Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The day Fuentes’ boss called Mexican-Americans “banditos”

Tom's no "wab," y'know

As you know, DtB has noted Tom Fuentes’ time as an assistant to now forgotten OC Supervisor Ronald Caspers. In 1974, Republican Caspers and nine others disappeared at sea somewhere off the Baja California coast. Very mysterious. (See Even Beelzebub had a mentor.)

Gustavo Arellano just posted about the fellow:

Mexican-Bashing OC Politicians of Days Past: Ronald Caspers

Gustavo relates a story from 1972:
Caspers, annoyed that a Mexican-American group of county employees were demanding affirmative action (he had accused one of the leaders of not being an American citizen), called them "bandidos" during a board meeting, then asked county counsel to explore moving the county seat from SanTana to whiter environs because "we are in an area which does not have a normal ethnic balance."

…Caspers ended up apologizing for his gaffe during a board meeting, and the other supervisors reprimanded him publicly. Caspers claimed he didn't know bandido was an offensive term to Mexicans, a bullshit excuse considering Chicanos had just successfully axed the Frito Bandito the year before.
Gustavo notes that, at the time, one of Caspers staffers was Tom Fuentes, “who would eventually become the longtime chair of the GOP and has always proudly stated he has Spanish blood in him, not wab.”

Tom certainly made that point at a board meeting four years ago, when he described his people leaving from Spain on a boat, yadda yadda.

Really. Check it out:



The notorious "Frito Bandito"(1969)

Street: up Sh*t Creek

$7,000 in double-billings for a laptop computer?

A week or so ago, I noted that trustee “Tom Fuentes, former OC GOP chair, and his pals have worked hard over the years to place their corrupt friends in office. County Sheriff Mike Corona was one of those friends. He’s headed to the pokey.
Chriss W. Street, OC Treasurer-Tax Collector, is another.”

Well, this just in at the OC Reg:

Fraud trial set for O.C. Treasurer Chriss Street

Orange County Treasurer-Tax Collector Chriss Street will face trial early next year in a $7 million fraud lawsuit.

The lawsuit alleges that Street milked Fruehauf to enrich himself and to build a trucking empire, rather than repay Fruehauf's thousands of creditors. Street has said he successfully managed Fruehauf and that [his successor, Daniel] Harrow is pursuing a political vendetta.

[Street] has had to give extensive testimony twice. Both times, the transcripts became public. The transcripts revealed that Street had billed Fruehauf for lavish trips and meals as well as $7,000 in double-billings for a laptop computer, $6,000 for a personal trainer and $1,100 for an overnight trip to a luxury hotel in New York.
...
The transcripts came on top of official controversies, including an extensive remodel of his office and his purchase of a $80 million structured investment vehicle that later defaulted.
Naturally, Street was on hand to give a special report to our board of trustees at its last meeting.

He had nothing new or important to say.

Corbett wins one

Remember those "Jesus glasses"?
Teacher not financially liable for disparaging Christians in class (OC Reg)

A federal judge has ruled that high school history teacher James Corbett is not financially liable for disparaging Christians in class, in violation of a former student's First Amendment rights.

"Corbett is shielded from liability – not because he did not violate the Constitution, but because of the balance which must be struck to allow public officials to perform their duties," [U.S. District Judge James] Selna said in a 33-page decision issued from his Santa Ana courtroom.

In May, Selna determined that Corbett, 62, violated the First Amendment's establishment clause when he referred to Creationism as "religious, superstitious nonsense" during a fall 2007 lecture at Mission Viejo's Capistrano Valley High School.

But the judge on Tuesday shielded Corbett from financial liability under a "qualified immunity" defense, a form of federal protection available to government employees who have violated an individual's constitutional rights.

[17-year-old Chad] Farnan's attorneys, who were working on the case on a pro-bono basis through a nonprofit Christian legal group, vowed to appeal the judge's decision.

"We feel the judge erred in his ruling," said attorney Jennifer Monk of Murrietta-based Advocates for Faith & Freedom. "At the same time, we are happy with the May 1 ruling and it doesn't not take away from the fact that Dr. Corbett violated the establishment clause."

In his lawsuit, Farnan did not seek monetary damages, but he asked that his former Advanced Placement European history teacher be fired or that the court issue an injunction barring Corbett from disparaging religion in class.

Selna ruled against issuing such an injunction; Corbett remains in his teaching position at Capistrano Valley High….

Doobie, doobie, doo


Pot users with chronic ailments lobby City Council (OC Reg)


Medical pot proponents called their peaceful rally tonight at Lake Forest's City Council meeting a success, saying the turnout brought awareness to the many patients helped through the use of medicinal marijuana.

The group – about 150 strong, filling the council chambers to capacity – vowed to return for the next City Council meeting to work toward keeping city dispensaries going by collaborating with city officials on how to regulate them.

"The solution is to regulate them," said Ryan Michaels, 27, who works with several of the Lake Forest dispensaries, to assure they are in compliance. "I don't think the problem is the city of Lake Forest. They are being pushed by their attorneys. The solution is regulating them and mitigating them through patient fundraisers. Potentially, we can come to a compromise."

The group – made up of representatives for patients with cancer, AIDS, chronic pain and nerve issues also includes advocacy groups like Medical Marijuana Inc. and OC NORML, the local chapter of the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws. The group is hopeful of changing the city's direction in the wake of its recent legal efforts to remove at least 10 pot dispensaries operating in some of the city's strip malls.

On Sept. 1, the Lake Forest City Council announced that it had filed civil complaints against 35 people associated with 14 medical marijuana dispensaries in the city and called on immediate prosecution and abatement of the storefronts

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...