by K. Lloyd Billingsley
When we last addressed California’s hidden money scandal,
the state’s Attorney General found that the state Parks had concealed
only $20.5 million and the remaining $33 million was “simply obscured by
long-term complexities in managing that fund.” The AG passed the buck
by letting the state Natural Resources Agency decide whether to bring in
local law enforcement. Now the Sacramento County District Attorney Jan
Scully, a Republican, has declined to bring charges because the Attorney General failed to identify any crime. That made sense on one level.
Governor Jerry Brown had asked the AG, a law-enforcement body, to
conduct an “administrative” investigation, like asking the police to
make sure a threatened business has all the right permits and signs in
place. To “knowingly keep any false account,” is a felony according to
section 424 of the state penal code, legal experts told the Sacramento Bee,
which broke the hidden money story. If the AG knew about that statute,
which may well be doubted, they still declined to file charges. With
local law enforcement opting out Parks bosses are considering the case
closed. Whoever hid the money got away with it, but the case still has
educational value.
Government is clearly unqualified to investigate itself but remains
unwilling to let independent investigators see the books. That’s why
government employees can hide millions with impunity. One witness told
the AG that the money was hidden so the state would not further reduce
the Parks Department budget, a perfectly plausible motive. The scandal
also revealed that a criminal background is no object to promotion in
state government.
Career bureaucrat Manuel Thomas Lopez spent 12 of his 23 years in state government on court-ordered probation
for a lengthy list of convictions, including felony drunk driving. But
Lopez was duly promoted to deputy of administrative services in the
parks department, where he presided over an unauthorized vacation
buyout. His boss Ruth Coleman, who would not talk to the AG and has
retained an attorney, accused Lopez of hiding the $54 million.
When the story broke Sen. Noreen Evans, Santa Rosa Democrat, wondered how much more “deceit and thievery”
was going on in state government. That remains unanswered but prompts
another question. California has long been a trendsetter for the rest of
the nation. Could such deceit and thievery also be going on in agencies
of the federal government, which operates scores of national parks?
Odds are we’ll never find out.
Independent Institute
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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