CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NO PUNISHMENT FOR CORRUPTION UNDER BROWN”
On
the day Gov. Jerry Brown returned to his office after 12 days wandering around
Europe preaching the ills of climate change and the current United States
response to it, a Los Angeles judge unsealed the latest evidence of corruption
among his appointees here at home.
The
key revelation in documents made public after more than a year of secrecy once
again spotlights the California Public Utilities Commission – made up primarily
of trusted former Brown aides. Other problem areas also festered during Brown’s
absence.
The documents show
the PUC asked the Legislature for $6.045 million in early 2016 to pay private
lawyers for allegedly helping it comply with subpoenas and search warrants in
the state attorney general’s ongoing criminal investigation of a highly
questionable settlement that now sees consumers paying about 70 percent of the
cost for shutting down the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The new money
comes atop $5.2 million in public money the commissioners paid their lawyers
since 2015.
That
essence of the San Onofre settlement was reached during a secret meeting
between leaders of the PUC and the Southern California Edison Co. in a luxury
hotel in Warsaw, Poland almost half a decade ago.
Under
pressure, the PUC has reopened its decision on that agreement, which precluded
public hearings that might have spotlighted Edison’s key role in causing the
plant’s shutdown.
The
documents demonstrate that once the PUC got its new funds, the private law firm
it hired fought the investigation, rather than cooperating with it, as the PUC
had promised. Among other things, those private lawyers questioned the validity
of a key search warrant and tried to assert the Warsaw meeting was legal – even
though the commission had already fined Edison for not formally reporting it.
(Irony: The commission was in on the meeting,
but fined other participants for not reporting. Meanwhile commissioners neither
reported the meeting to the public nor fined their own participant.)
Said San Diego
consumer lawyer Maria Severson, one of two attorneys who won release of the long-hidden
documents, “There were sufficient facts in the (subpoenas) to lead to a strong
suspicion of guilt,…nonfeasance and even malfeasance (and) probable cause (to
believe) that they conspired to obstruct justice or the administration of the
laws.”
Brown said nothing
about the released documents, and has refused comment repeatedly about dubious
PUC moves. He has yet to criticize any of his commission appointees, while they
refuse repeated requests to furnish a legal justification for use of public funds
to defend commissioners in a criminal investigation.
Meanwhile, the PUC
issued a written statement insisting it “has cooperated with the attorney
general’s office though every step of the investigation.” That’s not what the
judge, William C. Ryan, concluded when he wrote that “The PUC has withheld
hundreds of documents, claiming…privilege.”
State Assembly
Speaker Anthony Rendon, whose house okayed the funding, added in an email that
“I believe the PUC can expect vigorous examination (from lawmakers).”
As this went on,
Brown also was mute about admitted interference by aides to University of
California President Janet Napolitano with an audit of UC. While state auditor
Elaine Howell asked UC regents to consider disciplining those who interfered
with the audit, Brown said nothing, even though he has been an ex-officio
regent for many years.
It’s hard to
believe Napolitano didn’t know what her aides were up to. When football or
basketball coaches’ assistants break rules, the head coach is usually fired.
Why not Napolitano?
Nor did Brown
punish Energy Commission members for handing out tens of millions of gasoline
tax dollars to a company headed by a former academic who advised that
commission’s staff on how to evaluate grant applications for hydrogen highway
funds, then quit his university job and three months later filed a
multimillion-dollar grant application that was accepted.
Instead
of firing or disciplining the commission chairman who enabled this obvious
conflict of interest, Brown reappointed him.
The
time is long gone when Brown could plausibly deny knowing of the corruption
among his appointees or others in whose choice he had a hand, like Napolitano.
It’s
all part of a pattern of not merely corruption, but complete unaccountability
in Brown’s administration, where top appointees usually continue in
prestigious, powerful jobs no matter what misdeeds they do or okay.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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