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What It Takes to Bring Down Government Leaders -- Thailand and Detroit
Speaking of cover-ups, the day after I left for vacation, Detroit's mayor Kwame Kilpatrick finally resigned, as part of a plea deal (he pled guilty only to obstruction of justice), as I predicted in a recent blog entry. He will serve four months in prison. To read all about it, check out the Detroit Free Press's "Mayor in Crisis" page.
Here's an excerpt from a September 7 column by Mitch Albom, author of Tuesdays with Morrie and Free Press columnist:
"You done set me up for a
comeback" were your final words, because you couldn't resist, as the
curtain came down, one more grab of the spotlight. Instead of fessing
up to a series of lies that paralyzed this city, cost it millions and
turned it into an international embarrassment, you exited like a poor
victim, swinging at some vast, invisible conspiracy, as if people in
this state had nothing better to do than to mount an exhausting,
eight-month campaign against you -- full of your own
text messages. As if it were other people who had extramarital sex
in hotel rooms, fired cops, traded city money for silence and lied
under oath, while you stood innocently on the sidelines.
If only Kilpatrick had done nothing more than
moonlight as a chef ...
Update: The new Thai prime minister is a brother-in-law of a prime minister who fled the country in 2006 due to corruption charges. It appears that in Thai government circles, All in the Family is preferred over The Iron Chef.
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics
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