Conflicts
County Election Boards Scandal in Columbus
Robert Wechsler
Update: August 18, 2012 (see below)
There is a longstanding pattern of scandals in the cities that the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL) chooses for its annual meeting. COGEL was in Chicago when Rod Blagojevich was arrested, and in New Orleans when Rep. Jefferson was re-elected despite the bribery charges against him (they held). COGEL stayed in the D.C. hotel where then mayor Marion Barry had just been arrested.
There is a longstanding pattern of scandals in the cities that the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL) chooses for its annual meeting. COGEL was in Chicago when Rod Blagojevich was arrested, and in New Orleans when Rep. Jefferson was re-elected despite the bribery charges against him (they held). COGEL stayed in the D.C. hotel where then mayor Marion Barry had just been arrested.
When An EC Member's Appointing Authority Comes Before the Commission
Robert Wechsler
According to Courthouse
News Service articles Tuesday and yesterday,
former Georgia ethics commission executive secretary Stacey
Kalberman and her deputy, Sherry Ellen Streicker, filed suits
against the commission and its chair, Patrick Millsaps, for
retaliating against their attempt to investigate then Governor
Deal's alleged campaign finance violations by removing Streicker's
position from the budget, seriously cutting Kalberma
Legislative Immunity: An Official's Motive Is Not At Issue in a Conflict Situation
Robert Wechsler
A poor and disconcerting judicial decision on local legislative immunity came
down on May 24 from the U.S. District Court for the District of
Kansas, Kickapoo
Tribe v. Black.
An Official's Relationship with a Bidder
Robert Wechsler
Here's an interesting conflict situation from San Mateo County, CA.
According to an
article in yesterday's Almanac, prosecutors are investigating
the selection by two school boards of a project architect
for construction projects at the same time that the project
architect was remodeling the house of a district official.
Proximity to One's Own Ethics Program
Robert Wechsler
Proximity rules are common to local and state government ethics
codes nationwide (see my
blog post on them from five years ago). They require officials
to withdraw from any matter dealing with property within a certain
distance of property they own or rent, no matter how many others have property within the same proximity.
The Joke at the Heart of Local Government Ethics Programs
Robert Wechsler
Stephen Colbert has been doing a great job satirizing the current
federal campaign finance situation. He has especially made a mockery
of the Super PAC, a means of allowing individuals and entities to
make unlimited contributions to a candidate's campaign under the
guise of independent expenditures. Colbert has shown how weak the
rules on collaboration are, how the Super PAC is effectively, if not
constitutionally, no different than a campaign committee.
Rules for Officials "Dating" Lobbyists
Robert Wechsler
“The concern with potential corruption does not stop just because
the relationship has entered the bedroom.’’
Helping Contractors Rather Than the Public
Robert Wechsler
One thing jumped out at me from an
article on the front page of the New York Times today that
deals with a common government ethics situation. The situation
involves a lobbyist hired because he had a close personal and
professional relationship with the head of a department that had to
approve his client's project.
Making Use of Expertise
Robert Wechsler
Let's say you're a professional who wants to give something back to
your community by serving on a city board or commission. You open up
the newspaper and read that your mayor is saying, "It is not the
five of us commissioners who make the city great. It's the citizens
who are passionate about it, and now we're telling them, 'Sorry you
can't serve.'"
Hearse Chasing As Misuse of Office
Robert Wechsler
Everyone knows about ambulance-chasing lawyers, but until reading an
article in today's Citizens' Voice of Luzerne County (PA), I had
never heard of hearse-chasing deputy coroners. Maybe I would have known
about them if I'd watched the TV show Six Feet Under.