Posted on 07/28/2006 4:52:22 AM PDT by abb
Will do.
//
Going back to who/what may have helped elevate the rape allegations to natioanl status ...
M/M Dagenhart may have played an active role.
John, Dagenhart as president of the Trinity Park Homeowners Association made many statements to the press early on, links above.
Some background on Ellen, Trinity Park real estate agent and Historic Preservation Society of Durham president.
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:1KdeY12ZYb4J:www.herald-sun.com/durham/4-638202.html+%22ellen+dagenhart%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=8&client=firefox-a
http://www.preservationdurham.org/people/officers.html
http://www.mindspring.com/~dagnhrt/ellen.html
Good Catch! Black Panthers a registered hate group!
Georgia Goslee was a nobody before she started the Duke AV circuit.
But, how can they leave Kim Roberts "opportunism" out of an article on that subject.
Some of that stuff, as you know, was recycled. I think they put that article together in 30 minutes.
They could've also written an article detailing all the people that are in jail or awaiting trial related to this case.
There isn't any news in the article. It should be titled, "Pimping Thorpes's CD."
At best this article belongs in the N & O Lifestyle section, though I can think of better places for it. ;)
Note to N & O:
ID the BALD cop!
Melanie's got a new blog thread up...
Duke lacrosse thread
http://blogs.newsobserver.com/editor/index.php?title=duke_lacrosse_thread&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1
Airing out 'our' dirty laundry
Jim Wise; January 28, 2006, News & Observer, The (Raleigh, NC)
So a former member of the Durham Housing Authority's board came to a board meeting the other day and declared that it ought to quit airing "our dirty laundry in public."
A sentiment, that, no doubt, is discreetly shared by others around town fretted by the so-called "image problem."
Also, perhaps, by those for whom it's better to leave past events in the past, for reasons of decorum, decency -- or probable cause.
Such sentiments, however, slide around a pertinent point: the dirty laundry in question isn't "ours" -- it's ours, as in yours and ours, friends 'n' neighbors.
The public is precisely where it needs airing, because it's the public's property -- just like the money the Housing Authority apparently misused for years -- and the public's problem.
Yeah, it's pretty embarrassing for the City of Bull, too. Truth hurts. Big deal. Better to get it out and get it over with, though around here maybe that's too much to hope for.
Housing has been a matter of public concern in Durham since at least 1940, when a federal study found almost two-thirds of the city's dwelling places were "substandard" in terms of structure, utilities, capacity and/or upkeep.
It's just that situation that led to the Durham Housing Authority's creation after World War II, to administer taxpayers' money routed through federal hands toward eliminating the urban slums that the New York Times, in 1949, called "our number-one national disgrace."
The Housing Authority itself became a matter of concern later on, as two board members pleaded no contest to illegal wiretaps in a public-housing complex during the 1950s, and, in the late '60s, its management of public housing and policies toward tenants became the flashpoint for Durham's civil-rights movement.
Developments opened as objects of civic pride in the 1950s, such as the now-demolished Few Gardens apartments, declined on the authority's watch into warrens of despair, poverty, crime and drugs.
Over the past three years, the Housing Authority's fiscal management has become one more Durham scandal. It's bad enough that many thousands of the public's dollars have vanished into "our dirty laundry."
It's even worse that the people ultimately ripped off are the needy folks who are supposed be helped by the public's taxes. Stealing from the poor box is pretty low -- even by Durham standards.
For the public -- that's us -- to let the dirty laundry fester in the bin would be equally irresponsible, if not equally despicable.
Because it's just such lack of public oversight -- which means, of public interest -- that encourages hanky-panky. Stonewalling, "losing" records, making excuses and otherwise covering up only put off the time the laundry's fragrance leaks out, and the public can't help but smell the roses.
And when the laundry's brought out for airing, it's best if it looks like it's getting cleaned.
Copyright 2006 by The News & Observer Pub. Co.
Record Number: its51389
Durham DA: Shoulda Kept My Mouth Shut
http://lashawnbarber.com/archives/2006/07/31/shoulda-kept-my-mouth-shut
What a dilemma for the media of N & O --how to let a cover-up by the police continue?? I guess they really want these boys convicted more than anything!
As usual, thanks for keeping me posted!
BTW Mike, great report from Blincos-the MSM should be ashamed.
http://www.thescoop.org/archives/2005/03/09/durham-housing-authority/
Federal funding...
http://www.knowledgeplex.org/news/178194.html
Interesting.
I agree. The question is where did the money go, or maybe more to the point, who did the money go to?
http://www.carolinajournal.com/exclusives/display_exclusive.html?id=1695
Housing Policies Fail in Durham, Charlotte
Federal audit reveals problems in the Durham Housing Authority, while in Charlotte a density bonus may end
By Michael Lowrey
July 29, 2004
CHARLOTTE The fallout continues from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developments audit into the activities of the Durham Housing Authority. In the latest reversal for the DHA, the agency has admitted that its attempts to convert the former Fayetteville Street public housing project into a privately owned affordable apartment complex have failed. Many of the problems the HUD audit discovered at DHA involved the Fayetteville Street project.
The deal is not going to close, Robert Bo Glenn Jr., housing authority board member, said to the Durham Herald-Sun. Given the present environment, I dont see a private investor coming in not with the cloud hanging over it.
In a complex series of transactions, the housing authority in December 2002 sold the public housing complex for $1 to Fayette Place LLC. Fayette Place, in turn, was owned by two nonprofit subsidiaries of the housing authority. The transfer was made to obtain federal tax credits for developing low-income housing. The bulk of the $12.5 million needed to remodel the non-air conditioned, boxy brick-and-concrete public housing units into modern Victorian-style duplexes would have come from mortgage revenue bonds and private investors.
The principle force behind Fayette Place was James Tabron, then DHAs executive director. In April 2003, Tabron was forced to resign from the public housing agency for charging $12,500 in personal purchases, including a $1,750 gold ring for his daughter, to the agencys credit cards. Discovery of Tabrons unauthorized credit card purchases also prompted the HUD audit.
It has since come out that Tabron was also engaged in self-dealing. Tabron ran a consulting business on the side with Troy Chapman, director of the Chester County, Pa., housing authority. Chapman was to be paid a $450,000 developers fee upon completion of the Fayette Place project.
The HUD audit uncovered more than $5 million in questionable spending by DHA. It also recommends that the federal agency take over control of DHA, freeze spending on a $35 million federal housing grant Durham received, and discipline certain officials.
Even before the release of the audit, the Fayette Place project was in trouble. The sluggish economy had put downward pressure on rents generally, making it difficult for the authority to attractive private investors to the project.
The housing authority has spent more than $1 million on the project. To what degree it is liable for an additional $1.3 million in pending and disputed charges remains to be determined.
To make matters worse, DHA moved families out of Fayetteville Street in anticipation of remodeling the property, aggravating a public housing shortage in the city. The Herald-Sun reports that only 43 of the 200 units are occupied. Twenty of those families didnt pay their rent in May. Even with only limited maintenance being done, the complex lost $20,000 during the first five months of the year.
(snip)
We now are covering two parallel and related major storylines. One involves the criminal investigation.
The other involves the lacrosse team and broader questions of student life and party culture at Duke. [snip] We plan to keep covering them. [end excerpt]
Can Melanie say the same about the alleged assault by Durham PD officers at Blinco's?
We now are covering two parallel and related major storylines. One involves the criminal investigation.
The other involves Durham PD and broader questions of police life and party culture in Raleigh-Durham. We plan to keep covering them.
Now... what about the BALD man, who the cook alleges was the instigator? Melanie?
Well I got home from CA and to my computer I can post on her blog and put up a post on the Demorris Lee arrest/case.
Also anyone else see the irony that everyone BUT the N&O sees the Duke Lacrosse hoax as an opportunity. The N&O has an opportunity to as the leftist put it speak truth to power, but they do not see it as an opportunity to be great investigative reporters.
This is an appeal to readers here who are residents of Durham County and who are outraged (as I am) at the behavior of Mike Nifong as Durham's District Attorney. The events of last week turned November's election from an uncontested election for Nifong into a recall election for Mr. Nifong.
Lewis Cheek, and our own signatures on the petitions which got his name on the ballot, have given us an opportunity to vote for Cheek and Elect Anybody But Nifong. The Cheek campaign committee and doubtless many others in the county are looking to see how the public reacts to the two press conferences last week.
I ask that you join me as Durham residents to seize the day to better our justice system by writing letters to the editors of the HeraldSun and the News & Observer, giving all the good reasons why you are voting for Lewis Cheek to elect Anybody But Nifong. Be sure to identify yourself as a Durham resident. If you would like help composing your letter, please email letgovernordecide@yahoo.com
HeraldSun: Letters are limited to 250 words. You can email or use the form provided at the link below. If you email, be sure to visit the website listed to see what information the H/S requires in an email submission.email: letters@heraldsun.com You can also use the H/S form at:
http://www.heraldsun.com/tools/letterstoed/letterform.cfm?sendLetter=letters
News & Observer: Letters are limited to 200 words. A form is provided at:
http://www.newsobserver.com/484/story/433256.html
Mr. Nifong has asked for a Durham solution. Please help get this campaign off the ground to ensure a solution that is good for Durham.
Stay tuned for updates, and thanks to all of you for considering my request.
jmoo
9:25 PM, July 31, 2006
It will be VERY interesting to see what Gottlieb told authorities.
Did Gottlieb throw his friends overboard and minimize or deny his participation?
It's feasible that a SUPVR (Gottlieb) tells the other officers to keep their mouths shut, Deny and obfuscate. I can't be sure, I didn't see, I can't recall, It happened so fast. I didn't know what was happening.
So, why the other guys are obfuscating and playing dumb, did Gottlieb put the Knife in their Back?
So, if you have statements where people are claiming innocence and playing dumb, and then one statement provides the bulk of the details used to determine what happened? If that one statement (other than the Cook), was from
Gottlieb - you'd have exactly what we have today.
Gottlieb has far more experience than all of them, and he had the highest ranking, and conceivably was more experienced with strategy and Politics. He certainly has more trial experience.
... . .. . . . . .. . . . . NEW ARTICLE on DNA
http://www.heraldsun.com/durham/4-757334.html
Maybe Gottlieb talked them into taking the fall in exchange for some nice paying off-duty security jobs.
Sounds like Linwood has been trying to provide an effective leak and failed badly, as when he (imo) tried to call the fingernail dna a "match".
Link to new thread.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1675456/posts?page=18
semen on a towel in the house where the boy lived--I'm just shocked! /more sarc
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