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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (14620)9/12/2007 11:46:32 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224728
 
warwoundfakerkerry, edwardpopulist, drunkteddy: are just plain crooked, corrupt, insane, dishonest and perverse.



To: American Spirit who wrote (14620)9/12/2007 11:51:37 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 224728
 
A Political Manager Who Now Faces Scrutiny

By DANNY HAKIM and MARY WILLIAMS WALSH
Published: September 13, 2007
ALBANY, Sept. 12 — Few political partners have been closer than Hank Morris and Alan G. Hevesi.

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City Room Blog
The latest news and reader discussions from around the five boroughs and the region.

Go to City Room » Mr. Morris ran Mr. Hevesi’s breakthrough political campaign, an upset of City Comptroller Elizabeth Holtzman in 1993. He was the guiding force behind Mr. Hevesi’s combative last race, when he won re-election as state comptroller amid scandal last November. And he was Mr. Hevesi’s main adviser when he resigned a month later after pleading guilty to using state workers to chauffeur his wife.

Chief strategist, image maker and personal confidant, Mr. Morris, 54, has been far more than just a consultant to Mr. Hevesi. And it now appears that he earned much more than just political consulting fees from their relationship.

Since Mr. Hevesi took office in 2003, Mr. Morris created or was employed by half a dozen companies whose main purpose was to help hedge funds, private equity firms and others handle some of the investments of New York State’s $154 billion pension fund.

As comptroller, Mr. Hevesi had sole authority over the fund, and Mr. Morris appears to have been paid handsomely for making introductions: state investigators believe that at least $25 million in fees were paid to Mr. Morris’s business interests during Mr. Hevesi’s four-year tenure.

Mr. Morris’s earnings from pension fund work, along with those of other friends and political allies of Mr. Hevesi, a Democrat, are now the focus of criminal investigations by Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo, also a Democrat, and P. David Soares, the Albany County district attorney.

On Tuesday, Mr. Cuomo’s office said he had invoked sweeping powers under a decades-old state securities law, the Martin Act, to broadly expand his investigation of the comptroller’s office. Among the investigators’ discoveries is that a list of fees paid by investment firms to intermediaries like Mr. Morris had disappeared. Those intermediaries, known as placement agencies, helped investment firms win business from the pension fund.

Mr. Hevesi, 67, has denied wrongdoing beyond the chauffeur matter and cited the pension fund’s strong returns during his four-year tenure as evidence of sound management. Asked if Mr. Hevesi had been aware of Mr. Morris’s outside businesses, his lawyer, Bradley D. Simon, answered, “Mr. Hevesi was not aware of the alleged activities of outside third parties with respect to management of the pension fund.”

Legal experts say that it could be difficult to make a case against a political consultant moonlighting as a consultant to financial companies. But the investigation has cast a harsh spotlight on Mr. Morris, who declined to comment for this article.

Known for his nervous Woody Allen-like speaking mannerisms and penchant for wearing sweaters in all seasons, Mr. Morris has acquired a long list of enemies and former friends who are basking in schadenfreude.

But others praised his acumen; Senator Charles E. Schumer, who hired Mr. Morris to direct his 1998 Senate campaign, said in a statement, “Hank is one of the brightest people around and has done a great job for me.”

A native of Long Island who began his career battling the Nassau County Republican machine that gave birth to former Senator Alfonse M. D’Amato, Mr. Morris met Mr. Hevesi in the early 1970s when Mr. Hevesi was a young Queens assemblyman. By the mid-1970s, the two were socializing when Mr. Morris worked in the office of Speaker Stanley Steingut.

“They’re pages in a book, back to back, very close,” said Arthur J. Kremer, a Democratic assemblyman from Nassau County in that era.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Mr. Morris apprenticed with the political consultant David Garth, but the two had a bitter falling out, and Mr. Morris opened his own soup-to-nuts firm.

“It’s very rare that you find somebody in this business that does everything,” said Norman Adler, a consultant and lobbyist who has worked with Mr. Morris. “With Hank, he was the campaign manager, the media guy, the fund-raising guy. He did everything. If there were any arguments, they were all in his head.”



To: American Spirit who wrote (14620)9/13/2007 10:47:44 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224728
 
Half the NJ Dems are busy blowing up a 20ft rat...how appropriate. Evidently Hillary will be in town for a rally:

>New Jersey Supreme Court to Decide If Town Can Display Super-Sized Inflatable Rat

Thursday, September 13, 2007

TRENTON, N.J. — The state Supreme Court has dealt with such weighty issues as gay marriage, education funding and abortion rights. Now, the high court will turn its attention to whether a 20-foot inflatable rat can be kept out of a New Jersey town.

A three-judge appeals panel ruled Thursday that Lawrence Township could ban the big black rat. But the litigants can appeal automatically to the state Supreme Court because of one judge's partial dissent.

"We're disappointed, but the dissent gives us an automatic appeal to the Supreme Court of New Jersey. That's the silver lining," said Andrew Watson, a lawyer arguing for the right of a union local to display the rat during a job site protest.

The super-sized rat — on its hind legs and bearing fangs — had been blown up and situated at a 2005 labor event until police ticketed the senior union official onsite for violating a local sign law.

The event, at Gold's Gym in Lawrence, was staged by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) to protest low wages being paid to electricians by an out-of-area contractor. The rat is a symbol used by organized labor to signal a labor dispute or the use of nonunion workers.

The labor official, Wayne DeAngelo, was fined $100 plus $33 court costs for violating a Lawrence Township ordinance preventing the display of the large, rat-shaped balloon.

The law bans banners, streamers and inflatable signs, except those announcing grand openings.

DeAngelo on Thursday vowed to fight on.

"I feel it's restricting a worker's right to protest and bring information out to the public," he said. "The rat has been deemed a picketer by the National Labor Relations Board. It was just doing that."

John V. Dember, the lawyer for the town, sees the case differently.

"We consider this to be a really basic question of a municipality's ability to regulate itself, rather than labor management relations issue," he said.

The appeals panel affirmed DeAngelo's conviction Thursday, rejecting arguments that the sign law is vague, unconstitutional and should be trumped by federal union regulations.

However, DeAngelo's contention that the law violates free speech rights was not rejected entirely.

In a partial dissent, Superior Court Judge Jack Sabatino wrote that the sign ban may not be fair because it exempts signs announcing grand openings.

Such content discrimination — barring noncommercial signs while exempting some commercial ones — requires further consideration, Sabatino wrote.

"If a Disney retail store had just opened in the township, it could have promoted its wares for the grand opening with a rat-shaped balloon depicting the latest popular animated Disney character, from the movie 'Ratatouille,"' the judge wrote.<