suffering of victims but also their efforts to rebuild their lives.

"Most of (the women) were incredibly traumatized and yet they still found the strength to tell their stories,” Nottage said in an interview with The New York Times. “As painful as it was, I felt this urgency for them to recount every comment."

"At times I wanted to close my ears and stop listening. But I think they really wanted to go on record, very much in the way that Holocaust survivors feel it's incumbent on them to bear witness. They wanted the world to hear their stories.”

"Ruined" has been called "heart-wrenching," "riveting," "beautiful and hideous" by theatre critics. It features Congolese-rumba music composed by Zairean-born Dominic Kanza, with lyrics by Nottage.

Despite the ongoing violence, Nottage said she has hope for the Congolese women she met, "if other countries in the region come together to commit to the healing of Congo. If that’s able to happen, I do think there’s hope.”
=====================================================
"Ruined" at Manhattan Theatre Club, New York City Center through Mar. 29 212-581-1212 use code DSF

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

President Obama: Will Carrión be the third major mistake in your young administration?

Adolfo's Hot Sheet Motels

In the late 1990’s, then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani came to the northeast Bronx for a town hall meeting. At the meeting, he was met with complaints about the number one menace affecting the community: “hot sheet” motels.

For the uninitiated, “hot sheet” motels are short-term establishments, known for their low hourly rates and the forgiving eyes of the staff. Dozens of “hot sheet” motels make their home in The Bronx, and they are well-known havens for prostitution, drug sale and use, and other nefarious activities.

The bulk of the “hot sheet” motels in The Bronx are located in the northeast Bronx. At that town hall meeting, local residents demanded that Giuliani do something to clean up their community and, at least, prevent the opening of future “hot sheets,” if not close the existing establishments. Before leaving the meeting, Giuliani promised those in attendance that he would make something happen.

a typical, recently used room of a Bronx hot sheet motel

In 2000, the mayor delivered. He put forward a new zoning plan that severely limited the types of establishments that could be built in Bronx Community Board #12, the local planning board that covers the communities of the Northeast Bronx. While the zoning plan could not do anything about the “hot sheets” already operating, the new plan would have essentially prevented future “hot sheets” from being constructed.

The plan was met with widespread approval, and the community board was expected to support it. Along came a never before heard from “merchants organization” to protest the plan. The group was represented by attorney Linda Baldwin, wife of then-City Councilman Adolfo Carrion Jr. In November 2000, in front of the community board, Baldwin argued that the plan needed to be defeated for a variety of questionable reasons. Those arguments included charges that merchants’ buildings would deteriorate because they would not be able to repair them or put new facade or build toilets, arguments that supporters of the plan called “baloney.” Note that Baldwin was law partner with the politically connected Roberto Ramirez law firm.

In the end, the community board was persuaded by Baldwin, and voted the plan down. Shortly thereafter, Carrion became the recipient of significant campaign contributions from interests owning major property in the Northeast Bronx, interests that had been represented by Baldwin in the zoning fight.

Many observers were critical of these contributions, and wondered aloud if Carrion had used his City Council seat to raise money while at the same time sell out The Bronx. Though he won his race for Bronx Borough President, Carrion still faced significant pressure from observers to do something about the “hot sheet” menace, to which he was now forever linked.

To that end, Carrion announced the creation of a “hot sheet” motel task force, one that would work to close every such establishment in The Bronx.

In 2002, Carrion’s task force was instrumental in the closure of one such motel, which has since been converted to a Howard Johnson, though that establishment has also been revealed to have offered hourly rates in the past.

In 2002, to much fanfare, Borough President Adolfo Carrion led a 'raid' that closed the Alps Motel. Carrion and his wife, a politically connected attorney, had been criticized for being enablers for the growth of the hot sheet motel business in the north Bronx, and he sought to shake off these connections with 'bold' action. Our investigation in March 2008 found that the motel is back in business - renting beds by the hour.

In 2003, Carrion jointly closed two such motels in the Northeast Bronx on a Friday evening. By Monday, the courts had ordered both establishments be reopened, and both are operating today as “hot sheet” motels.

In his 2004 “State of the Borough” speech, Carrion let it be known that eliminating “hot sheet” motels would remain a major focus of his administration, despite having made no public moves against those establishments since 2003.

“We are not kidding…we will shut them down,” said Carrion during that speech, adding that the audience should “stay tuned.”

Since that time Carrion’s task force has been inactive, no other “hot sheets” have been closed and the issue has entirely disappeared from Carrion’s radar. In fact, Carrion no longer even mentions the issue in his speeches and public appearances.

And as recently as June 2008, Carrion accepted more campaign contributions from those

White House mum as foes rip Carrión

The White House stayed silent Sunday night on a Daily News investigation into developers' big-money donations to Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrión, who is President Obama's new urban policy pointman.

The News' probe of Carrión's cozy ties to developers with major Bronx construction projects provoked outrage from the politician's critics, but didn't stir a peep from the White House.

"We have no comment," White House spokesman Nick Shapiro said.

Carrión resigned Sunday as borough president to become the director of the White House Office on Urban Policy on Monday.

Richard Lipsky, a city planner in the Bronx, said The News exposed Carrión's modus operandi of putting his political coffers before the good of the community.

"Carrión's acted in such a perverse manner to really go out of his way to thwart community and small-business concerns," Lipsky charged.

The News revealed a string of construction projects pitched by developers who had donated to Carrión's campaign war chest just weeks before he approved their plans.

In one case, Boricua College contributed nearly $70,000 to Carrión during the time it was trying to win his support for a 14-story housing tower in Melrose.

Carrión has declined to answer written questions about the campaign contributions, but released a statement saying he's "proud to have such wide-ranging support" from all facets of the community.

Former west Bronx Councilman and state Sen. Israel Ruiz defended Carrión as an "honest young man."

"This is nothing new. All the way from the governor on down, everybody deals with these developers to get reelected," Ruiz said. "That's the nature of the beast, unfortunately."

whutchinson@nydailynews.com

Monday, March 2, 2009

Organized Crime Politics

Monday, March 2, 2009


Organized Crime Politics
Episode Two: The Rigged Election System

by Gary Tilzer


Money, influence and the fate of democracy in New York."The scandal unfolding at the city Board of Elections over the long-overdue modernization of New York's ancient, breakdown-prone mechanical voting machines. . . It appears that critical decisions about how we tabulate votes - the very core of our democracy - are being influenced, and perhaps controlled, by lobbyists and political fixers more concerned about their power, perks and paychecks than the public good." - Lewis, Daily News

It's not only the voting machines that are undemocratic, it is the rigging of the entire voting system that this blog has been investigating and reporting on:

1. 100 Years Without Change: How Tammany Hall Still Controls the NYC Board of Elections "MESS" The BOE is closely guarded by the incumbent protection society, because it serves as a gatekeeper to deliberately make it very hard and costly for anyone independent of the insiders from winning party positions or elected office. Since Robert Wagner in the 1960s, New York City mayors have tried to reform the BOE, but they have been mostly rebuffed by its arrogant leadership. . . Mayor Bloomberg once said the structure of the BOE is a remnant of the days when Tammany Hall ruled New York. . . Mayor Giuliani, who took down the five organized crime families, was limited to bargaining before the 1998 presidential election that he would give the BOE $18 million in funding if they agreed to accelerate its schedule for counting paper ballots. . . Koch vowed to fight for a nonpartisan BOE with civil service employees after the machine-controlled BOE tried to steal away his 41-vote victory over the leader of Tammany’s machine Carmine De Sapio in 1963. He failed. - From True News *** A History of Corrupt at the NYC Board of Election


The Board is controlled by the City's Democrat and Republican county leaders, who pick the board's commissioners.

2. Tammany’s Ballot Control Again and Again GOP Leaders Use Ballot Access to Fight for Patronage and PowerIt is not only challengers to local offices who are held hostage, even billionaire mayors must contend with Tammany Hall’s control of New York's Ballot Box. . . What the GOP has over the mayor is ballot access in the name of a Wilson-Pakula law that requires Bloomberg who registered as an independent (not independent party) when he was running for president, to obtain the written permission of three of the City’s five Republican county leaders to run for re-election on the Republican ballot line. . . There are no elected Republican officials in Manhattan, the Bronx and Queens and only one in Brooklyn. This year the Republicans lost their only congressmember in the city when it was discovered he had two families. There is no GOP vote to deliver in the city. It is all about controlling the ballot line. - From True News

3. The Real Campaign is to Suppress Challengers Using the Courts and the CFB Rules to Win Elections. Every year in an annual ritual, scores of candidates, many running for the first time are denied a chance to compete in the electoral process or have their campaign efforts severely harmed by the obstacles of ballot access. New York’s election law is among the most stringent in the nation. It poisons the democratic process and is kept in place by incumbents and a political machine which gain advantage by those that it harms. - from True News

4. Appointments Strengthen Special Interests, Corrupt Politicians.

5. NY's Falling Voter Participation - The City's election results from a half-century ago look like misprints. 3.46 million out of the City's 3.53 million registered voters, a staggering 98%, cast ballots in the 1952 Presidential election. One year later, 93% of registered New Yorkers voted in the Mayoral election. Today, the bottom has fallen out for the City's electorate. Only 27% of the City's registered voters cast their ballots in the last mayoral election in 2005. 39% of registered voters took part in the Mayoral election of 1997.

6. Member Item Slush Fund Cover Up When a candidate for council was asked recently at a community meeting if she had been questioned about the investigation of the City Council member items slush fund scandal, she truthfully said no. Inspector Clouseau Investigates - From True News

7. Venezuela Dictator Allowed A Vote on Term Limits .. Not NYC.