According to a
recent article in the San Diego Union-Tribune,
the chair of one of the city's economic development commissions made an
unusual deal with, and a half-million-dollar instant profit from (the
purchase and sale transactions were filed at the same time), the
commission three years before he became a member.
In my recent entry about Rep. Charles Rangel of New York, I said
nothing about the fact that the university center he was seeking funds
for has his name on it. An excellent entry
by John Fund placed up on Huffington Post today focuses on
this part of the story.
The drug war is not really about drugs, it's about addiction. And
dependency is what powers addiction.
As it turns out, dependency is also what powers the drug war, at least
in Texas. Local government agencies, and often local governments
themselves, are dependent on the money that comes from asset
forfeitures related to the drug trade. We're talking hundreds of
millions of dollars.
You know you're in trouble when a grand jury foreman says about you,
"They need an independent organization to be an oversight ..., not just
the grand jury doing it once every few years."
Of course, the "they" here are local government agencies: five
community college districts in San Diego County, whose boards of
trustees are elected.
Talk about the appearance of impropriety is, as Congressman Charles B.
Rangel of New York is quoted in a
recent New York Times article
as saying, “annoying.” Why should there be anything more than a
decision of his peerless peers on the House Ethics Committee, guilty or
not guilty? Appearances of propriety are not for someone of Rep.
Rangel’s ilk.
I recently reported that the Oklahoma Ethics Commission was considering suing the legislature for more funds, on the ground that the state constitution requires adequate funding for the EC, and the legislature had, among other limits, permitted it to have only one investigator.