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Black Thursday

A lot will be said and written today about Jim Black and our turn-of-the-century corruption scandal.

I’ll start throwing links into this post as things turn up.
From the Char-O reaction story:

“It’s a sad day for Mecklenburg. He has been a major contributor, but if he’s guilty of a crime he’s got to pay for it. I don’t think his motivation was avarice or self-aggrandizement. In his view he was doing what’s good for Mecklenburg. But what he did was wrong and he’s got to pay for it.” PAT COTHAM, Chair of Charlotte’s Uptown Democratic Forum

Jerry Meek in the N&O

“It’s unfortunate that this is the ending that comes to a man who has spent so much of his career serving the people of North Carolina,” N.C. Democratic Party Chairman Jerry Meek said Tuesday night.

Here’s Bob Hall’s statement released this morning:

Statement from Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North Carolina

The image of “strings attached” runs through the sad and not-yet-finished story of House Speaker Jim Black’s fall from power. Investigators at the State Board of Elections began pulling on a string connected to one group of Black’s political donors soon after Democracy North Carolina filed a complaint in June 2004 about the illegal donations to his campaign from
video-poker operators. That string led investigators to a host of other problems. Meanwhile, another ball of string connected to gambling, namely the proposed state lottery, began unraveling and revealing attachments between Speaker Black and other problem areas, including what eventually emerged as illegal lobbying and fraud.

Federal and state investigators following the strings kept finding new tangles and entanglements. It was only a matter of time before a clearly illegal quid-pro-quo attachment sealed the fate of House Speaker Jim Black.
This story is not over, however. We would hope that Black assists investigators in punishing the money suppliers involved in illegal activities. Corruption cuts at the heart of our fundamental system of self-government, which relies on open debate and honest representation of the people for the public good. Corruption is a crime against the people, against democracy itself. It should be rooted out and defeated.

Unfortunately, the danger today is more than one person committing a crime. Jim Black illustrates that even well intentioned, conscientious public servants can get caught up in a system that leads people to make bad choices. In search of money to stay in power, they follow the wrong strings
and become entangled in attachments that eventually smother them. As the state has become more competitive and campaign costs have risen, the demand for political donations has soared.

More than four times as much money moved through the 2006 state legislative campaigns as did just a dozen years ago. And too much of that money comes with strings attached. The money chase in North Carolina today clearly threatens the integrity of fair elections, free from corrupting influences.
That’s why Democracy North Carolina and a host of others recommend providing candidates with a new supply of clean money, attached only to the voters’interests and conditioned on the candidates satisfying certain public-trust condition. There is no complete solution, but without tackling the root cause of corruption, we can expect to see another politician endure the same fate as Jim Black - and Meg Scott Phipps - in the not too distant future.
And we the people suffer the consequences.

Comments (2) left to “Black Thursday”

  1. The Mill - Warp & Woof in Carrboro » Democracy North Carolina on the Jim Black case wrote:

    [...] Black ThursdayThe House organizesThe other surge [...]

  2. Dallas Woodhouse wrote:

    Why Should Black and Decker Continue to Costs Taxpayers?

    AFP-NC Supports Effort to Cut off Taxpayer Funded Pensions to Lawmakers Turned Felons

    In March of 2005, the grassroots membership of Americans for Prosperity-North Carolina was among the first to call for Speaker Black’s resignation. He refused. Now after millions of dollars in investigations expenses, significant harm to the electoral system and the corrupt creation of the state lottery, Jim Black is headed to federal prison again at the expense of taxpayers. Soon former state representative Michael Decker will be joining him.

    Unlike many states North Carolina does not appear to have a law that will keep these convicted felons who took bribes and broke the law from collecting a taxpayer funded pension, this is wrong and should be changed immediately.

    AFP-NC is calling on the legislature to immediately correct this statutory oversight and prohibit any individual from receiving any public pension if they are convicted of a crime that results from abusing their elected or appointed position in any level of state government.

    “The legislature should immediately pass the ‘Black & Decker Pension’ bill to correct this oversight in law,” said Francis De Luca-State Director AFP-NC.
    “The citizens of North Carolina do not expect their hard earned tax dollars to go to convicted criminals who abused the public trust.”

    To see a list of states and the current status on policies governing termination or Confiscation of Public Pensions go to:
    http://www.nasra.org/resources/Pension%20termination%20policies.pdf

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