Friday, October 22, 2010

Spitzer spills: corruption at the DA's office

Todd Spitzer Pounds DA Tony Rackauckas in KUCI Interview (OC Weekly)

      The equation is simple and easily more verifiable than any Albert Einstein formula.
      Todd Spitzer plus microphone equals, well, explosive talk.
      And KUCI-FM gave Spitzer, the rebellious Orange County Republican recently fired by District Attorney Tony Rackauckas, a mic for an hour tonight.
      Somebody should check to see if Rackauckas has had a heart attack.
      In one of his most aggressive interviews ever—and that's saying something—Spitzer urged Orange County residents and reporters to pay closer attention to the people running the DA's office—Rackauckas and his two biggest advisors, Susan Kang Schroeder and her husband Mike Schroeder—because, he said, they are "immoral."
      "Immoral people are running one of the most powerful law enforcement agencies," Spitzer said in his interview with Cameron Jackson on KUCI-FM's "The OC Show."
      He added, "We're all in trouble . . . You can't take anything these people say at face value."
      Spitzer, a maverick politician, has an extensive job history: school board official, LAPD cop, deputy district attorney, county supervisor and state assemblyman. He'd also been an outspoken opponent of Rackauckas and the Schroeders in 2004 and 2005. But in 2009, he abandoned that stance and joined Rackauckas' office allowing the DA to be his mentor in hopes of taking the top slot by at least 2014. An 18-month arrangement ended in August with Rackauckas firing Spitzer. He blamed his understudy's immaturity. Spitzer says he was lured back into the office so that he would not use his $1 million campaign war chest to challenge Rackauckas in the 2010 election.
      In dueling Oct. 20 press conferences about each other, both men said they cannot tolerate the idea of the other being DA and will face off in the 2014 election.
      Other notable Spitzer quotes during his Jackson interview:
●"The man [Rackauckas] hasn't kept his word to his ex-wives, the public or me."
●"I'm most upset that I'm not [now] doing the work I love to do."
●"All I care about is making sure the system works."
●"I don't think the media has done as good a job as it needs to do [investigating allegations of Rackauckas/Schroeder corruption]."
●"It's been a rough week but I'm not stressed. I'm blessed," referring to suggestions by the Schroeders that he's mentally unstable.
●"She [Susan Kang Schroeder] has no business being DA," referring to persistent rumors that Rackauckas' chief of staff is eyeing the top slot when her boss retires.
●"I beat the [throat] cancer the same way I'm going to beat Rackauckas and the Schroeders... I'm so looking forward to this fight. If I don't do it, no one else will."
      Reached for comment after the KUCI show, Susan Schroeder sent a responding text while she and her husband watched the South Pacific musical at the Orange County Performing Arts Center: "We are going back to prosecuting bad guys. Todd needs to get a life."

(Corrupt) Men at Work

Rackauckas Admits Loaning Out 'Prosecutor' Title to Political Friend (Voice of OC)

     District Attorney Tony Rackauckas earlier this year allowed state Sen. Tom Harman to use the DA's Office to help out his campaign for attorney general – offering him the title of "prosecutor" for use on the ballot.
     However, it wasn't until Rackauckas' news conference Wednesday – in which he laid out his case against former protege Todd Spitzer – that Rackauckas publicly acknowledged his favor to Harman, whom he endorsed in the June primary.
     Last spring, Harman's opponent, Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley, challenged his ballot designation in court. A Sacramento Superior Court judge ruled in favor of Cooley, saying that because Harman had never even tried one case as a prosecutor, he could not use the ballot designation of prosecutor.
     Harman lost to Cooley in the Republican primary election.
     At a Wednesday news conference, Rackauckas – just after talking about how he scolded Spitzer for using official resources to campaign for district attorney in 2014 – elaborated on how he helped Harman get his ballot designation.
     "Tom Harman did call me up and asked if he volunteered in our TAP [Trial Attorney Partnership] program would that be acceptable?" Rackauckas said. "I said it certainly would."
     Under the TAP program, private attorneys can help out the district attorney's office by getting courtroom experience.
     Harman did not return a call for comment.
     Rackauckas admitted that Harman "had a special schedule" and needed accommodations to join the program. He also admits that Harman "was running for AG [attorney general] at the time" but says that fact didn't come up during their discussions.
     "I did anticipate he would learn about the DA's office," Rackauckas said.
     Spitzer said he and other prosecutors were disgusted at the Harman photo event when he was given the title. "It's one of the most outrageous abuses I've ever seen," Spitzer said.
     Rackauckas said he "was surprised" when he saw the title of prosecutor on Harman's ballot designation.
     "I talked to Steve Cooley about it at another event that was not connected," Rackauckas said. Cooley "mentioned to me that Tom Harman and the other candidate were both claiming to be prosecutors."
     Rackauckas swore in Harman on Feb. 5, according to documents filed with the court in the Cooley challenge and obtained by Voice of OC under the state's public records act.
     According to the declaration of Director of Government and Community Relations Todd Hart, who administers the program, Harman was assigned through the TAP program to work in the West Justice Center in Westminster. He ended up working parts of seven days in the justice center. Hart also wrote that there is not a termination date to such appointments.
     When asked whether Harman had ever worked as a volunteer at the District Attorney's Office since his bid for California attorney general ended in June, Rackauckas replied: "I don't think we've had him working at the DA's Office since then."

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...