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Copyright © 2010 WatchOurCity.com
In The Public Interest .com
WatchOurCity
RELATED:
Rick Cole, City Manager,
City of Ventura, at Bell Residents Club Meeting, led
by Nestor Valencia and Mario Rivas.


(Photo courtesy Pasadena Star News)
latimes.com
Fixing Bell
Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown must request a court-
appointed receiver to reinstitute honest
administration in the city.

October 12, 2010
Rick Cole, City Manager, city of Ventura

The agony of Bell deepens with each passing day. After eight current
and former leaders were marched to jail, the city was left with a
thoroughly disgraced and discredited City Council. Only one
incumbent escaped criminal indictment, and he failed to notice the
rampant banditry among the colleagues who appointed him and the
staff he was supposed to oversee. The current acting city manager
and acting city attorney were appointed by the old regime in a frantic
but futile effort to confine the scandal to Robert Rizzo and his top
lieutenants. Now it turns out that no binding deal was struck
amongst the thieves, and Rizzo is insisting that he never actually quit
— and may be owed back pay!

More damaging than these sickening revelations is the meltdown of a
functioning government for 40,000 residents. If Bell is not already
bankrupt as a result of repaying illegal taxes, redevelopment
boondoggles and candy store looting by its top officials, it will remain
paralyzed by the media circus, lawsuits, audits and recall now
consuming every molecule of civic oxygen in the small community.

There's only one way out, and it is a path endorsed by the Los
Angeles County Board of Supervisors: State Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown
must request a court-appointed receiver to reinstitute honest
administration in Bell.

Every day the attorney general delays yanking the plug on this
criminal regime only deepens the hole into which Bell is falling. An
intense political campaign may be distracting Brown, but nothing
would be so gubernatorial as to see him march into court and asking
a judge to appoint a respected and competent city administrator to
halt the flailing death throes of the corrupt and dysfunctional
government of Bell.

What are the objections to immediately appointing a receiver?

There is no legal authority. Nonsense. Mark Adams, an attorney
specializing in the arcane arena of receivership law, says: "In my
view, the well-established principle of necessity allows a court almost
unlimited discretion to protect innocent people when no one else has
the power to act. If a bankruptcy court can take jurisdiction over
Orange County, a Superior Court judge can take jurisdiction over Bell.
A court can invoke any equitable remedy needed, including
appointing a receiver, until it enters judgment on the attorney
general's civil lawsuit charging fraud, civil conspiracy, waste of public
funds and breach of fiduciary duty. "

It would be bad precedent to undermine "local control." Hardly.
The greatest threat to local control is the worsening Bell scandal. If
that's "local control," we're in deep trouble. The best defense for
California's tradition of local control is to put a swift end to its
subversion by blatant criminal conduct.

The recall by local citizens will eventually solve the problem. Good
luck with that. It is likely to be at least four months before a recall
vote, assuming Bell can even muster a quorum to hold a council
meeting to schedule the election. If they are still around by the time a
recall happens, the targeted incumbents almost certainly will be
ousted. But the principal funder of the recall effort is the Bell police
union. Can a truly honest election be held with such special-interest
clout looming over the candidate choices? The leaders of the political
machine that fleeced the citizens of Bell may have been indicted, but
many of its supporters continue to operate in the shadows.

One alternative that's been floated by the state attorney general's
office is to negotiate a pact with the current officeholders to assign a
"monitor" to Bell's government. Like the Justice Department monitor
who oversaw the Los Angeles Police Department's consent decree
after the Rampart scandal, the Bell monitor would have broad
investigatory powers. But the citizens of Bell don't need any more
investigators. They need a receiver empowered to take immediate
action to free their government from those who have unethically
profited from bloated salaries, uncollected "loans" and customized
pension benefits.

That's why genuine grass-roots activists in Bell marched on City Hall
last week carrying brooms and shovels, demanding that a receiver be
named to sweep out the crooks and dig out their corruption.

The appointment of a receiver is no panacea. The receiver will need
to make hard decisions to unravel the financial chaos and put Bell
back on sound financial and administrative footing. The remnants of
the old guard will conspire to undermine needed change. In time, a
new City Council will need to reassert local authority in a community
with great needs and few resources.

But the only way to put an end to the unfolding nightmare in Bell is to
start fresh. The attorney general can make it happen. The sooner he
does it, the quicker Bell can begin to recover and heal.

Rick Cole, a former mayor of Pasadena, is the city manager of
Ventura. He won the 2009 Excellence in Government Award from the
Municipal Management Assn. of Southern California.


Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times
"Every day the
attorney general
delays yanking the
plug on this criminal
regime only deepens
the hole into which
Bell is falling"

"nothing would be so
gubernatorial as to
see him march into
court and asking a
judge to appoint a
respected and
competent city
administrator to halt
the flailing death
throes of the corrupt
and dysfunctional
government of Bell."
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Editor, WatchOurCity.com
Nestor Valencia,
The Heart &
Soul of Bell
Tuesday July 13, 2010
Update Wednesday July 14, 2010
The Editor,
WatchOurCity.com
Depriving the Public of
Honest Services: Bell,
Maywood, Huntington Park,
LAUSD
Fiduciary fail by Maywood, Bell,
Huntington Park officials.
Tuesday July 13, 2010
The Editor,
WatchOurCity.com
Huntington Park in $1.2
Million Fiscal Deficit Partly
Caused by City of Bell's
George Cole
Mayor Noguez gave George Cole
millions
August 24, 2010, Updated 8-30-10
The Editor, WatchOurCity.com
Robert Rizzo, George
Cole, Pete Werrlein,
other Bell officials gave
$7,752 to Pedro
Carrillo's 2002
Assembly race, more
than all southeast cities
combined
No other city in the southeast
gave more money, by more
officials, or by more felons, to
Pedro Carrillo's campaign than
the city of Bell. Carrillo hid Pete
Werrlein's donor identity. Pete
was convicted of a felony in 1984.
Friday September 3, 2010, 1:00 pm
WatchOurCity.com
Pedro Carrillo violated
FPPC regulations by hiding
identity of campaign Donor
Pedro Carrillo, a Robert Rizzo
aid, is in violation of FPPC filing
requirements.
Carrillo hid identity
of contributor who in 2002
donated $500. Donor, identified
only as "Western Gaming
Consultant", is former Bell
councilman and convicted felon
Pete Werrlein, a Rizzo friend.
Bell's purchase of Werrlein's
property is under investigation by
the State Attorney General.
August 20, 2010, 6:00 am,
WatchOurCity.com
State Controller John
Chiang gave $1,150 to
Pedro Carrillo's 2002
Assembly campaign,
according to State
campaign filing Reports
John Chiang and Pedro Carrillo
have a personal & political
relationship going back to 2001.
Why BASTA is not calling for
Carrillos' resignation
The Editor, WatchOurCity.com
August 12, 2010, 6:00 am
Part I: Rizzo, George
Cole & John Chiang
Donated to Pedro
Carrillo's 2001
Assembly Campaign
BASTA's owner revealed:
"BASTA will make me lots of
money"
The Editor, WatchOurCity.com
August 13, 2010, 6:00 a.m.
Part II: BASTA issues
Press release criticising
Whitman's politicizing
of Bell; Gubernatorial
candidate Whitman
Dismisses BASTA as
funded by Police Union