Wednesday, June 20, 2012

1976: Tom Fuentes, lobbyist, deputy—investing in a "singles bar" with Sheriff Brad Gates

The entire “Fuentes/Shooting Star” saga can be found here.



     MONEY TALKS. I found an old LA Times article, dated February 6, 1976, about lobbyists and the gifts they had given to members of the OC Board of Supervisors. —This was about a year and a half after the mysterious sinking of the Shooting Star, which took the lives of OC Supervisor Ron Caspers, political consultant Fred Harber, and eight others.
     1976: those were, of course, the days of Louis Cella and the "Coalition." With the loss of strategist Harber and the reliable DA-hating Caspers, Cella could not effectively block scrutiny of his operation. Soon, OC DA Cecil Hicks, and then the feds, were all over 'im. 
     According to the article:


     Among the lobbyists mentioned was our own (until recently) Tom Fuentes, who was by then working for the engineering firm Raub, Bein & Frost.


     (Also mentioned among lobbyists is Frank Michelena, a ubiquitous [notorious] lobbyist who had worked with Fuentes on campaigns during the Caspers days.)
     A LOBBYIST DOING WHAT LOBBYISTS DO. In 1993, Fuentes was still working for Raub, Bein & Frost (by then called Bein & Frost) as a lobbyist. The company got into hot water for wining and dining officials of the Santa Margarita Water District. Fuentes appeared to be directly involved in these "lobbying" efforts. (See O.C. Company's Gift-Giving Gets Attention.)
     In 1996, as the dust of the scandal settled, Fuentes left BF and joined Tait and Associates. The Times noted the curious circumstances in which Fuentes joined Tait:
     Early last year, while still with the company [i.e., Bein], Fuentes lobbied members of the Anaheim City Council for the appointment of Tom Tait. Tait was appointed to the City Council in January 1995. Shortly afterward, in March 1995, Fuentes became a vice president at Tait and Associates, an Orange engineering firm where Tait is president. (See Guiding With an Iron Hand)
     By then, of course, Fuentes was the chairman of the local GOP (that started in 1985).
     When officials at Bein were asked why Fuentes left the company, they were very vague, saying only that they and Fuentes were on good terms.
* * *
     PIETY BOY INVESTS IN SINGLES BAR. Remember those "deputy" badges that convicted felon (and former OC Sheriff) Mike Carona used to give out, like candy, to campaign contributors? Well, as it turns out, that's an old practice, though, by 1976, it had all but died out everywhereexcept for Orange County. I found a 1976 Times article ("Sheriff Gates grants 'special deputy' status to actors, politicians," 9/23/76) that explains that then-newly-elected Sheriff Brad Gates was giving these things out in very much the same spirit in which Carona did starting in the late 90s.
     One of the "special deputies" was Tom Fuentes.
     Oddly, the article mentions a business deal that Fuentes had gone in with Gates and others:


     OK, "last year" (presumably 1975), Fuentes and these others "invested in a singles bar"? That was the year that Fuentes had returned from the Menlo Park seminary, having abandoned his plan to become a priest.
     He goes from studying for the priesthood to investing in singles bars? (And with the Sheriff?)
     These pious OC Republicans are something else, ain't they?

Monday, June 18, 2012

Harber and Caspers attempt to bribe a developer, but then they die instead

 
Tom Fuentes, 1974
[Part of our "Fuentes Files" series.]

     It’s pretty clear, I think, that Supervisor Ron Caspers was seriously hinky, and his teeming corruptitude was such that it is hard to imagine his close associate and assistant, Tom Fuentes, not participating in it—or at least being aware of it.
     Bear in mind that young Tom was the chief organizing entity of Caspers’ operation. He handled routine complaints, scheduled events, made phone calls, etc.for his boss, all day long, every day.


     FRED HARBER WAS THE BOMB. My most recent research (mostly old LA Times articles) has led me to conclude that Fred Harber, Caspers’ close associate, was much more than might be supposed based on his job descriptions. My reasons will become clear as we proceed. I’ll just say for now that Harber was perhaps the third most important member of what Supervisor Robert Battin called the “Coalition”—the money-distributing venture headed by “Dick and Doc,” i.e., R.J. O’Neill and Louis Cella. As you know, Orange County DA, Cecil Hicks, regarded the “Coalition” as OC’s “shadow government.” Near as I can tell, that’s just what it was, for it “owned” the Board of Supes.
Buena Park pols, 1958
Fred Harber in the middle
     For the core of the Coalition, I think, at least at first, the “Dick and Doc Show” was essentially an effort to give muscle to the Democratic Party in traditionally conservative OC. But it clearly morphed into something less political, more self-aggrandizing and profitable. It reached out to some Republicans, such as Caspers (1970) and Laurence Schmit (1975). Starting with Caspers, it became more about greed. And it seems likely that, for Harber and Cella, though perhaps not for O’Neill, laws and ethics were just things to get around somehow.
     As we’ll see, some of the “inside baseball” about the Supes back in the years 1969-1974 point to Harber’s alarming prominence, despite his having no elected office or appointment. He had served as Mayor of Cypress (among other offices), but, in 1969, he was an “assistant” to Supervisor Battin. He was a curiously highly-regarded assistant among the corps of helpers surrounding the Supervisors.
Ron Caspers
     After Harber dumped that gig, Battin was at one point compelled to complain aloud that, no, he wasn’t Fred Harber’s puppet!
     It was, of course, Harber’s boat that was lost off the coast of Baja California in June of 1974, leaving not a trace of the ten men aboard, including Caspers and Harber.
* * *
     HERE COMES MR. JORDAN. I’ve found two newspaper articles that tell the story of the alleged “shakedown” scheme that, according to developer Richard Jordan, Harber and Caspers approached him with:
OC Register
OC Developer Alleges Political Bribe Demand
May 23, 1978
By Joe Cordero & Charley Roberts 
LA Times,
Caspers, Harber accused of bribe try by developer
May 24, 1978
By Steve Emmons
     As you can see, the Reg scooped the Times—thanks to a timely request for a pubic record. Nevertheless, I’ll start by outlining the contents of the Times’ piece:
Young Tom Fuentes
     Had Caspers and Harber not died in 1974, they might “have sailed home to a bribery indictment.” Or so it is alleged in a sworn 1975 depo by developer Richard Jordan.
     The Reg managed to get that depo.
     In the depo, Jordan explains that he had acquired a 46-acre piece of land in El Toro from a man who had already secured the necessary county permits and OKs for a mobile home park. Jordan even got assurances from county people that everything was set to go, but then, suddenly, in early ’74, he learned that Supervisor Caspers preferred that the land be used for condos.
     So Jordan revised his plans and pursued the condo project, but that soon got mired in complications and red tape. So he returned to plan A: the mobile home park.
     Pretty soon, county inspectors were nitpicking the project to death, so he contacted supervisor Ron Caspers’ office. (Caspers’ area included El Toro.) He figured he’d just deal with Tom Fuentes, Caspers’ assistant. He asked Fuentes to find out just who, down at the county, was concerned about his project and why. Fuentes called back a month later, saying that “we were going to have some problems,” but he couldn’t say more over the phone. Jordan hurried to Fuentes’ office, whereupon Fuentes explained that the Planning Commission’s Shirley Grindle was asking lots of questions about the project. Jordan went back to his plans, looking for a problem, but he could find none. He called Fuentes back.

     Fuentes next arranged for Jordan to meet with Bart Spendlove, Caspers’ planning commissioner. Two days later, at the project site, Spendlove told Jordan that everybody opposed the mobile home park, but “as far as I’m concerned, you have a permit and you have started on it. I think you should be able to continue with it.” Jordan agreed to plant a row of trees to obscure the park and that seemed to make Spendlove happy.
From “Spendlove, Wife, 4 Children Killed in
Utah Plane Crash,” LA Times, Sep. 9, 1975

     (Spendlove, says the Times, died in a plane crash 18 months later. How come so many people die violent deaths in this yarn?)

     A few days later, Caspers called Jordan to tell him that Spendlove’s approach wouldn’t cut it. But Caspers had a plan. He wouldn’t elaborate over the phone but said Jordan should meet a man who could solve the problem. That man was Fred Harber.
     Casper suggested that he, Jordan, and Harber spend some time down in Baja on Harber’s boat. They could get to know each other, have fun, become pals.
     Jordan said he’d get back to him. He looked into Harber’s history and found that Harber had once been involved in a bribery scandal—in Cypress.
Near La Paz
     Years earlier, when Harber was the city manager of Cypress, in exchange for immunity, he agreed to testify about a scheme in which a developer paid him and a member of the City Council $2,000 a month. These facts never came to light because the City Councilman—Mr. Job Denni—perished in a plane crash in 1966, necessitating abandonment of the case.
     So Jordan phoned Casper, asking why Harber was so dang influential. Well, owing to his help with financing their campaigns, Harber had clout with supervisors Clark and Battin. [Supervisors Clark, Battin, and Caspers were, of course, in “Dick and Doc’s” stable of politicians.]
     In April of ’74, Jordan joined Casper and his pals in a drive to LAX; from there the group flew down to Mexico (La Paz) and Harber’s boat, the “Shooting Star.” Harber motored the yacht to an island. Caspers took Jordan and the two took a rubber boat to fish somewhere, whereupon Caspers explained that Harber has sway with Grindle’s boss, supervisor Clark. 
The Shooting Star
     The following Monday, back in the OC, the county ordered a halt to Jordan’s project, evidently because Grindle had asked an official to look it over. That process yielded the voiding of Jordan’s permit.
     Jordan figured he’d next be hit up for a bribe. So (according to Jordan, according to the Times) Jordan’s lawyer contacted someone at the DA’s office, explaining the situation, but without naming names. Jordan then tried to set up another meeting with Harber.
     On the Mexico trip, Harber had invited Jordan to visit his office—but alone. So Jordan set up an appointment. When the two got together, Jordan asked Harber how long it would take to fix the problem with his project. “Not long.” Harber then explained that he wanted $10,000 up front plus $2,000 per month. Jordan asked how long the $2k thing would be necessary. The answer: “How long do you plan to develop in Orange County?”
O'Neill
     [DIGRESSION: MCWHINNEY THE POOAgain, the $2k per month scheme had been employed by Harber before when he was City Manager of Cypress (according to the Times article).
     But there’s another relevant case. In 1972 (two years before this Jordan stuff), a high-profile trial of the mayor of Westminster—Derek McWhinney(see)—also involved bribery and the figure $10,000—the amount demanded of a farmer who sought to lease city land (now part of Mile Square Park). In the course of the trial, both Fred Harber and Tom Fuentes were mentioned—Harber, because he was a source of information and recommendations (to supervisors) that were directly related to the case and because, according to the farmer, McWhinney had told him that six people, including he and Fred Harber, “run” Orange County. Fuentes was mentioned because, at one point, he, acting on behalf of his boss Caspers, informed the county of a complication with regard to the land—conceivably in accordance with one of McWhinney’s shakedown schemes. (My sources: LA Times, August 4, 1972; September 22, 1972; May 30, 1973; July 1, 1973.)] 
Lou Cella
     Jordan was trying to set up yet another meeting with Harber—this time with the DA office’s involvement—but then that fateful trip aboard the Shooting Star occurred—and Harber and Caspers (and eight others) were dead. Jordan had been invited on that trip, but he declined because there was no way of getting the DA office involved in anything happening way down south in Mexico and because he judged the Shooting Star to be less-than-seaworthy.
     (The top men at the DA's office later claimed that they hadn’t heard about any of this—that perhaps Jordan and his lawyer had communicated informally with a deputy DA.)
     After the mysterious Shooting Star disaster (none of the bodies was ever found; see DtB’s extensive scribblings about the tragedy), the county was about to shut down Jordan’s project on technical grounds (not enough work done). By the time the permit was squared away, costs were way up, and the project folded. It was a disaster for Jordan and his company.
     So he sued the county, which, a month prior to the article, had agreed to pay him $700,000 in a settlement deal. [End of précis.]
On that fateful trip 
(the one Jordan missed)
     The Register’s piece doesn’t add much to the yarn. There’s Harber’s elaboration concerning what would be done with the bribe money: “Harber said that he would keep part of the money, and the balance would go to ‘make large loans to people running for political office,’ according to Jordan’s deposition.”
     There also seems to be a disagreement between the Reg and the Times about whether Caspers’ gang (with Jordan) flew or cruised down to La Paz. (They agree that they flew back.)
     And there’s this. According to the Reg,
     Jordan’s deposition describes how [after the trip to La Paz] he and his attorney ... planned to make the payoff with marked money with the cooperation of the district attorney’s office.
     “After we’ve cleared it with District Attorney Cecil Hicks…that we’ll arrange for me to go back to Fred Harber and pay him the money, in marked bills. The exact details of the plan were not worked out at this time, but were, I think, that the District Attorney’s office was going to be involved in how we would work it out,” Jordan said.
     SO. Well, judge for yourself. How believable is Jordan’s story?
     That the county paid Jordan $700,000 in a settlement—one that barred the principles from discussing the case (only the Reg’s request for the documents brought Jordan’s depo to light)—might tell us something.
     And what about those other bribery cases?
     Admittedly, the “McWhinney” case is murky with regard to Harber (or Caspers) involvement, if any, in the bribe. (McWhinney was convicted.) So maybe we’ll turn to that next. 
     Also: I’ve gotta tell you about the time Supervisor Battin protested too much
     One more thing.
     I don’t know if this has anything at all to do with the Jordan business, but, according to a 1976 article by journalists Dan Walters and Al Downer, in 1971, Cella, O’Neill, and Harber joined a partnership that bought some El Toro land. Then, in 1971, the OC Board of Supes—which, of course, included Ron Caspers (and Harber/Cella beneficiaries Bob Battin and Ralph Clark)—made a decision that yielded C, O and H a huge profit:


Unscrambling Dick and Doc’s financial and political empire
California Journal, January, 1976
By AL DOWNER and DAN WALTERS
Parvin
…El Toro Land Company was formed as a partnership in 1970 to develop a 39-acre parcel along the San Diego Freeway in Orange County. One of the original partners, with a $25,000 investment, was Albert Parvin, one-time Las Vegas casino-owner and head of the Parvin-Dohrmann Company and the Parvin Foundation. Meyer Lansky, reputed Mafia financial brain, was one of Parvin’s partners in the Flamingo Hotel and the Parvin Foundation had former Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas on its payroll for $12,000 per year.... Cella, O’Neill and Harber bought into El Toro Land in 1971 and remain as major partners, along with Parvin, according to corporate records. Shortly after they bought in, the Orange County Board of Supervisors took emergency action to establish a freeway interchange adjacent to that property and the land increased in value by 600 percent, county records show….
     Like I said: dirty.
     —Don’t know what to make of that Parvin connection. Sheesh.

     [Note to self: McWhinney contributed to Ronald Caspers' campaign in 1970. See Times, 7/8/70.]

SLIGHTLY REVISED VERSION of the above [12/17]


Tom Fuentes, 1974
     [June 18, 2012]: It’s pretty clear, I think, that Supervisor Ron Caspers was seriously hinky, and his teeming corruptitude was such that it is hard to imagine his close associate and assistant, Tom Fuentes, not participating in it—or at least being aware of it. 
     Bear in mind that young Tom was the chief organizing entity of Caspers’ operation. He handled routine complaints, scheduled events, made phone calls, etc.for his boss, all day long, every day.

     FRED HARBER WAS THE BOMB. My most recent research (mostly old LA Times articles) has led me to conclude that Fred Harber, Caspers’ close associate, was much more than might be supposed based on his job descriptions. My reasons will become clear as we proceed. I’ll just say for now that Harber was perhaps the third most important member of what Supervisor Robert Battin called the “Coalition”—the money-distributing venture headed by “Dick and Doc,” i.e., R.J. O’Neill and Louis Cella. As you know, Orange County DA, Cecil Hicks, regarded the “Coalition” as OC’s “shadow government.” Near as I can tell, that’s just what it was, for it “owned” the Board of Supes.

Buena Park pols, 1958
Fred Harber in the middle












     For the core of the Coalition, I think, at least at first, the “Dick and Doc Show” was essentially an effort to give muscle to the Democratic Party in traditionally conservative OC. But it clearly morphed into something less political, more self-aggrandizing and profitable. It reached out to some Republicans, such as Caspers (1970) and Laurence Schmit(1975). Starting with Caspers, it became more about greed. And it seems likely that, for Harber and Cella, though perhaps not for O’Neill, laws and ethics were just things to get around somehow.
     As we’ll see, some of the “inside baseball” about the Supes back in the years 1969-1974 point to Harber’s alarming prominence, despite his having no elected office or appointment. He had served as Mayor of Cypress (among other offices), but, in 1969, he was an “assistant” to Supervisor Battin. He was a curiously highly-regarded assistant among the corps of helpers surrounding the Supervisors. 
Ron Caspers
     After Harber dumped that gig, Battin was at one point compelled to complain aloud that, no, he wasn’t Fred Harber’s puppet!
     It was, of course, Harber’s boat that was lost off the coast of Baja California in June of 1974, leaving not a trace of the ten men aboard, including Caspers and Harber.
* * *
     HERE COMES MR. JORDAN. I’ve found two newspaper articles that tell the story of the alleged “shakedown” scheme that, according to developer Richard Jordan, Harber and Caspers approached him with:
OC Register - OC Developer Alleges Political Bribe Demand
May 23, 1978
By Joe Cordero & Charley Roberts [SEE]
LA Times - Caspers, Harber accused of bribe try by developer
May 24, 1978
By Steve Emmons [SEE]
     As you can see, the Reg scooped the Times—thanks to a timely request for a pubic record. Nevertheless, I’ll start by outlining the contents of the Times’ piece:
Young Tom Fuentes
     Had Caspers and Harber not died in 1974, they might “have sailed home to a bribery indictment.” Or so it is alleged in a sworn 1975 depo by developer Richard Jordan.

      The Reg managed to get that depo.

     In the depo, Jordan explains that he had acquired a 46-acre piece of land in El Toro from a man who had already secured the necessary county permits and OKs for a mobile home park. Jordan even got assurances from county people that everything was set to go, but then, suddenly, in early ’74, he learned that Supervisor Caspers preferred that the land be used for condos.
     ¶ So Jordan revised his plans and pursued the condo project, but that soon got mired in complications and red tape. So he returned to plan A: the mobile home park.¶ Pretty soon, county inspectors were nitpicking the project to death, so he contacted supervisor Ron Caspers’ office. (Caspers’ area included El Toro.) He figured he’d just deal with Tom Fuentes, Caspers’ assistant. He asked Fuentes to find out just who, down at the county, was concerned about his project and why. Fuentes called back a month later, saying that “we were going to have some problems,” but he couldn’t say more over the phone. Jordan hurried to Fuentes’ office, whereupon Fuentes explained that the Planning Commission’s Shirley Grindle was asking lots of questions about the project. Jordan went back to his plans, looking for a problem, but he could find none. He called Fuentes back.¶ Fuentes next arranged for Jordan to meet with Bart Spendlove, Caspers’ planning commissioner. Two days later, at the project site, Spendlove told Jordan that everybody opposed the mobile home park, but “as far as I’m concerned, you have a permit and you have started on it. I think you should be able to continue with it.” Jordan agreed to plant a row of trees to obscure the park and that seemed to make Spendlove happy.
From “Spendlove, Wife, 4 Children Killed in
Utah Plane Crash,” LA Times, Sep. 9, 1975
¶ (Spendlove, says the Times, died in a plane crash 18 months later. How come so many people die violent deaths in this yarn?)¶ A few days later, Caspers called Jordan to tell him that Spendlove’s approach wouldn’t cut it. But Caspers had a plan. He wouldn’t elaborate over the phone but said Jordan should meet a man who could solve the problem. That man was Fred Harber.¶ Casper suggested that he, Jordan, and Harber spend some time down in Baja on Harber’s boat. They could get to know each other, have fun, become pals.¶ Jordan said he’d get back to him. He looked into Harber’s history and found that Harber had once been involved in a bribery scandal—in Cypress.
Near La Paz
¶ Years earlier, when Harber was the city manager of Cypress, in exchange for immunity, he agreed to testify about a scheme in which a developer paid him and a member of the City Council $2,000 a monthThese facts never came to light because the City Councilman—Mr. Job Denni—perished in a plane crash in 1966, necessitating abandonment of the case.¶ So Jordan phoned Casper, asking why Harber was so dang influential. Well, owing to his help with financing their campaigns, Harber had clout with supervisors Clark and Battin. [Supervisors Clark, Battin, and Caspers were, of course, in “Dick and Doc’s” stable of politicians.]¶ In April of ’74, Jordan joined Casper and his pals in a drive to LAX; from there the group flew down to Mexico (La Paz) and Harber’s boat, the “Shooting Star.” Harber motored the yacht to an island. Caspers took Jordan and the two took a rubber boat to fish somewhere, whereupon Caspers explained that Harber has sway with Grindle’s boss, supervisor Clark.
The Shooting Star
¶ The following Monday, back in the OC, the county ordered a halt to Jordan’s project, evidently because Grindle had asked an official to look it over. That process yielded the voiding of Jordan’s permit.¶ Jordan figured he’d next be hit up for a bribe. So (according to Jordan, according to the Times) Jordan’s lawyer contacted someone at the DA’s office, explaining the situation, but without naming names. Jordan then tried to set up another meeting with Harber.¶ On the Mexico trip, Harber had invited Jordan to visit his office—but alone. So Jordan set up an appointment. When the two got together, Jordan asked Harber how long it would take to fix the problem with his project. “Not long.” Harber then explained that he wanted $10,000 up front plus $2,000 per month. Jordan asked how long the $2k thing would be necessary. The answer: “How long do you plan to develop in Orange County?”
O'Neill
¶ [DIGRESSION: MCWHINNEY THE POOAgain, the $2k per month scheme had been employed by Harber before when he was City Manager of Cypress (according to the Times article).¶ But there’s another relevant case. In 1972 (two years before this Jordan stuff), a high-profile trial of the mayor of Westminster—Derek McWhinney(see)—also involved bribery and the figure $10,000—the amount demanded of a farmer who sought to lease city land (now part of Mile Square Park). In the course of the trial, both Fred Harber and Tom Fuentes were mentioned—Harber, because he was a source of information and recommendations (to supervisors) that were directly related to the case and because, according to the farmer, McWhinney had told him that six people, including he and Fred Harber, “run” Orange County. Fuentes was mentioned because, at one point, he, acting on behalf of his boss Caspers, informed the county of a complication with regard to the land—conceivably in accordance with one of McWhinney’s shakedown schemes. (My sources: LA Times, August 4, 1972; September 22, 1972; May 30, 1973; July 1, 1973.)]
Lou Cella
¶ Jordan was trying to set up yet another meeting with Harber—this time with the DA office’s involvement—but then that fateful trip aboard the Shooting Star occurred—and Harber and Caspers (and eight others) were dead. Jordan had been invited on that trip, but he declined because there was no way of getting the DA office involved in anything happening way down south in Mexico and because he judged the Shooting Star to be less-than-seaworthy.¶ (The top men at the DA's office later claimed that they hadn’t heard about any of this—that perhaps Jordan and his lawyer had communicated informally with a deputy DA.)¶ After the mysterious Shooting Star disaster (none of the bodies was ever found; see DtB’s extensive scribblings about the tragedy), the county was about to shut down Jordan’s project on technical grounds (not enough work done). By the time the permit was squared away, costs were way up, and the project folded. It was a disaster for Jordan and his company.¶ So he sued the county, which, a month prior to the article, had agreed to pay him $700,000 in a settlement deal. [End of précis.]
On that fateful trip 
(the one Jordan missed)
 The Register’s piece doesn’t add much to the yarn. There’s Harber’s elaboration concerning what would be done with the bribe money: “Harber said that he would keep part of the money, and the balance would go to ‘make large loans to people running for political office,’ according to Jordan’s deposition.” 
 There also seems to be a disagreement between the Reg and the Times about whether Caspers’ gang (with Jordan) flew or cruised down to La Paz. (They agree that they flew back.)
And there’s this. According to the Reg,
¶ Jordan’s deposition describes how [after the trip to La Paz] he and his attorney ... planned to make the payoff with marked money with the cooperation of the district attorney’s office.
“After we’ve cleared it with District Attorney Cecil Hicks…that we’ll arrange for me to go back to Fred Harber and pay him the money, in marked bills. The exact details of the plan were not worked out at this time, but were, I think, that the District Attorney’s office was going to be involved in how we would work it out,” Jordan said.
 SO. Well, judge for yourself. How believable is Jordan’s story?
 That the county paid Jordan $700,000 in a settlement—one that barred the principles from discussing the case (only the Reg’s request for the documents brought Jordan’s depo to light)—might tell us something.
 And what about those other bribery cases?
 Admittedly, the “McWhinney” case is murky with regard to Harber (or Caspers) involvement, if any, in the bribe. (McWhinney was convicted.) So maybe we’ll turn to that next. 
 Also: I’ve gotta tell you about the time Supervisor Battin protested too much
 One more thing.
 I don’t know if this has anything at all to do with the Jordan business, but, according to a 1976 article by journalists Dan Walters and Al Downer, in 1971, Cella, O’Neill, and Harber joined a partnership that bought some El Toro land. Then, in 1971, the OC Board of Supes—which, of course, included Ron Caspers (and Harber/Cella beneficiaries Bob Battin and Ralph Clark)—made a decision that yielded C, O and H a huge profit:

California Journal, January, 1976
By AL DOWNER and DAN WALTERS
Parvin: casino owner, 
organized crime figure
¶ …El Toro Land Company was formed as a partnership in 1970 to develop a 39-acre parcel along the San Diego Freeway in Orange County. One of the original partners, with a $25,000 investment, was Albert Parvin, one-time Las Vegas casino-owner and head of the Parvin-Dohrmann Company and the Parvin Foundation. Meyer Lansky, reputed Mafia financial brain, was one of Parvin’s partners in the Flamingo Hotel and the Parvin Foundation had former Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas on its payroll for $12,000 per year.... Cella, O’Neill and Harber bought into El Toro Land in 1971 and remain as major partners, along with Parvin, according to corporate records. Shortly after they bought in, the Orange County Board of Supervisors took emergency action to establish a freeway interchange adjacent to that property and the land increased in value by 600 percent, county records show….
 Like I said: dirty.
 —Don’t know what to make of that Parvin connection. Sheesh.


¶ [Note to self: McWhinney contributed to Ronald Caspers' campaign in 1970. See Times, 7/8/70.]

BATTIN: the "COALITION," HARBER'S "BRAINCHILD

OC Reg Feb 18 1976


See The George Murai case (1972; Harbor gives testimony)

Board interviews of replacement trustee applicants: June 25, 3 p.m.


From the agenda:
2.1 The Board will hold trustee applicant interviews to fill the appointment of a
vacant trustee position residing in Trustee Area #6. 
2.2 The Board may discuss and act to appoint a provisional Board of Trustees
member by a majority public vote of the Board members. If the Board acts to
appoint a person to fill the vacancy, the person will hold office until the next
regularly scheduled election of the Board.
     There will be an opportunity for pubic comments at the start of the meeting.
     A reader has suggested that there are two applicants: Jim Wright (former Saddleback College administrator) and  Jolene Fuentes (Tom Fuentes' widow).

Sunday, June 17, 2012

The Fuentes file: Fred Harber & the ubiquity of violent death

     Recently, I suggested that we need to understand Mr. Tom Fuentes, his career and his significance, in relation to his formative years—namely, his four-or-so years working with and for Ronald Caspers, the Orange County Supervisor, fifth district, from 1971 until Caspers’ mysterious death in June of 1974. Fuentes was young back then: he turned 23 in 1971.
     Fuentes managed Caspers’ successful campaign for the post in 1970. Afterward, Fuentes was made a “consultant” to Caspers’ S&L; he was also made Caspers’ assistant down at the County (ultimately, Caspers, as Supervisor, hired two assistants, but Fuentes seemed to be the first and chief assistant).
     I have suggested that the 1970 campaign—especially efforts, involving various members of the “Coalition,” to damage the reputation of incumbent Alton Allen—was extremely sleazy, with no-holds-barred by team Caspers.
     Caspers spent nearly $90,000, much of it his own, to secure that job—a job that made less than $20,000 a year.
     At the time, many wondered what he was up to.
     According to the man who was the chairman of the OC GOP at the time, Tom Rogers, Caspers represented recognition of an opportunity to make huge sums of money by working with developers. After Caspers, the Board of Supes was about opportunities to support Supes who were happy to allow the special interests to develop the crap out of Orange County. The game was all about increasing density and maximizing profits: the Supervisors win, the developers win. Everybody's happy.
     And Tom Fuentes was “there” for the birth and rapid growth of this ugly new reality.
     My case for Caspers’ corruption relies somewhat on the notion, inspired by a 1978 lawsuit, which was settled out of court, that Caspers and his crony Fred Harber engaged in a “shakedown” of a developer, Richard Jordan—leading some to wonder whether this was a routine practice of theirs.
     Yesterday, I found a marvelous 1978 Times article that paints quite a picture of the Jordan affair. That piece referred to the apparent fact that, seventeen years earlier, when Harber was the City Manager of Cypress, he had participated in a bribery scheme that greatly resembled the one Jordan was approached with back in 1974 (namely, the bit about $2,000 a month). (See below.) At the time (1961), Harber secured immunity from prosecution by agreeing to testify that he and another man, Cypress City Councilman Job Denni, were receiving $2,000 a month in bribes.


     But get this: the case was dropped after Denni died in a plane crash.
     And that wasn’t the only plane crash that took out people involved in that case. (More soon.)
     Since I started to look into Caspers and the "Coalition," I've kept running into stories of peculiar violent deaths. I've already discussed the mysterious 1974 loss of Harber's "Shooting Star," which apparently took ten lives, including Harber, Caspers, and an assistant to Supervisor Clark. (Tom Fuentes and Lyle Overby were supposed to be on that trip. Fuentes never came aboard; Overby actually got off the boat before it headed up the coast.)
Arlene Hoffman
     Then there's Harber's secretary, Arlene Hoffman, who was killed with an arrow in 1994 (as she started work with yet another OC Supervisor). The case was never solved.
     Evidently, back in the early seventies, a "probate referee" connected to yet another member of the "Coalition" was mysteriously murdered (haven't found any details about that yet).
     Here's one I've not mentioned before: in the mid-50s, Caspers, an expert yachtsman, crashed his boat, which killed his first wife. Her body was never found.
     What does it all mean? Maybe nothing.
     Beyond that, the stuff is fascinating, to me at least.
     Details to come.

BATTIN: the "COALITION" HARBER'S "BRAINCHILD

OC Reg Feb 18 1976

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Fuentes & Schmitz, 1967, 1970, 1972

From the LA Times, Oct 10, 1967

     I've often wondered whether there were a Tom Fuentes-John Schmitz connection, since Schmitz and Fuentes were at Santa Ana College (Fuentes as a student, Schmitz as an instructor) at the same time—c. 1967. As it turns out, at Santa Ana, Tom was very active in student government and clubs, such as the Young Republicans. That brought him into contact with plenty of "adults." So who knows.
     Today, I found dozens of fascinating old LA Times articles, some of them about Tom. The one above, from 1967, reveals that, as Student Prez, Tom was involved in a student government conference at which Schmitz, a Poli Sci instructor, gave the "keynote address." That by itself, of course, does not imply that Tom supported Schmitz.
     By 1968, I believe, Fuentes had transferred to Chapman College. Reading through these old articles, I learned that Ron Caspers had connections with Chapman, where Fuentes was once again the President of the Young Republicans. Perhaps that is where the two got to know each other. (I'm only speculating.)

From the LA Times, June 23, 1970

     In 1970, Fuentes, at age 22, managed Caspers' campaign in which he won the area 5 Supervisorial position. In the early stages of that campaign (before Fuentes' involvement?), Caspers and his "Coalition" friends used remarkably unscrupulous tactics to damage the reputation of respected Republican incumbent Alton Allen. In any case, in the end, with Fuentes' help, Caspers won the seat.
     The article above reveals that, at about the end of his college career, Fuentes somehow managed to donate $500 to the Schmitz campaign (to replace Jimmy Utt in Congress, I suppose; Utt died in 1970). Oddly, everything I've read about Caspers suggests to me that, likely, he would not have been a fan of the extreme Mr. Schmitz, though I have not confirmed that.

LA Times, Sep. 17, 1972

     The above 1972 letter to the Times reveals that, indeed, Tom had long supported John Schmitz, though he now distanced himself from the fellow. At the time, the ferociously anti-Commie Schmitz had become a harsh critic of Nixon—who had, after all, gone to China!—and actually headed the American Independent Party ticket, running against him. My guess is that it was at this point that Fuentes' support for Schmitz ended. Clearly, from an early age, Mr. Nixon was Tom's #1 idol.

Nixon birthplace marks 100 years (OC Reg)

P.S.:
Gloria A.
     By 1988, after the Gloria R. Allred lawsuit (Schmitz had called her a "slick butch lawyeress") and the Carla Stuckle scandal (he had produced two kids in an affair with Stuckle, a former Tustin school board candidate), Schmitz’s career was pretty much dead.
     Nevertheless, he still seemed to count Tom Fuentes as his pal:
     …Thomas A. Fuentes, county Republican Party chairman and a longtime Schmitz confidant, said Schmitz recently joked that "if there were 14 Republican candidates he might be the 15th, just to offer a little color to the race."
     "I would say," Fuentes added, "that it was said in the heartiest of jest in the typical style of John Schmitz's renowned humor." (From “Schmitz, Out of Spotlight, Confines Politics to Classroom,” LA Times, May 16, 1988)
     Classic Fuentes. Nobody talks like that.
     Nobody but Tom

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...