Wednesday, January 25, 2012

OK, let's see Colantuono's report!

Public administrator refuses to leave office (OC Reg)

     John S. Williams, the county’s embattled public administrator and former public guardian, is refusing to leave office as he had said he intended to do.
     Williams in March signed a letter to Bill Campbell, who was then chairman of the county’s Board of Supervisors, stating “It is my intention to retire as Public Administrator – Public Guardian on Jan. 23, 2012.”
     However, Williams recently notified county officials that he does not intend to retire, and he reported to work on Tuesday, Jan. 24, staying at his office until about 2 p.m., said his attorney, Phil Greer. After Williams left, county workers moved in to change the locks on his office.
     John Moorlach, current chairman of the Board of Supervisors, released a letter dated Tuesday to Williams from County Counsel Nicholas Chrisos.
     “(T)he purported oral notice to the CEO and to me via your counsel that you desire to rescind your nine-month old resignation, is not effective,” Chrisos wrote.
     Moorlach said he told County Executive Officer Tom Mauk “we could change the locks and he’s off the payroll effective the 23rd.”
     Williams, 60, has served as the county’s elected public administrator since 2003. He had also served as the appointed public guardian until the Board of Supervisors fired him from that role in June amid accusations of mismanagement.
. . .
     Williams was most recently reelected Public Administrator in June 2010, when he received 204,175 votes, or 58.4 percent of the total cast in a four-way race. His term expires in January 2015.
     “They cannot throw an elected official out,” Greer said, adding that county officials are “behaving completely outside the scope of the law.”
     Williams won’t attempt to return to work while he is locked out, Greer said. “We’re not going to go in there and have some kind of confrontation. We’re trying to resolve this with the county if we can’t do that, we’ll obviously be in court,” Greer said.
     The Board made several agreements with Williams in exchange for his resignation, according to the letter from Crisos:
“(1) The Board allowed you tor [sic] remain as the Public Administrator for a one year period following the beginning of your term of office, which commenced in January 2011, at your full salary for both Public Administrator and Public Guardian, even though the Board had the power to reduce your salary when it removed you as Public Guardian; (2) The Board would not publicly release the highly critical report of your performance prepared for the Board by Special Counsel, Michael Colantuono; (3) The Board discussed with the CEO the option for the CEO to, within his authority, retain you as a consultant to the County for transition purposes.”
     Williams never formally resigned or retired, Greer said. Williams’ letter to Campbell “indicated he was considering retiring around the first of the year,” Greer said….


SEE ALSO:

• John Williams Told to Stay Away from Public Administrator Office He Was Forced Out Of (Navel Gazing)
• O.C. administrator won't step down, is locked out of office (LA Times)

Spitzer weighs in

     One of the comments that this morning's VOC article (about former trustee John Williams) attracted today is by former Assistant DA (and current Supervisorial candidate) Todd Spitzer. It reads in part:
     Is this really a shocker that the disgraced, former, PA/PG John Williams would refuse to leave despite his written promise to resign effective Monday? He should have been walked out of the County once it completed its outside audit of his mismanagement practices, pension spiking and inflated salaries. The County had to replace the locks to keep John Williams out. Unbelievable. We have had Mike Carona, Chriss Street and now John Williams when the County is supposed to be more accountable.
     Yes, I lost my job as an Assistant DA because I unknowingly called the Public Guardian on behalf of a crime victim to inquire whether the PG had an on-going investigation. I had no idea that the DA's fiance, Peggy Buff, was the Assistant Public Guardian. I had no idea until about a month later that he was involved in taking over the TapOut case and was reversed by the Court of Appeal. I did not know then that Williams's scheme was to go after decedents' estates in order to gain the court ordered administrative fees so that Williams could offset his padded and bloated budget with those fees after he was warned by the Board of Supervisors to get his fiscal mess in order about a year earlier.
     Williams was stripped of his duties; Buff was demoted and because of her political connections landed another job in another county department and the DA's staff assisted in helping Williams craft a press release to make me look like the bad guy which continues through their spin today.
     I was let go because I uncovered a needle in a haystack which led to another OC scandal involving a lot of high powered political figures…. [My emphases.]
     Gosh, what do Mike Carona, Chriss Street, and John Williams have in common?
     Each was championed (as a public official) by OC GOP kingmaker--and, since 2000, SOCCCD trustee--Tom Fuentes.
     Fuentes was instrumental in having Carona--now serving time in federal prison--receive Irvine Valley College's "Hometown Hero" designation. Carona was invited to numerous IVC events, such as 911 commemoration ceremonies.
     Fuentes arranged to have former OC Treasurer Chriss Street give occasional presentations before the SOCCCD Board of Trustees.
     Fuentes helped Williams secure the Public Administrator gig in 2003, despite Williams' utter lack of qualifications.

Williams won't leave?!


     [Note: Voice of OC has since UPDATED this story. Use link above.]
     Last March, Orange County's embattled Public Administrator John Williams staved off a political execution by agreeing with the Board of Supervisors to retire on Jan. 23, 2012, which was Monday.
     But despite that agreement – and an order to change the locks on his office door – Williams showed up for work anyway.
     On Tuesday, he was officially told not to come back.
     "The Board of Supervisors accepted your resignation as Public Administrator of Orange County effective January 23, 2012 up receipt of your letter of March 9, 2011," wrote County Counsel Nicholas Chrisos in a letter to Williams.
     Williams' attorney and spokesman, Phil Greer, couldn't be reached for comment.
     Williams has been a controversial figure in county government since 2009 when two scathing grand jury reports criticized his management of the offices of public administrator and public guardian, which oversee the complex estates of deceased people without heirs and those of indigent people.
     The spotlight on Williams became intense in late 2010 when high-ranking assistant district attorney, Todd Spitzer,was fired by Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas after looking into allegations that Williams was mishandling a case involving a domestic violence victim.
Enthusiastic Republican Peggi Buff
     The controversy was fueled by the fact that Rackauckas' fiance′, Peggy Buff, was Williams' second in command.
     The Spitzer affair also drew a heightened focus on how Williams ran his office. An investigation determined that the county faced potential legal liability over mismanaged estates.
     In the wake of the investigation, Buff was quietly moved into a six-figure job at the county despite a hiring freeze because of her relationship with Rackauckas.
     Meanwhile, county supervisors, like John Moorlach, who were one-time political mentors to Williams as a fellow Republican quickly turned on him. They stripped him of his public guardian role. And appointed an executive manager to take over operations for the public administrator post.
     It was the third crisis between county supervisors and a countywide elected official in recent years.
     In 2008, supervisors had to figure out how to get then-Sheriff Mike Carona to step down. By the next year, they had to figure out how to get rid of then-Treasurer Tax Collector Chriss Street. And by 2010, Williams was under pressure to leave.
     County supervisors can't remove an independently elected office holder like Williams.
     So whether it's a federal indictment in Carona's case, or a bankruptcy-related lawsuit for Street or Williams' mismanagement, these countywide elected officials can't be forced to resign. They can only be recalled.
     That was the road that Williams was on back in March until his attorney, Phil Greer, was able to broker his resignation.
     Under the terms of that deal, as described by Chrisos in his Jan. 24 letter to Williams, he was able to stay in office with his full salary of $153, 206 even though all his official duties were handled by others appointed by county officials.
     For example, Lucille Lyon was appointed Public Guardian in July.
     Supervisors also placed an initiative on the June ballot that would transform the Public Adminstrator back into an appointed position.
     On Tuesday, Moorlach said Williams – whom he once supported – had become a poster child for the campaign to turn the post back into an appointed slot.
     Yet Chrisos' letter also noted that county supervisors had previously agreed to keep a lid on Williams' mismanagement of his agency by not releasing the results of their independent investigation to the public.
     They even gave authority to CEO Tom Mauk to retain Williams as a private consultant during the transition, according to Chrisos letter.
     Yesterday, supervisors apparently ran out of patience.
     "The Board has fulfilled its portion of the obligation," Chrisos wrote. "Therefore, the purported oral notice to the CEO and to me via your counsel that you desire to rescind your nine-month old resignation, is not effective."
     "Your final salary check and any leave payout will be mailed to you at your address on file. The CEO will separately determine the need to retain your services as a consultant."

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...