Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Still no apology from Islamophobic Republican demagogue and Tea Party airhead Pauly

OC Weekly
• Muslim supporters protest Villa Park councilwoman (OC Register)
"Do you feel sodomized?"
     About 500 protesters from various groups demonstrated and chanted slogans against or in support of Councilwoman Deborah Pauly in front of Villa Park City Hall Tuesday evening.
     The large majority of protesters were Muslim supporters who organized in response to a speech by Pauly last month at a Yorba Linda rally. About 50 protesters showed up Tuesday night to support Pauly.
. . .
     The protest is a response to a speech Pauly gave at a rally during an Islamic Circle of North America fund-raiser Feb. 13, which many have interpreted as anti-Muslim. Her remarks are prominent in a YouTube video created by the Council on American-Islam Relations.
     Protesters said they're angry that Pauly hasn't apologized and demanded an official reprimand.
     The Villa Park City Council held a special meeting on March 15 to address Pauly's comments and issued a declaration saying that public comments by a council member do not represent the city. An earlier draft of the declaration named Pauly, but her name was omitted from the final draft. At the time, Councilman Richard Ulmer also asked Pauly to apologize, and she refused.
     Pauly has said that her comments were directed toward the speakers at the charity dinner, who she believed to be terrorists.
. . .
     Pauly, who referred to the speakers as terrorists, said that she thought referring to [the speakers] by name would have endangered her life. But Pauly has also said that she regretted not being more specific in her remarks.
     "It's just not sufficient," said Waqas Syed, the deputy undersecretary of Islamic Circle of North America. "Instead of distancing herself and apologizing for her comments, she has actually justified them in a perplexing and confusing way."
. . .
     Pauly's comments have drawn criticism before, but she's avoided official reprimand each time.
     In March 2010, she reacted to the passage of President Obama's health care legislation with a graphic Facebook status update, asking, "Do you feel sodomized?" She narrowly avoided council's censure for the comment by a vote of 2-3.
     Later that year in June, then-Mayor Ulmer sought to remove Pauly from her committee responsibilities in response to a controversial comment Pauly made about immigration at a Yorba Linda City Council meeting….
     Even her election to the council in 2007 was controversial. A group of citizens submitted a recall petition alleging that Pauly had behaved improperly at polling sites.
• Matt Coker’s Update in Naval Gazing/OC Weekly:
UPDATE, MARCH 22, 6:55 P.M.: We're out here at the march and our photographer Christopher Victorio estimates around 300 protesters have showed up, along with 30-plus deputies. See full photo after the jump.

UPDATE, MARCH 22, 5:29 P.M.: Tonight's Villa Park City Council meeting is not scheduled to open to the public until 7 p.m., but things are already heating up.

An unceremonious deWilliamsization of a County office

Guardian no more, thank God
     Kimberly Edds of OC Watchdog (Williams stripped of public guardian role) reports that
     Orange County Public Administrator John S. Williams was unceremoniously stripped of public guardian duties Tuesday. The vote came without a word of protest from Williams or one of vindication from the Board of Supervisors.
     Williams himself was a no-show.
     The county is overhauling the struggling Public Administrator/Public Guardian, which has been hit repeatedly with accusations of mismanagement, dubious promotions, and questions about how it handles the affairs of Orange County’s ill and elderly who have no one else to care for them and the estates of those who die without legal heirs.
. . .
     A months-long county investigation revealed “serious concerns,” which prompted the removal of Williams as public guardian among other changes. Supervisors accused Williams, a former Orange County marshal, of being unqualified and called for his immediate resignation.
     The county tried to negotiate with Williams for an early departure from his position as both the appointed public guardian and the elected public administrator but after weeks of negotiating he refused to step down. He remains the county’s elected public administrator, a position the board cannot take from him and one he says he will hold until he retires on Jan. 23, 2012.
     His term expires in January 2014.
     A new public guardian is scheduled to be in place April 14 to head the newly created Orange County Public Guardian Department. That person, who will also be responsible for overhauling the culture of the troubled Public Administrator’s Department and make immediate personnel and policy changes, will report to the county’s chief executive officer.
     Williams has pledged to work with the new public guardian to implement those reforms.
     “It was not unexpected,” said Williams’ private attorney Phil Greer of the vote. “It will be interesting to see how they facilitate managing the operation.”
. . .
     Longtime county watchdog Shirley Grindle has already put the Board of Supervisors on notice that giving Williams pay for a job which he is not doing — and is not allowed to do — would constitute an illegal gift of funds. The Watchdog has a call into the county and we’ll let you know what we hear.
. . .
     A series of other personnel changes are expected in the office as a result of the county’s investigation. The exact findings of the investigation remain under wraps under the county’s claim of attorney-client privilege. It is unclear whether the report will be made public….
Jackass and jackass
     Total Buzz reports Chriss Street's new gig (Chriss Street turns part-time pundit; OC Reg). But they bring up Street's curious record facing charges of fraud:
     …Meanwhile, [former OC Treasurer Chriss] Street’s successor as Fruehauf trustee, Los Angeles money manager Dan Harrow, sued Street alleging fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. In March 2010, just as Street was preparing to run for re-election, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Richard M. Neiter ordered Street to pay $7 million for breach of fiduciary duty.
     In a harshly worded ruling, Neiter described Street’s explanations for his conduct as “absurd” and “inconceivable.”….
     Note: Street in part blames his attorney, Phil Greer, for the outcome of the above-mentioned case.

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...