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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (4054)6/27/2002 6:37:40 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 15516
 
"WE'RE THE GOVERNMENT, WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU...."

Here's a classic from the Bureau of Subversion, Dept. of Injustice, the disHonorable John Ashcroft executing:

sacbee.com

Ashcroft removes bankruptcy trustee
She's won praise and drawn fire for acting as the public's advocate in the PG&E case.
By Claire Cooper -- Bee Legal Affairs Writer
Published 2:15 a.m. PDT Wednesday, June 26, 2002
Linda Ekstrom Stanley, the no-nonsense official who has stood up against corporate giants in the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. bankruptcy case, has been removed from office two years before the end of her term under orders by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft.

As regional bankruptcy trustee for eight years, Stanley has been the U.S. Justice Department's official watchdog over bankruptcy cases in Northern and Eastern California and Nevada.

She has acted aggressively as the public's advocate, particularly in the 14 months since California's largest utility filed for bankruptcy protection. She attempted to give the utility's ratepayers a voice in the process and opposed giving the utility an exclusive right to draft the plans for its future.

She said Tuesday that she was informed of her dismissal "out of the blue" in a phone call late last week. Ashcroft's written order, dated June 18, gave no reason, according to Stanley, who said she didn't know if the action was related to the PG&E case.

PG&E had no comment.

Dana Perino, a Justice Department spokeswoman, said other trustees have been replaced in the past year, but she was unable to say whether the vacancies occurred through resignation or dismissal. All trustees were informed when Ashcroft took office that "their positions would be reviewed as part of the normal course of business," she said.

No successor to Stanley was announced.

Some prominent members of the bankruptcy bar said the likely explanation was simply that Stanley is a Democrat in a Republican administration.

"Maybe there's some Republican that wants the job," said John Hansen, a former Stanley law partner.

However, Jack Williams, scholar in residence at the American Bankruptcy Institute, said, "This is the first trustee that I know of that has essentially been fired" since creation of the office.

Although the federal statute establishing the trustee's office gives the attorney general the power to replace any of the nation's 21 regional trustees, Williams said removing one "unless for fraud or embezzlement or things like that" contradicts the intent of Congress in giving trustees five-year terms, a year longer than the president's.

Williams, Hansen and others familiar with Stanley's work said she may have attracted negative attention by espousing the view that trustees should protect the public interest and not simply monitor the bankruptcy process.

She was "the most high-profile and vocal" advocate of that view in the nation, said Williams.

"That's new," he said, adding that "reasonable minds could disagree" on whether the statute allows a U.S. trustee to take on such a role.

In that debate, though, Stanley seemed to have the support of the bankruptcy judges in her area.

"Generally, my colleagues all agree she was doing what the office was designed to do," said U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali, who sits in San Francisco and presides in the PG&E case.

Montali said he sometimes solicited Stanley's recommendations and, while he disagreed with her responses at times, he believed she ran her office at "the highest level of professionalism and integrity." He declined to speculate about the effect of her departure on the PG&E case.

Gary Cohen, general counsel of the state Public Utilities Commission, said he "hoped and expected" the trustee's office would continue its active role. Stanley did a good job, he said, of raising issues when the commission held back because of concern that its legal immunity might be jeopardized.

The Utility Reform Network issued a statement calling Stanley's dismissal an apparent "political move that will benefit PG&E at consumers' expense."

Steven Felderstein, the state's outside counsel in the PG&E case, said Stanley "paid attention to the issues that she thought were going to be important," such as whether the public was well-represented.

Richard Heltzel, the bankruptcy court clerk in Sacramento, said Stanley raised the caliber of professionalism in the trustee's office and opened the office to new ways of doing things.

"I've loved the job," said Stanley. "I've tried to make a difference. I think I've changed the attitude that people have about the office of the U.S. trustee."

Her last day in office will be July 2. Stanley said she'll spend it in Montali's court, where a hearing is scheduled on 21 lawyer and accountant fee applications in the PG&E case. She has filed objections to scores of items, including pay increases of up to $125 an hour for one firm's lawyers.



To: Mephisto who wrote (4054)6/27/2002 7:55:10 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 15516
 
June 27, 2002

ROLLING THUNDER SEATTLE – NEWSLETTER #2
”Putting the Party Back in Politics”

Howdy ya’ll!

Grab an iced latte, put your feet up and read all about what’s been
happening during Act II of “Rolling Thunder Meets Seattle: The Organizing
Effort”.

In this mailing:

1) What the heck is the Rolling Thunder Down Home Democracy Tour?
2) When is it? Where? How much? Who’s on the program?
3) How can I get involved with the organizing?
4) Help us flyer!

1) WHAT THE HECK IS THE ROLLING THUNDER DOWN HOME DEMOCRACY TOUR?

In case you are still wondering, just what is the Rolling Thunder Down Home
Democracy Tour? It is a festival of music, arts and grassroots organizing. A
county fair with guts. A revival with a reason. A concert with
consciousness. And it's coming to Seattle on Aug. 24!

Spearheaded by Jim Hightower, a progressive commentator from Texas, the
first festival took place in Austin in April. It included well-known
performers from hip-hop, Tejano, rock, folk, and other musical genres, plus
hands-on workshops, games, food booths, and scores of tables and booths for
community organizations. Unlike other festivals that may allow a few
non-profit tables around the fringe, the whole idea behind this festival is
to fuse grassroots politics, music and fun while reaching out to new people.

2) WHEN? WHERE? HOW MUCH? WHO’S ON THE PROGRAM?

Our second Rolling Thunder Seattle organizing meeting took place at Seattle
Central Community College on June 13, which just happened to be the warmest
day Seattle has seen in two years. We took this as an omen meaning Rolling
Thunder is HOT!

Those in attendance and not already so engaged joined a committee of their
choosing. Committees gave reports. The air swelled, sizzled and crackled in
a communal joining as we all vowed to make August 24th a day that Renton
will never forget. The news in a nutshell:

The event location is now confirmed as:

Petrovitsky Park
16400 SE Petrovitsky Road, Renton, WA

This is about 20 miles SE of downtown Seattle. You may view two maps showing
the park’s location at:
powerupmedia.com

Ticket prices are:
$5 advanced, $10 at the gate. We will send out info soon on how to purchase
tickets.

Confirmed guests thus far include:

Jesse Jackson Jr. – Illinois congressional representative
Jim Hightower – America’s #1 populist
Tom Hayden – Democratic activist, former CA state Senator
Holly Near – Singer/songwriter, actor, author, activist, teacher
Medusa - Queen of LA's thriving Hip-Hop scene

Additional local & national speakers and performers to be announced soon.
Stay tuned...

3) HOW CAN I GET INVOLVED?

Your next chance to join the cast of “Rolling Thunder meets Seattle: The
Organizing Effort” is

July 16, 7 PM
Seattle Central Community College, Main Building, RM 1110

But why wait -- join now! And we’ve made it easier. The following committees
request your input and involvement:

Program: To participate with the committee or to submit possible
program/workshop participants. Send email to:
Sea_program@rollingthundertour.org

Outreach: For individuals and organizations interested in endorsing,
sponsoring or simply spreading the word about Rolling Thunder:
Sea_outreach@rollingthundertour.org

Publicity: Help get the Rolling Thunder message out via the creation of
flyers, PSA’s, TV, newspapers, skywriting or subliminal messaging – you name
it!
Sea_Publicity@rollingthundertour.org

Vending: For those wanting to reserve a space or those interested in
selecting vendors.
Sea_vend@rollingthundertour.org

Seattle Rolling Thunder general information: Those interested in forming a
committee (got an idea we haven’t thought of yet?) or wanting to help the
day of the event.
Seattle@rollingthundertour.org

4) HELP US FLIER!

Okay now a BIG HEADS-UP...

When you attend events in your community, for example, last weekend’s
Fremont Solstice Parade, or this coming weekend’s Gay Pride Parade, please
consider (then DO) help pass out flyers. The more the better -- don’t be
shy.

The Gay Pride Parade is this Sunday, June 30, from 11am - 1:30pm. It begins
at Broadway and Pike on Capitol Hill in Seattle. It moves north along
Broadway up to Volunteer Park. If you want to help us flier at the parade,
meet other Rollers at 10am at 10th and Pike. More info at:
seattlepride.org

For more frequent Rolling Thunder Seattle organizing & program updates, join
a committee!

Until next time … keep up the rabble and ORGANIZE!

-- The Rolling Thunder Seattle Gang

CONTACT INFO
Email: seattle@rollingthundertour.org
Voice mail: (206) 686-2975
Snail mail: P.O. Box 28955 Seattle, WA 98118.
Web: www.rollingthundertour.org/seattle