truesee's Blog

Government spends 6 months probing 50-cent sausage theft

Murder, extortion? No, Waterfront Commission probing theft of $2 dollar bottle of iced tea, sausage

 

 

Larry Mcshane
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Friday, January 28th 2011, 4:00 AM

 

 

A suspect swiped a $2 bottle of iced tea and used it to wash down a stolen piece of sausage.

On the mobbed-up docks of Bayonne the six-month probe was known as Operation Missing Link.

Its target: A suspect who swiped a $2 bottle of iced tea and used it to wash down a stolen 50-cent piece of sausage - the lost link that left a bad taste in everybody's mouth, sources told the Daily News.

An investigation of the penny-ante heist was ordered by the Waterfront Commission, the agency charged with policing the docks for mob corruption, drug smuggling and other major crimes, the sources said.

The investigation included scores of interviews over countless hours dating to last August, sources said - even though the victim was reluctant to press charges.

"It's like Capt. Queeg and the strawberries," said New Jersey state Sen. Raymond Lesniak, a harsh critic of the bistate commission.

"It's a $2.50 ongoing investigation."

One of the sources was more blunt: "The whole investigation is bull----. It's a waste of manpower, money and resources."

Waterfront Commission General Counsel Phoebe Soriel, while declining to address specifics, said the case was more complex than it appeared.

"While the commission does not comment on pending investigations, it takes any theft in the port seriously - especially theft involving extortion," she said without going into detail.

The reported value of the stolen goods - a handful of change - is a microfraction of the $200 billion that moves annually through the ports of New York and New Jersey.

The overkill began when the commission received an anonymous tip that someone filched the drink and the sausage from a food truck catering to dock workers.

According to two sources, the case was quickly wrapped up: The thief confessed to the crime, and the victim said an arrest was unnecessary.

The victim "didn't want to see him behind bars...just wanted him to stop," one source said.

But top commission officials, convinced its investigators mishandled the case, ordered a second probe with every possible witness reinterviewed, the sources said.

Investigators from the 58-year-old agency returned to the docks and conducted about 80 second interviews, all the while cranking out piles of paperwork, the sources said.

The commission was blasted in August 2009 - one year before the sausage investigation was launched - as home to corrupt execs barely better than the waterfront's notorious mobsters.

Officials were accused in a ing 60-page report of misusing Homeland Security money, keeping a convicted crook in business and surfing the Internet for porn.

The iced-tea-and-sausage probe - which has yet to wrap up - is considered an embarrassment among investigators and dock workers.

"They snicker about it," one of the sources said.

Entry #3,840

Americans won't buy the tea party's free market snake oil

Americans won't buy the tea party's free market snake oil

 

11:30 AM EST, January 26, 2011

 

 

In the topsy-turvy, Alice-in-Wonderland alternative universe of the tea party and its Republican toadies, small-government and free-market economic policy will save the nation from disaster. In fact, as thinking Americans know full well, the current economic crisis is largely due to the unmitigated greed of Wall Street banks and American homeowners, abetted for years by the "free market" nonsense that Reps. Paul Ryan and Michelle Bachmann continue to foist on the public. When the history of this era is written, it will be clear that the Obama administration's aggressive action saved the nation from a fate far worse than the current recession.

 

B. Krueger

Ellicott City, Maryland 

 

The Baltimore Sun

Entry #3,836

Man arrested more than 250 times is in custody again

Man arrested more than 250 times is in custody again

Suspect accused of criminal trespass at O'Hare

Chicago Tribune 

8:05 PM CST, January 27, 2011

 

 

A 53-year-old man arrested more than 250 times was in custody again Thursday night, accused of trespassing at O'Hare International Airport, according to Chicago police.

Elijah Goodlett, whose last known address was on the 1000 block of North Central Avenue, was charged with criminal trespassing and soliciting unlawful business, both misdemeanors.

Goodlett was arrested at about 11:30 a.m. after trying to get travelers to let him carry their luggage.

Police said he was being locked up overnight because he violated his bail on a prior case, in which he is accused of trespassing at the airport.

Court records show many of his other arrests were on misdemeanor criminal trespassing and disorderly conduct charges.

Goodlett is due in court Friday.

Entry #3,834

Obama Names New Press Secretary

Sam Stein

Huffington Post

Jay Carney To Be Next White House Press Secretary

 

Jay Carney White House Press Secretary

First Posted: 01/27/11 03:27 PM  Updated: 01/27/11 05:58 PM

 

Jay Carney, Vice President Joe Biden's top spokesman, is taking over the post of White House Press Secretary, multiple Democratic sources confirmed to The Huffington Post.

Carney will be taking over the position being vacated by Robert Gibbs at a time when much of the original inner Obama circle is either leaving the White House or heading to Chicago to help with the re-election campaign.

CNN's Ed Henry first reported the news.

Carney was chosen from a candidate pool of roughly five, including several current members of the White House's communications team. One of those individuals, former DNC Communications Director Karen Finney (a paid contributor to MSNBC) praised the decision. "Jay will be great, he's well respected, in addition to his background as a journalist, his work with the Vice President on domestic and foreign policy issues will be a huge asset," she said.

In private, it was widely expected that Carney would end up at the post.

The choice caused a bit of rancor. Carney, who is known as being a bit more brass-knuckled than Gibbs and the other contenders, is, nevertheless, a creature of D.C., having previously served as TIME magazine's Washington bureau chief. In that regard, he is no different than many of the other administration hires. But that was still enough to cause some eye rolls.

"Most of us thought that hiring someone from the outside was likely 'too much' change," said one top Democratic strategist.

From the C-SPAN archives comes this 2006 quote from Carney -- then the Washington bureau chief of Time Magazine -- discussing the difficulties of the position he is set to assume.

"The best press secretaries were very deft at serving both their boss, the president, the White House, the administration, and the press. It's a tricky job. I'm sure I wouldn't be any good at it."

UPDATE: White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley sent the following email to staffers announcing Carney's new position, as well as thirteen other people taking on new roles:

Today, I am pleased to announce a number of important White House personnel decisions. I believe these decisions will bring greater clarity to our structure and roles and will enhance coordination and collaboration among us. I am excited about these changes and I look forward to working with all of you - those in existing roles as well as those filling new roles - in the weeks and months ahead. We have a great team.

I want to thank Pete Rouse for his counsel and leadership in this effort. My mission is to get the most out of the great talent that President Obama has brought to the White House so that we can all help him effectively serve and lead the American people.

Below are the names and titles of those assuming new roles:

- Ron Bloom, Assistant to the President for Manufacturing Policy (National Economic Council)

- Jay Carney, Assistant to the President and Press Secretary

- Stephanie Cutter, Assistant to the President and Deputy Senior Advisor

- Nancy-Ann DeParle, Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy

- David Lane, Assistant to the President and Counselor to the Chief of Staff

- Alyssa Mastromonaco, Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations

- Rob Nabors, Assistant to the President and Director of Legislative Affairs

- Emmett Beliveau, Deputy Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff to the Chief of Staff

- Jon Carson, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Public Engagement

- Danielle Crutchfield, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Scheduling and Advance

- David Cusack, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Advance

- Mike Strautmanis, Deputy Assistant to the President and Counselor for Strategic Engagement to the Senior Advisor

- Jessica Wright, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Scheduling

- Brian Deese, Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Director of the National Economic Council

Some of you may have heard that Phil Schiliro's intention was to leave the White House at the end of the last Congress. Phil has made extraordinary contributions to the President's success, and I've asked him to slow his departure in order to lend his wise counsel and guidance in the transition period ahead.

I am looking forward to collaborating with all of you. Effective collaboration requires a clear understanding of roles and responsibilities, so that we can hold each other accountable for the duties we've each undertaken. In coming days, I hope to clarify further the roles each of our offices needs to play, so we can continue to work together in the highly productive way the that we must.

I want to thank each of you for your hard work and for your commitment to serving the President and American people. We've got a lot of important work ahead of us.

Entry #3,833

Man awarded $14 million in wrongful conviction arrested on drug charges

Man released in 12-year-old's murder is arrested on drug charges

 

January 27, 2011 07:00 PM

Travis Andersen

Globe Staff

 

A Fall River man who won a $14 million judgment in a civil suit after being wrongfully convicted in an infamous 1988 murder case has been arrested on drug charges, authorities said.

Shawn Drumgold, 45, pleaded not guilty at his arraignment today in Roxbury District Court to charges including possession of a Class A substance with intent to distribute, and was released on $500 cash bail, according to Jake Wark, a spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley. Drumgold is due back in court on March 15.

His attorney, Rosemary C. Scapicchio of Boston, said in a phone interview that she believes he is innocent of the new charges.

‘‘It appears that he was back in Boston hanging around the wrong crowd,’’ said Scapicchio, who also represented Drumgold during his civil suit. ‘‘It was a poor choice of his to put himself in that situation, but I don’t believe he was out there selling drugs, no."

According to a Boston police report, an informant told police earlier this month that drugs were being sold out of an apartment on Cardington Street in Roxbury. Police raided the apartment on Wednesday, the report states, and recovered several bags of heroin and crack cocaine, as well as $304 cash from Drumgold’s person. He was arrested along with several other suspects, authorities said.

In 2003, Drumgold was released from prison after spending more than 14 years behind bars for the shooting death of 12-year-old Darlene Tiffany Moore, who was struck by gunfire as she sat atop a mail box near her mother’s home in the Grove Hall section of Roxbury.

The killing, which police investigated as a gang shooting gone awry, stunned the city and spurred a massive investigation to hunt down those responsible. Drumgold, then 23, was charged with the murder on Aug. 29, 1988, 10 days after the slaying. He went on trial the following October with an alleged accomplice, Terrence ‘‘Lug’’ Taylor.

While Taylor was acquitted after a judge said there was insufficient evidence to sustain a murder charge against him, Drumgold was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

However, Drumgold was released in November 2003 after prosecutors said they believed he was wrongfully convicted because he did not receive a fair trial. In April 2008, a federal jury in Boston ruled that a city police detective violated Drumgold’s civil rights during the investigation by concealing that he gave money to a key prosecution witness before that witness testified in the murder trial. The jury awarded Drumgold $14 million, plus interest, in October 2009.

A call to a number listed for Drumgold was not returned today.

‘‘I’m excited,’’ he said in the courthouse lobby in 2009 after the jury announced the award. ‘‘It’s been a long battle, but we’ve still got a long way to go.’’

Scapicchio said Drumgold has been working as a day laborer but has not received any job training or counseling from the state, which is required by law under the wrongful conviction statute.

‘‘I’m sure that 15 years of demons [in prison] takes a lot of counseling to take care of,’’ she said.

William Sinnott, corporation counsel for the city, said tonight in a statement that the city is awaiting the court’s final judgment on the verdict before deciding whether or not to appeal the $14 million award. Drumgold has not yet received any of the money, city officials said.

The Moore case remains open but no additional arrests have been made, according to Wark.

He said tonight that the Roxbury apartment — not any one suspect — was the primary target of the most recent drug investigation. At today's arraignment, Wark said, a prosecutor referenced Drumgold’s four-page rap sheet, which included several drug and motor vehicle offenses.

 
LINK TO PHOTO OF SHAWN DRUMGOLD:
 
Entry #3,830

Fugitive captured after 31-years

Thursday, 01.27.11

31-year fugitive from Black Tuna drug gang arrested

  

 MARK STEVEN PHILLIPS
MARK STEVEN PHILLIPS

JAY WEAVER

Miami Herald

 

A key member of the infamous Miami-based Black Tuna Gang, the biggest U.S. marijuana-smuggling operation of its time, was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service Thursday morning in West Palm Beach -- more than 31 years after he skipped out of a federal trial.

Mark Steven Phillips, 62, was captured at his rented apartment in a senior living community, law officers said.

``The judge wants to see you, Mark,'' a deputy U.S. marshal told Phillips after rousting him out of bed.

``The judge wants to see me from 30 years ago,'' Phillips responded, according to the Marshals Service.

Phillips was arrested in May 1979 along with a dozen others in what was then the nation's biggest pot importation cases in history -- before the dawn of the Cocaine Cowboy era in Miami. The trial was before U.S. District Judge James Lawrence King, who is still on the bench. Phillips was convicted in absentia on racketeering, possession and distribution charges in February 1980.

He is scheduled to have his first court appearance in decades before a Miami federal magistrate Thursday afternoon.

A joint DEA/FBI task force in Miami that took down the Black Tuna Gang estimated the ring smuggled 500 tons of marijuana into the United States over a 16-month period. The case was the first combined investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration and FBI on drug profits behind the marijuana trade.

The gang operated, at least briefly, from a suite in Miami Beach's Fontainebleau Hotel, according to the DEA.

The Tunas invested in yachts, particularly Fort Lauderdale-based Striker Aluminum Yachts. Its treasurer, Phillips, whose family owned the company, retrofitted yachts for maximum carrying capacity, painting water lines on the hulls to give the illusion they weren't riding low even when they were laden with tons of marijuana.

The grass was transported in these modified boats and unloaded at a series of waterfront ``stash houses'' in posh neighborhoods.

The Black Tuna gang also used state-of-the-art electronic equipment to stay in touch with marijuana-laden freighters and to monitor DEA and Customs communications channels.

A DEA-FBI probe of Florida banks called Operation Banco, which began in 1977, traced the group's drug profits through South Florida banks until members of the Black Tuna Gang made a large cash deposit in a Miami Beach bank.

In the racketeering indictment, Phillips was accused of showing two vessels in 1977 to a co-conspirator that had been used in the smuggling of 20 tons of marijuana into the United States. He also was accused of going to a Miami address to pick up a suitcase filled with cash, and paying $223,000 to buy a yacht for future marijuana smuggling trips.

After his arrest, Phillips was released from custody on July 5, 1979, on a $25,000 bond. He took part in his trial for more than a month, but then failed to show up on Nov. 5. King issued a bench warrant charging him as a fugitive.

The Marshals Service soon learned Phillips had fled the country.

In 1993, relying on informants, deputies discovered that he was in Santiago, Chile, had assumed a new identity, Marcus Steffan, and had married a Chilean woman. He also created a fishing company with her, calling it Fishing Research Inc., according to the marshals.

Eight years passed before deputy marshals received new information that he was traveling between Chile and Germany. They learned from German authorities that Phillips had obtained a driver's license and passport in that country in the name of ``Marcus Steffan.''

According to the marshals, the ``fake'' passport was valid for the next 10 years.

Knowing his new identity, deputy marshals began running checks on Phillips to see if he had entered the United States. They found that he flew into New York from London in August of 2000, and again several other times in 1999 and 1998.

In February 2001, they discovered that he had been renting two New York penthouse apartments for $10,000 a month, using the name of Steffan Marcus, but that he had been evicted the previous year.

Deputy marshals learned that Phillips flew from New York to Miami in January 2001, but they missed him by one month. He had continued on to Chile. He stayed there until 2010, when deputy marshals assigned to the Cold Case Fugitive Squad realized that he had slipped back into the United States and obtained a Florida driver's license under his real name in September.

The address on his new license was in Miami's historic black neighborhood, Overtown: 1050 NW 14th St., Apt. 430. It was the address of a motel.

Deputy marshals continued to track him down, this time to West Palm Beach, where they arrested him Thursday at the senior living community.

``Phillips never attempted to use his fake name,'' said Marshals Service spokesman Barry Golden. ``All of his belongings were contained in one travel bag.''



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/01/27/2037655/31-year-fugitive-from-black-tuna.html##ixzz1CB3kz9xW

Entry #3,829

Sarah Palin criticizes Obama's State of the Union address

LATimes

Sarah Palin harshly criticizes Obama's State of the Union address

In a blistering Facebook response to Obama's address, Sarah Palin says the president has lost the trust of the American people. The message is seen as a further move toward Palin becoming a presidential candidate.

 

James Oliphant

Washington Bureau

7:55 AM PST, January 27, 2011

Reporting from Washington

 

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Positioning herself more and more like a presidential candidate, Sarah Palin issued a lengthy and blistering response to President Obama's State of the Union address late Wednesday, saying that the president had lost the trust of the American people.

"Real leadership is more than just words; it's deeds," the former Alaska governor said in a message published on Facebook. "The president's deeds don't lend confidence that we can trust his words spoken" Tuesday night.

Like many Republicans, Palin equated Obama's call for renewed investment in education, infrastructure and technology as a mandate for ramped-up federal spending. Echoing President Clinton's State of the Union address in 1996, Palin said Obama was telling the public: "The era of big government is here as long as I am, so help me pay for it."

And adding a touch of snark, she said, Obama "dubbed it a "Winning The Future" speech, but the title's acronym seemed more accurate than much of the content."

Palin largely had been silent on the national stage since she posted a video response earlier this month to critics who tied her firearm-flavored campaign rhetoric to the shootings in Tucson. Those remarks then drew further criticism from some who said that she appeared too defensive and unconcerned with the victims, while also drawing the condemnation of some Jewish leaders for using the term "blood libel" to describe the attacks on her.

But her 1,700-word response to Obama's speech suggests that Palin is assuming a role as one of Obama's central antagonists. In it, she also accuses the president of not paying enough attention to the federal debt.

"Our country's future is at stake, and we're rapidly reaching a crisis point," Palin said. "Our government is spending too much, borrowing too much, and growing too much. Debt is stifling our private sector growth, and millions of Americans are desperately looking for work."

And she went to great pains to distinguish her oft-repeated view of "American exceptionalism" from Obama's: "He couched his proposals to grow government and increase spending in the language of 'national greatness,' Palin said. "This seems to be the Obama administration's version of American exceptionalism – an 'exceptionally big government,' in which a centralized government declares that we shall be great and innovative and competitive, not by individual initiative, but by government decree. Where once he used words like 'hope' and 'change,' the president may now talk about 'innovation' and 'competition'; but the audacity of his recycled rhetoric no longer inspires hope."

Palin made passing mention of the "tea party" -- and firmly embraced that movement's populist persona, saying that Obama is allied with big business and that everyday Americans would suffer as a result."It's basically a corporatist agenda – it's the collaboration between big government and the big businesses that have powerful friends in D.C. and can afford to hire big lobbyists," she said, labeling that collaboration "crony capitalism."

Quoting President Reagan, Palin said, 'You can't be for big government, big taxes, and big bureaucracy and still be for the little guy." President Obama's proposals [Tuesday] night stick the little guy with the bill, while big government and its big corporate partners prosper."

Palin wasn't the only possible presidential candidate to respond to the president's speech. Mitt Romney, appearing on Sean Hannity's show on Fox News on Wednesday evening, called Obama "misguided."

"He's trying awfully hard," the former Massachusetts governor said. "The problem is that he really doesn't know what to do."

Like Palin, Romney said that the president failed to offer specific plans to reduce unemployment and government spending. "He starts off by saying the right things," Romney said. "He doesn't understand that the entrepreneurial spirit of free men and women unfettered from an excessive government regulatory and taxation environment is the right way to create jobs and to build the new enterprises that frankly have powered us in the past and can power us in the future."

"It's sad to watch in some respects," Romney said.

Despite not formally announcing presidential bids, both potential candidates have been raising money at a furious pace through their political action committees. As reported earlier by The Times Romney has raised more than $9 million over last two years and Palin has raised more than $5.5 million.

Entry #3,828