The Voice of OC has posted a LINK to an interview of former SOCCCD trustee and “embattled” OC Public Administrator/Guardian John Williams that appeared last week on PBS SoCal. Be sure to have a look.
As you know, the OC Supes have been trying to get Williams to step down, after hearing from an attorney they hired to review Williams' office.
Unsurprisingly, Williams insists that he’s done nothing wrong, though he has agreed to retire (in January). A January departure is obviously not soon enough for the Supes.
It has been reported that the recent review revealed Williams to be incompetent—but, true to form, the Supes have not made public the content of that report.
Do you suppose it’ll ever see the light of day?
Williams' attorney is a close associate of the crew of hinky local Republicans that seem to run politics in the county. The ethically-challenged Phil Greer has represented all but one of the current Supes; he was Chriss "fraudster" Street's attorney; he was also hired by the SOCCCD to represent Raghu Mathur in negotiations leading to the latter's removal from the Chancellorship of the district.
Greer seems to be the official go-to guy for the OC Baugh-Schroeder-Fuentes Creeposphere, which also includes former Sheriff Mike Carona, now serving time in federal prison. (Carona was represented by Jones Day; it's not clear who paid for his pricey defense.)
Bastard v. bastard:
Speaking of rat bastards, OC Watchdog (Chriss Street wants $7 million breach-of-trust verdict overturned) reports that
…former Treasurer-Tax Collector Chriss Street is seeking legal redemption.Of course he did.
Street asked U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Richard M. Neiter to throw out a $7 million judgment or give him a new trial.
Neiter ruled last March that Street breached his fiduciary duty as trustee of the bankrupt Fruehauf truck trailer manufacturing company. Creditors had forced him to resign that post in August 2005. He joined the county government in January 2005 as then-Treasurer John Moorlach’s handpicked successor and was elected treasurer in June 2006.
. . .
Acting as his own attorney, Street filed a motion this week arguing that Neiter should reopen the case. He claimed that … his own attorney, Phillip Greer, was negligent before and during the trial.
. . .
Street ... contended that Neiter should reopen the case because of negligence by Greer, his politically well-connected [Pal o' Fuentes] former attorney. Street alleged that Greer signed a long list of stipulations before the trial without his consent — stipulations that shut off several potential defenses for Street’s actions as trustee.
“I have no conception why any attorney would do that to a client,” Street said.
Greer declined to comment.
Rocky to the rescue:
The college community just received word that IVC's own Glenn Roquemore (President of the college) will be lecturing on the earthquake in Japan next Wednesday. Here's the flier: