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by Pat Flannery
Back
at the end of October I asked the City Auditor John
Torell to explain the information given to the City
Council and to the public regarding the restructuring of
a Bank of America loan for $152 million for sewer
infrastructure. The Council were told that the City was
paying interest on the $152 million calculated at
62.34% of the LIBOR rate (at that time 3.007%) plus 75
basis points i.e. a rate of 2.624%.
I asked Mr.
Torrel the following questions on the telephone and by
email:
"... the current 2.624% annual rate raises the
following questions:
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what was the cost of issuance in
this case? What was the role of Banc of America
Securities LLC? Did they receive a broker’s
commission and if so how was it paid? Is there a
closing or settlement statement in existence
showing the costs of the entire transaction? If
so, may I see it?
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what was the cost of issuance in
the other cases involving the BofA? Were there
any companion or compensating deals?
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why are we paying Kroll to get us
to the public bond markets where we will
presumably pay more than 2.624%?
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why did we pay a higher
(reported) rate on the Petco Park bond when we
could presumably have placed it with the BofA?
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is the BofA willing to buy more
of our bonds at this low rate? If so why all the
concern about our credit rating and our audit?
It just doesn’t make sense John."
Mr.
Torell agreed on the telephone that it did not make
sense to him either. Accordingly he copied me with a
request he sent to Dennis Kahlie on November
2, 2005:
"Would you please (when you get a
chance) in the next couple of days respond to his
concerns and copy me on the response (I'd like to
know the answers to some of these questions also.
Thanks, in advance, for your help -John"
I have not heard another word from either
gentlemen but in the meantime the matter went back
before the City Council for a repeat approval
because Scott Peter's wife had owned Bank of America
stock at the time of its first approval. Kahlie
again appeared before the City Council and again
confirmed the above interest rate.
Yet nobody
on the City Council questioned why we were not
taking advantage of this very attractive interest
rate from what Scott Lewis of the Voice (again
without question) described as a very friendly
source. If this rate was available why were we
paying Arthur Levitt and his gang millions so we
could pay a higher rate in the public bond market?
Surely I'm not the only one in the world to whom
that question occurs.
The fact is of course
that I simply do not believe that the Bank of
America did not receive some undisclosed "incentive"
to make such an attractive loan and nobody
(apparently now including John Torell) wants to open
up that can of worms.
Torell neither appeared
before the City Council nor to my knowledge uttered
a single word about the concerns he shared with me
on November 2, 2005. So what has happened to this
honest man who replaced the former acting City
Auditor Terri Webster who is now charged with a
felony by the District Attorney? Has he too been
swallowed up in the black hole of corruption that
appears to be San Diego City Hall? He certainly has
not responded to any of my repeated questions.
Either Kahlie and others have stalled Torell who is
now reluctant to admit as much or he too has joined
the pervasive web of deceit that seems to be our
City Hall.
Torell made a great show of his
commitment to honesty and transparency on several
occasions before the City Council. But eagle eyed
Mel Shapiro pointed out something interesting to me
in an email on December 1, 2005:
"Today's U-T
editorial gives City Auditor credit for bring
financial reports to the council. The truth is
that Donna insisted that this be done, since its
required by the City Charter." Indeed she
did Mel.
In any case Torell seems to have gone awful
quiet. Maybe "Bowtie Bob" has shared with him
why it is so important not to upset the apple
cart with whatever is going on between Levitt
and Kittle, which I totally believe is some kind
of scheme. It certainly is a puzzler. The local
newspaper opinion editor should not be a
political "player". Not only is Kittle a
"player", he sees himself as the preeminent
"player"!
Or
maybe the relationship between the U-T and
Sanders is not as cozy as it seemed during the
campaign when all the U-T cared about was
stopping Frye (I think the U-T owners would have
called up the Chicago Tribune and left town if
she was elected).
Sanders/Froman
certainly seem to have scant regard for Torell.
"I wasn't aware until you just told me this
instant that he was going to oversee the
auditor's office" Torell told The Voice on
December 14 when informed that Jay Goldstone
from Pasadena had been hired by Sanders and
Mayor Froman (well isn't that the truth of it?)
at a salary of $194,500, to oversee Torell's
job! And become the City's first CFO.
So
much for Sanders' much promised streamlining of
the City's bureaucracy! So far all we have seen
is Froman finding very lucrative new positions
for former colleagues from her Navy career and
elsewhere. To the victor goes the spoils, is
that it?
So what can I now expect from
"honest John" Torell with regard to my B of A
questioning? Not much it would seem. Perhaps he
had a word with his wife and decided to do as
all good civil servants do, keep their heads
down and count the years until retirement when
they can all go fishing together.
The
black hole of City Hall seems to have swallowed
Torell without trace. Now I see the wisdom of
Donna Frye's call to make the City Auditor an
elected office. But it is not likely to happen
on the Sanders/Froman watch. They are going to
consolidate power in their own hands and use it
to do favors for their friends - that is their
retirement plan.
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Kittle
is a strange individual -
12/14/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
"Bowtie Bob" Kittle is a
strange individual. He has it as wrong regarding Arthur
Levitt and his bogus Audit Committee as he had regarding
Randy Cunningham being a pillar of society. Yet we have
not heard even a hint of regret let alone a retraction
of all the glowing dribble Kittle wrote about Cunningham
over the years. Now he expects us to be impressed
by his latest chain of pompous editorials extolling the
virtues of another pompous old fake, the biggest conman
ever to hit this town since the
1915 rain man.
The only explanation I can think of for his mad love
affair with this old influence peddler is his all
consuming hatred of Mike Aguirre. Kittle has blinded
himself to the shameless extortion being perpetrated by
a greedy old political pro from DC rather than accept
the fact that Aguirre is the only one who will rid this
city of corruption. Thank God we have Mike as only He
knows where we would be right now if the establishment
had got their puppet Leslie Devaney into the City
Attorney's Office.
I often wonder if Kittle and
the U-T really want this city cleaned up and rid of
corrupt officials. Maybe they like it the old way. I say
that because Arthur Levitt is about the last person on
the planet that would be likely to banish the curse of
corruption from this town, he would be far more likely
to add to it from what we have seen of him so far.
Therefore "Bowtie Bob" Kittle has a lot to answer
for his crazy support of Levitt and his "Audit
Committee". His
editorial today
is laden with hypocrisy and contradictions. Kittle is
appalled that Sanders baulked at asking the City Council
for another $11 million on top of the $7.8 million they
already paid to this bandit without any guarantee that
that would satisfy his insatiable appetite for easy
money. And Kittle claims to care about the people of
this city? What a strange individual he is indeed.
Maybe Sanders will turn around after Christmas and tell
Kittle that it was the people of San Diego who elected
him Mayor not the Union-Tribune. Now wouldn't that be
nice. |
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The
blame game has only just begun -
12/07/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Mike Aguirre is right to ask
Scott Peters why he will not support his legal challenge
to the 2002 employee pension enhancements. Peters should
not be allowed to get away with calling Aguirre's legal
challenge "silly and risky" when we all know that Peters
is the unions' appointee to the Council Chair, which
means that Peters is owned lock stock and barrel by
those who have most to lose by the truth coming out. We
should not forget that. Indeed as far as I am concerned
his credibility is zero.
What will be interesting
over the next few weeks and months will be whether
Sanders will break towards Aguirre or towards Peters.
Those two represent the opposing sides of the pension
issue. Sanders will not be able to stay on the fence for
very long.
What may force the issue on Sanders is
if his Republican backers start to salivate over the
city land sales the unions are demanding. Such a fire
sale of city land would suit Sanders' developer backers
just nicely. No doubt Peters will trot out a new effort
before the City Council early in the new year and
Sanders will have to weigh in on it.
But the Feds
will have the final say in all this. This is more than a
local issue. The nation's municipal bond system is at
risk here. If cities like San Diego get away with lying
to the markets about their finances the whole system is
threatened. The Feds are not going to allow that, they
will clean house and make an example of San Diego.
Sanders should keep that in mind and be aware that the
Feds want Aguirre to succeed. Aguirre knows that
even if the U-T doesn't. They are backing Arthur Levitt
whom the FBI must know is part of the problem not part
of the solution. All Levitt is doing is shamelessly
exploiting the San Diego situation for his own personal
profit and prolonging the problem. Shame on the U-T for
mollycoddling such a devious person at City expense.
Sanders may yet prove wiser than Bowtie Bob. I certainly
hope so.
The six accused by the DA and their
various witnesses who have taken the Fifth, know that
the Feds will have the final say. They know that Duke
may not be the only one around here who may see the
inside of a Federal prison. Lying about municipal bonds
is a Federal crime. That is why they are taking the
Fifth and it shows where their real fears lie. Their
attorneys know who is the bigger threat.
The fact is that somebody down at City Hall lied on
the bond forms. If any attorney told them to do so then
that attorney is just as guilty and should fear more
than the civil complaint for negligence and breach of
contract the City has already filed. Therefore pleading
that their attorneys told them to do it will not save
them.
That is why Sanders should be careful which
side he takes on the pension issue. At least one of his
predecessors may well be heading for jail over it, one
Richard (Dick) Murphy and Dick may have Peters for
company. The blame game has only just begun. |
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Diann Shipione, the new Erin Brokovitch
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12/01/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
“Today, the
citizens of San Diego begin to fight back and hold
professionals responsible for their significant roles in
creating and covering up financial irregularities”.
So says nationally-recognized malpractice attorney, Dan
L. Stanford and his San Diego associate attorney Bryan
C. Vess who yesterday filed a civil lawsuit in the San
Diego Superior Court on behalf of the City of San Diego
against various lawyers and accountants who acted as
professionals for the City in connection with bond
offerings between 1996 and 2003. The City is
seeking more than
$100 million in damages for professional negligence,
breach of fiduciary duty and breach of contract.
Here is the
press release
and here is the
full complaint.
It speaks for itself and once again tells the whole
sordid story of the greed and lies of high officials and
the lawyers they hired to protect them from their lies.
But you know the old saying "if they'll do it with you
they'll do it to you". If you marry somebody who cheated
to be with you, don't be surprised when they cheat on
you. Lawyers should not now be surprised when their
former clients sue them for doing what they were earlier
hired to do - lie. Now Council Members Madaffer,
Maienschein, Peters and Atkins are suing the lawyers
they once hired to lie for them.
It is also
ironic that six of the city officials most directly
concerned with the financial shenanigans for which they
needed expensive rear-covering attorneys are, these very
days, in front of a judge arguing (through their
attorneys and rolling their eyes) that Diann Shipione
(the only one who told us the truth about what was going
on at City Hall) didn't know what she was talking about
and that these very city officials were right to trust
these knowledgeable attorneys now being sued by the City
for lying, oops I mean "negligence".
Nicola Hanna, attorney for one of the accused six
officials, asked Shipione yesterday in the pension case
"Did any of them stand up at any time and say if you
vote on this you are committing a felony?" "No"
replied Shipione.
One day they will make a movie
about Diann Shipione. One lone honest girl pitting her
wits against a City Hall full of corrupt officials in
America's seventh largest city aided and abetted by the
nation's best attorneys. It will make Erin Brokovitch
look tame. |
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The city
unions run City Hall -
11/24/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Have you wondered how
everybody on the City Council came to be in full
agreement as to who should be their Council President?
Just watch
the video
(go to 0:30 minutes) of Scott Peters' appointment to
that position on Tuesday.
Watch the parade of
city union leaders taking the microphone in support of
him and you have your answer - the city unions are
running this city.
They picked Peters as its
Council President as they picked Murphy and Sanders
before him. Make no mistake Sanders is their man just as
Murphy was. That's where he learned his politics, he was
a police union politician first.
So we have a
city that is run by a coalition of city unions and city
developers. The city unions give the developers what
they want and the developers give the unions what they
want while the rest us, including the non-city unions,
get squeezed in the middle. |
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Attorney-client privilege is really taking the Fifth -
11/21/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
I watched Mel Shapiro's
presentation to the City Council last Tuesday asking how
much we are paying criminal lawyers to represent four
City Councilors who are being investigated by the FBI.
Mel made an excellent point: invoking attorney-client
privilege is really taking the Fifth. The City Council
now have it down to a science.
By routing
everything through lawyers they can hide the whole
business of government behind attorney-client privilege!
A perfect example is the trick the pension board has
pulled on us by having their lawyers, Reish, Luftman
Reicher & Cohen, appoint Navigant Consulting as their
"Audit Committee" similar to Kroll & Co. at the City.
Thus they don't have to tell us anything about the
Committee's activities. They just invoke attorney-client
privilege, a blatant use of City money for a cover-up.
We wouldn't even know about this trick if Diann Shipione
had not refused to talk to Navigant unless they showed
her their engagement letter and their work scope. They
refused, claiming attorney-client privilege. And so it
goes on. |
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But who
will put the leash on Bob Kittle at the U-T? -
11/15/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Bob Kittle's
editorial
on Sunday made it clear that he and Sanders' handlers
want him to put the muzzle on our elected City Attorney.
This makes Sanders a stooge of the city's power brokers.
They paid for his election to keep a lid on the scandal
powder keg.
Personally I had to (temporarily)
leave town to get away from the sound of kissing up.
Even Aguirre was puckering.
But it doesn't
matter. If San Diegans had elected Pope John Paul II or
Mother Teresa the fact is that the city is like a
haunted house with spidery closets brim full of
skeletons - our "special
relationship"
with the Bank of America being one of the more
interesting ones (whose side is Scott Lewis on?)
I am still waiting for the City Auditor to get back to
me with the cost of placement of the BofA loans. We all
know that there are closing costs involved in arranging
a loan or in refinancing one, but according to the City
Manager's Office there were none by the BofA. I just
don't believe it. They are also telling us that the
interest rate is lower than the LIBOR rate. If that is
the case why will they not show us the closing
statements?
No wonder Kittle and his power-broker
friends want Sanders to keep us mushrooms in the dark
and feed us "you know what" through his "newspaper". |
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Did
Sanders get a free ride? -
11/08/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Here is a letter from a
concerned San Diegan to the local editors that did not
quite make it past the censor, I wonder why? The writer
seems to make a very valid point. If Sanders is such a
business genius why is he not talking about the company
he has headed as President since he left the Red Cross
and the United Way?
Here is the letter:
"What
has Donna Frye's competitor, Jerry Sanders, been doing
for the past 3 years? Answer: Although Sanders never
mentions it, and is never asked by local media, for the
past 3 years he was COO and President of a "technology
start-up" company. As proof,
admire Sanders partying
with other corporate leaders, now his mayoral campaign
contributors, at the Corporate Directors Forum in 2003.
What Sanders "did" for Virtual Capital of California
(VCC) is unknown. Sanders does not include VCC among the
organizations that he constantly touts as having "turned
around." In any case , Sanders' tenure with United Way
and the Red Cross was LONG ago; why won't anyone ask
Sanders how successful he was in his recent role as
"executive"? Because he probably wasn't successful: he
was given the "executive" position by a local wealthy
Republican, Thomas Stickel; Sanders, lacking any
academic credentials in technology, was probably used as
a nice face and pleasant do-gooder to drum up business
for Stickels' start-up (other "officers" in Virtual
Capital of California had to divvy up money; Sanders'
contribution is unknown). Was Sanders successful? Will
he apply the same successful approach as Mayor?
Who would want to hire a person who couldn't talk about
their most recent, and possibly most pertinent,
experience?"
Why would the "mainstream" media refuse to publish such
a letter? The author of this one just happened to send
it to me, are there others? Raising similar issues,
being suppressed by the editors? Who is really running
this town? Arthur Levitt flies in from Washington DC
last week to meet with the editorial board of the San
Diego Union-Tribune, at enormous taxpayers' expense, but
he does not have time to meet with the City Council!
Nobody questions it. And nobody questions Sanders'
resumé. Strange. |
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Now all
we can do is pray
- 11/07/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Just in case there are any
un-decideds out there (I hope not) who read my blog, I
would remind them that the single most telling
difference between Sanders and Frye is their intentions
regarding the illegally granted pension benefits. How
can anybody be unsure about something as illegal as
driving on the wrong side of the road? Why would anybody
insist that such a thing is legal until a judge rules it
illegal? Yet that's what Sanders is saying about the
illegally granted pension benefits.
To me there
is a basic dishonesty about such talk. But then just
about everything about Sanders is basically dishonest.
Personally I can never forgive him for using a
massacre-in-progress as an opportunity for self
promotion. I remember that
1984 day
very well. When the powers-that-be in San Diego (through
Republican Mayor Susan Golding) appointed him Police
Chief I was shocked. Now he is being foisted on us as
mayor by the same Republican Party power elite
(according to the Datamar polls). This time I am beyond
shocked, I am disgusted. I am a long-time San Diegan and
love this town as if I were born here.
Not only
has our beautiful city become a national embarrassment
financially under successive Republican regimes but
"electing" Sanders (if the people fall for it tomorrow)
will demonstrate a huge moral black hole at our core.
The fact that this guy let 22 people die while he went
home and changed into his dress uniform to preen for the
TV cameras, allowing the killing to go on until he
arrived, does not seem to bother many of my fellow San
Diegans (nobody even wants to talk about it).
There really does seem to be a moral black hole at the
very heart of public life in this city. All you have to
do is read Mike Aguirre's Interim Reports (which I went
to the trouble of translating from PDF format to the
more searchable HTML format and put them here on my
site) to realize how deeply morally comprised this City
has become.
I experienced this personally for
three years from February 2002 to April 2005 as I fought
(with some success) to frustrate Mayor Murphy's
international money-laundering scheme disguised as a
sister city partnership with
a development company.
The only one who paid any attention to me was Donna
Frye. As with Diann Shipione she was the only one who
had the moral compass to listen to what we were saying.
All the others on the City Council, including in my case
Tony Young, could care less about morality or a clearly
fraudulent sister city organization, despite my full
explanation as to what was going on. They just voted for
it anyway. That was the culture in this city and that is
what has brought it to almost certain bankruptcy and
deep, deep national and international embarrassment.
What a shame. What a shame.
So if there is
anybody out there who has still not made up their mind
or who intends to vote for Jerry Sanders and have bought
into the false image the Union-Tribune has created for
him, think again. It will be too late to save this city
after tomorrow.
Donna has been the lone voice of
conscience for these last four agonizing years. She is
the only one that can be trusted with the keys to what
is left of this city. Sanders is only interested in the
keys to what is left in the cash box. He knows the city
is doomed and only wants to grab what he can. His reign,
if he wins, will be short and final.
Mike Aguirre
will get his wish. After the great Republican raid there
will be a new City Charter created on the ruins of the
old one. It could so easily be different. Donna and
honesty could still win. Now all we can do is wait (and
if you pray, please pray). |
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The
Sanders "Mythodology" -
11/05/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
I received
the following press release this morning. I put it up
here in full because I doubt it will be printed by the
San Diego Union-Tribune (I wonder why). It seems the
Sanders methodology is to create a myth based on
lies - a "mythodology".
Livable
Communities Network - Nov. 6, 2005 8:30 pm Contact:
Tom Mullaney Cell: 619-296-8231 Press Release
Mayoral Election SANDERS CLAIMS ABOUT MANAGEMENT
PROVEN FALSE!
HE DID NOT “TURN AROUND” UNITED WAY
Mayoral candidate Jerry
Sanders has stated that he cut expenses and “turned
around” United Way while he was CEO from 1999 to 2002.
A review of financial statements just completed
shows this is not true!
Claim #1. Jerry Sanders “decreased
overhead costs” at United Way.
The truth: The expenses were
not reduced while Jerry Sanders was in charge at United
Way. In fact, Total Expenses were about $10
million when he took over in 1999, and about $10 million
when he left in 2002. Claim #2.
Jerry Sanders “dramatically increased fundraising”.
The truth: The "Available
Campaign Revenue" went down by one and one-half million
dollars in the year that Sanders joined United Way,
1999, and had not increased to its previous level by
the time he left in 2002.
This key revenue figure was $9.5 million in 1998, before
Sanders took over as CEO, and was $9 million when he
left United Way in 2002. METHODOLOGY
As a public interest project, Livable Communities
Network analyzed the United Way financial statements
from 1997 to 2004. This allows us to put
Jerry Sanders' results in perspective, including two
years before he joined and two years after he left. He
was President and CEO of United Way from April 1999
until mid-2002. Then he served in fall 2002 as
fundraising chair.
The claims from Jerry
Sanders were taken from his website,
http://www.jerrysandersformayor.com/
http://www.jerrysandersformayor.com/biography/index.cfm
DETAILED INFORMATION 1. Expense details:
Total Expenses were $10,372,267 for the year ending
June 30, 1999, which was Sanders’ first year. Total
Expenses were $10,097,647 for the year ending June 30,
2002, Sanders’ last year. So expenses were reduced only
2.6% over the three years. The only significant
improvement in expenses was a temporary decrease for one
year, 2000. 2. Fundraising details: "Gross
campaign revenues" were increased from 1999 to 2002, but
the increase was due to "Designated funds" which are
immediately paid out to specific agencies at the
direction of the donor. These "Designated funds" are not
available for United Way to pay out to its member
agencies as allocations, or to use for expenses. The
other factor that inflated the gross figure was an
increase of $1 million in “uncollectible pledges”.
After adjusting for these two factors, the financial
statements show that the “Campaign Revenue Available for
allocation and expenses” decreased from $9,537,398 in
1998 to $9,004,063 in 2002. SUPPORTING
INFORMATION
A one-page summary of figures and a graph showing
the 1997-2004 figures are available by email. Contact
LivableComm@aol.com or Tom Mullaney, 619-296-8231.
Copies of the complete United Way financial
statements can be obtained from the following sources:
1. Livable Communities Network. 1997-2004. Hard copy.
2. United Way website. 2001-2004 only. Pdf format.
http://www.uwsd.org/about/fin_annualaudit.asp
I also received these
Financials
and a
statement from a
former CFO of the United Way. They seem to bear out what
Mr. Mullaney is reporting above. Does anybody care? It
seems not. I understand all of this has been made
available to the press at large. Is everybody scared of
Jerry now that he may have all this power? |
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A vote
for the chicken or the fox -
11/05/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Just
when I thought I understood democracy along come lawyers
for Inzunza and Zucchet (and they should know, they are
lawyers)
telling us
in the Union-Tribune that these two nice lads "were
unfairly convicted by a jury that failed to comprehend
how democracy works and was swayed by ongoing turmoil at
City Hall".
It turns out that I am just as
stupid as the jury. It has nothing to do with you and I
and our votes, it has to do with business lobbyists
stuffing wads of dollar bills into politicians' whatever
in return for government favors. That's how it works.
Didn't you know? It is rather like a strip club,
Cheetah's for example, the performers "perform" and
their clients stuff dollar bills wherever they will fit.
Now I understand. Finally.
The "ongoing
turmoil at City Hall" they are referring to is the
ruckus my kind of democracy has been making in
trying to reassert itself in the persons of Mike Aguirre
and Donna Frye. It is the kind of ruckus you would hear
when a fox is raiding the chicken coop. That would not
be a good time for a fox trial. Chicken coop owners on
the jury might be "swayed by ongoing turmoil"
at the chicken coop.
Next week is going to
be a big week for democracy in San Diego. On Tuesday we
the voters will get to vote for either the chicken or
the fox. On Wednesday Judge Miller gets to decide
whether or not a jury understood how democracy works. In
any case we the voters will get a lesson on how the
legal system works and whether our own moral compass
still works or if it got lost in the ruckus.
If we vote for the fox (Sanders) it will be because
somehow we all secretly want to be foxes or pirates. We
would all love to get into the Aladdin's Cave that is
City Hall. We would all like to shriek like crazed
buccaneers bathing ourselves in the City's treasury.
If we vote for the chicken (Donna) perhaps there is
still hope for us - we haven't all joined the pirate
ship the Republican Party (to which I once belonged) has
become. |
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The
town we loved so well -
11/04/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
The Labor Council's
TV ad
for Donna Frye sums up the
people's choice succinctly: "honest, open, different"
vs. "same-old-same-old". I like the final shot of Donna
looking out over the blue Pacific Ocean - both are San
Diegans' pride and joy.
This election boils down
to who gets to choose our mayor, the people or
developers.
There is no doubt that Donna is the
people's choice, she has proven it over and over again,
and there is no doubt that Sanders is the developers'
choice, every construction site in San Diego is
festooned with Sanders' signs. If he gets elected it
will be open season on the environment and affordable
housing.
While San Diego will become developers' heaven, we
the people who have to live with their handiwork will be
excluded from all land use decisions. The Chargers will
get to cram Mission Valley with thousands of condos on
city-donated land, the Padres will get to develop
downtown and get to keep the property tax from it for
forty years.
Donna will be relegated to the lone
dissenting voice on the City Council again and pretty
soon even she will give up and go home to her husband. I
will be singing Phil Coulter's lovely Irish song about a
lovely Irish city, Derry "The Town I loved so well",
with that plaintive line "my God what have they done to
the town I loved so well".
The circumstances are
different but the results will be the same. In the case
of Derry it was the British Army "with their tanks and
their guns" that destroyed the city, in San Diego it
will be the Republican Party with their money and their
lies.
Let us just pray that Tuesday November 8,
2005 will be remembered as "Good Tuesday" not "Bloody
Tuesday". Those familiar with the British-Irish conflict
over the last thirty years will understand the parallel.
It really is a watershed. Let's hope this is not the end
of the town we all "loved so well". It need not be, it
is up to us.
I have great faith in the people of
San Diego. I have great faith they will choose to keep
the city they love so well, not turn it over to greedy
developers who care nothing about our quality of life or
our families' future. It must be Donna as after her the
deluge. |
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Oh Lord
it's hard to be patient - 11/03/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Apparently the
powers-that-be at City Hall want this BofA $152 million
sewer bond refinanced real bad. Trouble is it requires
all six votes on the Council. Scott Peters "forgot" that
his wife owned
$175,000 in Bank of America stock
when he cast his vote on October 24th. I wish my wife
(if I had a wife) had so many investments that I could
"forget" about a little thing like $175,000 in Bank of
America stock. I guess if you live in La Jolla and are a
City Councilman you don't have to worry about such
trivia.
Anyway she dutifully
sold
her little BofA investment last Monday so her husband
Scott can vote on this thing again on November 14th just
to make sure there is no problem.
Meanwhile I am
still waiting for Dennis Kahlie (with a little help from
John Torell the City Auditor) to get back to me as to
why this particular bond needs to be refinanced right
now instead of waiting until we get back into the public
bond market or if its just because the BofA are offering
us such cheap money (2.624%) we can't refuse. If so then
why are we not taking more advantage of it to fix
potholes and mend broken sewer pipes? Are we waiting for
Ronne Froman to tell us that 2.624% is a good deal?
I will be patient and wait until Kahlie enlightens me.
But sometimes, Oh Lord it's hard to be patient and I'm
doing the best that I can. |
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Mike
Aguirre's "escrow" -
11/03/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
As a longtime realtor and mortgage
broker, but mainly as a longtime male, I am
following
Mike Aguirre's
romantic "symbolic gesture" of a red
rose wrapped in a
notarized quitclaim deed
for half ownership of his house with professional
curiosity but mainly with dismayed amusement at the
sometimes stupidity of my gender when it comes to
getting former lovers back into our bedrooms. I have
done some stupid things in that department over the
years myself but I guess I am not quite as "romantic" as
Mike. I would have just stuck with the red rose.
You have to love the guy though, he never does
anything in moderation. But a quitclaim deed? Was she
that good? But she was smart. She knew the difference
between a quitclaim deed and a rose - the County
Recorder doesn't record roses.
Will he be doing a refi one of these days and paying
her a few hundred grand? I'm not a lawyer but I have
handled a lot more quitclaim deeds than red roses. It
will all hinge on "delivery". It was signed, sealed and
..... but was it "delivered"? If she removed it from his
bedroom without his permission it was not delivered. He
should keep the judge's focus in the bedroom. It is well
known (especially to women) that men don't think too
clearly in the bedroom. Hopefully the judge will know a
little about that.
In real estate we draw and
notarize title deeds, both "grant" and "quitclaim", all
the time and hold them for "delivery". It is called an
escrow. When certain things are completed, payment
received for example, the deed gets "delivered" i.e.
recorded. Unauthorized recording is unauthorized
"delivery". If an escrow holder recorded (i.e.
delivered) a title deed before a contingent event had
taken place (usually a whole lot of events in a typical
escrow) that escrow holder would be drummed out of the
business.
So Mike has to contend that he opened
escrow in the bedroom and that certain "contingent
events" needed to take place before "delivery", mainly
that she needed to move back in with him. The only way I
can see him losing his case is if the judge rules that a
rather less romantic event took place in the bedroom,
which I understand usually involves payment in advance.
So the case may well revolve around whether she hung
anything in the closet and thus moved in or whether it
was a more brief encounter in which case half ownership
in a house seems rather steep. |
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"Sick"ophant City -
11/02/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
Is the Kroll investigation
genuine or is it a City Hall cover up? That is the
question that haunts most thinking San Diegans. John
Torell, our City Auditor, feels there is no practical
alternative but to stick with Kroll. He may well be
right, but this is San Diego and he is new to our fair
city and is a trusting kind of guy.
At
yesterday's Council meeting Mr. Torell, a CPA himself,
explained that only an unqualified audit report from
KPMG will clear the way for the City to get back into
the public municipal bond market. A qualified report is
not possible he says, because KPMG does not know what
the "exception" might be. So it is a Catch 22 situation.
Meantime I continue to pose the question: why do we need
access to the public bond market if we can borrow money
from the Bank of America at 2.624%? Or alternatively:
what is the real cost of our borrowings from BofA?
Mr. Aguirre's
questioning of the Kroll Co.
(go to 4:20 mins.) and representatives from the San
Diego Data Processing Corp. clearly demonstrated that
the "technical problems" cited by Kroll as the reason
for further delay was not only fixable but was known as
early as January 2005. Is Kroll acting in good faith?
Why is the editorial board of the San Diego
Union-Tribune, the City Manager's Office and four City
Councilors, being so protective of Kroll & Co.? What do
they know that is being withheld from the rest of us,
including our City Auditor Mr. Torell?
There
seems to be a cadre or inner circle of power brokers,
entirely unaccountable to the people of San Diego,
running this city. Clearly Bob Kittle, the editor of the
editorial board of the Union-Tribune, belongs to this
elite group. It was revealed yesterday that Kroll & Co.
have been meeting and reporting to him regularly and
billing the City!
It seems the way to get on in
this town is to suck up to Kittle and the rest of these
guys whoever they are. Is that what Jerry Sanders has
done?
If so we are in deep trouble. Last year
these behind-the-scenes-power-brokers very nearly
succeeded in getting their hand-picked sycophant Leslie
Devaney elected City Attorney. Instead they got their
worst nightmare: Mike Aguirre.
They are taking no chances in the mayoral race. They
have pulled out all the stops to get Sanders into the
office of Strong Mayor they created through a well
financed ballot proposition. Their second worst
nightmare would be to let Donna Frye have it.
If
elected, Sanders' first job will be to shut down Mike
Aguirre and in so doing shut down open and accountable
government in this city. We will have a one-party
city - the Republican Party, with its own party
newspaper the San Diego Pravda otherwise known as the
San Diego Union-Tribune. That is classic Third World -
government by the rich for the rich, through corrupt
politicians whose honor and incorruptibility is
trumpeted daily by their party-controlled media while
the rich live on hillsides throwing their trash over the
walls of their gated communities onto the great
unwashed.
Have you driven through East San Diego
lately? We are already Third World in large areas of
this city. You need a four-wheel drive vehicle to
navigate through the potholes! And Sanders is going to
"cut" the fat out of our city services! I wonder if he
has picked out his new home in Rancho Santa Fe yet.
Toni Atkins knows that these guys are not fooling
around and she intends to be on the winning side.
Aguirre is adroitly pushing her to more and more show
her hand and it aint pretty. She has already passed the
point of no return in protecting Kroll.
The
stakes in this mayoral race could hardly be higher, not
only is the financial health of our city at stake our
very democracy is on the line.
But there is one bright spot on the horizon, the
Hispanic Community.
It is time they were acknowledged for what they are, the
future of this city. Like the Irish on the East Coast
they will take over city government all up and down the
West Coast and chase away the corrupt old guard. It is
inevitable and very welcome. Bowtie Bob and his stuffy
old colonial friends should take the plane back with
Prince Charles, into oblivion. |
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City
finances are a strange thing to be sure -
10/26/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
My suspicions deepen. My
repeated requests for clarification of the interest rate
being charged by the Bank of America on the $152 million
sewer bond, even though I had correctly identified the
actual person at the bank who is dealing with it, went
unanswered for two days until today I got a call from a
media relations guy telling me that they do not give out
information on such matters. Why a media relations
person?
Dennis Kahlie confirmed to me on the
telephone prior to the City Council meeting on Monday
that I was correct that the interest rate being paid by
the City on the $152 million sewer bonds was a
combination of an index, the LIBOR rate, together with a
margin (defined as 62.34% of that LIBOR rate) plus
variable basis points to be reflective of the perceived
risk to the Bank at any particular time.
Referring to the "First
Supplemental Subordinated Indenture"
(page 3) attached to the
Report
I therefore calculated the actual interest rate charged
by the Bank as follows:
the LIBOR index plus
the margin (calculated as 62.34% of the LIBOR index)
plus 150 basis points - 62.34% of 3.007 = 1.874 + 1.500
= 3.374 + 3.007 = 6.381%.
He agreed with my
calculations with one correction. He pointed out that
the basis points "hit" do not go to 150 until March 17,
2007
and only
if by then the City has still failed to provide audited
financial statements for fiscal years 2003 and 2004. He
said the basis points will remain at 75 until December
15, 2005.
That would revise my calculation as follows: the
LIBOR index plus
the margin (calculated as 62.34% of the LIBOR index)
plus 75 basis points - 62.34% of 3.007 = 1.874 + 0.750 =
2.624 + 3.007 = 5.631% (tax free as all municipal bonds
are).
After the Council meeting I called him and
asked why he represented to the Council that the
interest rate was in the 3% to 3.25% range. He repeated
what he had told the Council and asked me to talk to the
Bank of America for any further clarification. I asked
him if the Bank of America had charged any "frontloaded"
points or fees to enable them to settle for such a low
interest rate. He assured there had been none.
Well, the BofA is not talking. At this stage the only
thing that would clear this up for me is sight of the
transaction Settlement Statement from June 1, 2004,
showing the interest rate, how it is calculated and the
net proceeds received by the City at that time. There
are just too many outstanding questions regarding any
hidden costs and actual interest rate charged which
neither the City nor the Bank of America seem anxious to
clear up. If everything is above board there should be
no problem with making full disclosure.
If
Mr. Kahlie can borrow $152 million from the Bank of America
at 62.34% of the LIBOR rate (currently 3.007%) plus 75
basis points i.e. 2.624% without any upfront deductions
to boost the yield, he should be taking a bow and
accepting our applause.
I don't know what the
going rate in the municipal bond market is right now but
if it is more than 2.624% why in the world would we want
access to it when we have the Bank of America pushing
cheap money at us? Maybe that is why we are paying $900
per hour to Arthur Levitt: to keep us out of the bond
market for as long as possible.
I wonder why Mr.
Kahlie has not refinanced the Petco Park bond with the
Bank of America. We are paying over 8% on that one.
Maybe Kahlie should be running for mayor. It seems he
could finance Donna Frye's $250 million hole in the
General Fund a lot less painlessly than her half percent
sales tax hike. I must ask her to talk to him. |
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Somebody at City Hall made a lot of money today -
10/24/05 |
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by Pat Flannery
The justification for "restructuring"
the $152 million Sewer Revenue Bond, placed with the
Bank of America in 2004, just did not stand up in City
Council today. Refinancing to “better manage near to
medium term cash flows” made no sense.
The
Bond in question requires a $19 million principle
payment in March 2006 and another in June but the MWWD
director Scott Tulloch told me over the telephone that
he has no problem meeting the principle and interest
payments every quarter and that neither he nor his
department were the initiators of this refinance. It is
certainly not a staff thing that's for sure. City
Manager Lamont Ewell did not even sit in the Manager's
seat today, so he doesn't care. Then who does?
Jim Madaffer led the City Manager's staff person,
Dennis Kahlie, through "explaining" why this refinance
must be done at this time and Madaffer was the maker of
the Council motion. Madaffer led Kahlie through a
routine of glowing reports about the Bank of America and
how kind they have been to the City to the extent where
Kahlie lied outright about the interest rate. He told
the Council that the original rate was 1.75% when in
fact it was over 6% tax free to the lender. Madaffer
knew better but did not correct him. Did the others
believe that or are they just naive?
Somebody is
making a lot of money brokering this deal. A $152
million refinance is every broker's dream. In his
anxiety to sell the deal for Madaffer Mr. Kahlie
repeatedly misrepresented the interest rate as the LIBOR
rate without mentioning the added margin. Anybody who
ever refinanced their home with an ARM knows that there
is a "margin" added to an "index". Kahlie talked about
the current "interest rate" being 3% to 3.25% when he
really meant the LIBOR index rate.
When asked if he had shopped the loan in 2004 he
said Bank of America was "light-years less expensive"
than other proposals. He sounded like a BofA salesman.
He then "explained" (after I raised it in public
comment) that the actual lender was not the Bank of
America but the
"Banc" of America Securities LLC, "a subsidiary
of Bank of America Corporation, a full-service U.S.
investment bank and brokerage firm with principal
offices in San Francisco, New York, and Charlotte"
according to their web site. Kahlie always referred to
the Bank of America never to the Banc of America
Securities LLC.
Banc of America Securities LLC
is a Delaware limited liability company, 100% owned by
NationsBanc Montgomery Holdings Corporation, a wholly
owned subsidiary of NB Holdings Corporation and NB
Holdings Corporation is wholly owned by Bank of America
Corporation. It is therefore a gross misrepresentation
by Kahlie to constantly refer to the Bank of America as
the lender.
Kahlie told me that Banc of
America could not
sell the loan. I wondered why he offered that piece of
information and whether it is accurate.
I found their their current un-audited financial statements
on the web, but it has since disappeared!
Kahlie
said
Banc of America
are holding the San Diego $152 million in
their portfolio yet there is no trace of it and nothing
of that size. It is clear they are brokers and pay
finders' fees out of their "yield adjustment premium"
when they place a loan. I wonder who was the "finder"
for this sweetheart deal. Why did Kahlie tell us that the
loan was not resold, when clearly it was, at least to
the real Bank of America. What were the upfront fees?
How much of the $152 million did the City actually
receive? Did it pay out fees after receiving a gross
amount? So many questions.
The fact that the lender was the Banc of America, not
the Bank of America answered my question on Friday about
possible Federal regulations barring the real Bank of
America from lending to or dealing in municipal bonds
from a city unable to produce financial statements.
Page 4
of its financial statement (which has since disappeared
off the web) says: "The Company is not
a bank. Securities sold by the Company are not bank
deposits and, accordingly, are not insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation."
A
by-product of today's session was that the Council and
City Manager's Office obviously do not expect to gain
access to the public bond market anytime soon. None of
the Council Members seemed very surprised at that.
That's not what they have been telling the people when
they vote to approve all those fees to Kroll and KPMG.
Somebody is positioning themselves to make a lot of
money out of "placing" San Diego City borrowings for
years to come. Has Murphy's background with the Bank of
America and his close association with Madaffer anything
to do with this?
The fact is that the "Banc" of America is receiving
6.381% TAX FREE on Bonds that have zero possibility of
default. These are SECURED bonds. The 2.5% "hit" they
have "restructured" into this re-write is just to
pretend that there is an added risk to the "Banc". This
"insolvency event" is a red herring to justify doing
this refinance.
The "Banc" of America like this
loan so much they do not want it paid off for as long as
possible. $152,000,000 gold-plated, secured, tax free,
at over 6% is a great loan for the lender. Somebody
could retire for life on that brokerage fee. I expect
somebody will (City pensions are not as reliable as they
once were). Somebody knows something that they are not
telling. There is a strong smell of corruption here but
nobody on the City Council seems to care. |
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How do
you "restructure" a bad loan? -
10/21/05 |
|
by Pat Flannery
The City Council are being
asked on
Monday
(page 29) to approve and authorize the "restructuring"
of a "presently outstanding, privately placed, $152
million Non-Transferable Subordinated Sewer Revenue
Bonds, Series 2004". The City Manager has issued
this report
"explaining" what this is all about. The trouble is that
it raises more questions than it explains.
To
add to the confusion Jennifer Vigil
wrote this
in today's Union-Tribune
which raises even more questions and includes
inaccuracies e.g. - did acting
City Treasurer Chuck Mueller Jr. really say that "spending
it on the debt would almost certainly force severe
cutbacks"? Either Jennifer or Mueller got that one
wrong. Any overage or underage at waste water is not
transferable to the General Fund, besides no cuts would
be required at waste water according its director.
The City Manager's report explains that "in June,
2004 by means of a
privately placed
interim, or “bridge” financing in the amount of
$152 million, placed by the Public Facilities Financing
Authority of the City of San Diego (the Authority) with
Bank of America, N. A. (the Bank), which was intended to
be retired by a subsequent public offering of long term
debt, which at that time was expected to occur prior to
the end of calendar year 2004" [emphasis added].
This action was required to address "near-term cash
flow pressures" caused by "several regulatory
obligations which require the construction and
renovation of numerous capital facilities on an
established schedule" - in other words they were
being threatened with sever financial sanctions if they
did not immediately bring the City into compliance with
the Clean Water Act, the Ocean Pollution Reduction Act
and several other Federal Regulations.
Unable to
raise money in the normal way, through municipal bonds,
they went to an ordinary commercial bank, the Bank of
America in San Francisco for a loan. But the BofA
couldn't make a loan because Federal Banking rules
require that any corporate borrower must have current
audited financial statements and as we all know our fair
city was having a little problem in that department at
the time. So what did the Bank of America do? They
bought specially prepared Sewer Bonds and "portfolioed"
them!
I guess the Bank of America are allowed
under Federal banking rules to invest in stuff they are
barred from lending on. I wonder who figured that one
out, Dick Murphy? He used to work for the Bank of
America.
If you read the "explanation" in the
Report
(page 3) about interest on the $152 million loan you
would be forgiven for getting the impression that our
fair city are paying something called a LIBOR rate which
they say is currently 3.007% and no more.
The
Report says: "interest on the Bonds is computed at a
variable rate indexed to" the LIBOR rate, but they
forget to mention a thing called "the margin" which is
the number added by the lender as their cut. The "First
Supplemental Subordinated Indenture"
(page 3) attached to the
Report
says that it is 62.34% of the applicable LIBOR plus 150
basis points i.e. 62.34% of 3.007 = 1.874 + 1.500 =
3.374. Therefore the full interest rate on the Bonds is
currently 3.007 + 3.374 = 6.381%.
The
Report
refers to a "bond purchase agreement" (page 3)
having referred earlier to a "privately placed
interim, or “bridge” financing" (page 2). This
confuses the fact that the City did not get a "loan"
from the Bank of America (because no FDIC insured lender
could lend to a city without financial statements) but
that instead Murphy had arranged for the BofA to buy his
junk Sewer Bond and put it somewhere in the Bank's
investment portfolio. I didn't know the BofA invested in
junk municipal bonds.
Now our City Manager is
placing a request for the "restructuring" of this
dubious financing package before the City Council on
Monday. The so-called "restructuring" of this
"loan" consists mainly of redrawing the Trustee papers
whereby Wells Fargo will act as stakeholder in case the
City defaults or goes into bankruptcy.
If I were a City Councilor I would have many, many
questions on Monday. What if a BofA shareholder
complained about the Bank making such high risk loans or
what if a Federal regulator found that the BofA was
barred by law from dealing in municipal bonds from a
city unable to produce financial statements. I would
want to know.
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