.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

Proviso Probe

Monday, August 10, 2009

Forest Park poised to politicize village administrator position

The Village of Forest Park has been without a village administrator since Mike Sturino departed in January, 2009.

Proviso Township Trustee (and former Forest Park Commissioner) Tim Gillian has emerged as one of the finalists for the position. See Forest Park Review (Josh Adams).

Steve Bachman of Citizens United in Forest Park created the following video to show how the four commissioners were united on getting a village administrator hired. Commissioner Mark Hosty called for someone "non-political". Commissioner Rory Hoskins agreed with Hosty and called for it to be done expeditiously. Commissioner Mike Curry also agreed and emphasized the village would work better with the position filled. Commissioner Marty Tellalian called for filling the position to have significant expertise.



In a later meeting Mayor Anthony Calderone said the candidate should, "The individual selected would not be an expert in any one capacity and has a heeping amount of good old common sense and diplomacy." [emphasis added]

Here's a anecdote about Gillian that shows his version of common sense.

I covered a Village of Forest Park meeting shortly after the April, 2003 elections which seated Patrick Doolin, Gillian, Hosty and Theresa Steinbach and Anthony Calderone as Mayor.

Hosty relayed a complaint from a constituent about the intake of overnight parking requests. The constituent complained that when she called the number to request overnight parking for her mother the message said if it was before 8 PM to call the police department instead. The police department told her to call after 8 PM.

The message made more work for the person requesting the overnight parking and the police department with no value added.

Calderone called the overnight parking number to test this (it was still before 8 PM). And the message did say what Hosty reported.

Calderone and all the commissioners were fine with changing the message, except Gillian. Gillian argued that if the message was changed constituents would just find something else to complain about.

I was a new reporter and didn't know any of these people (except for meeting Calderone briefly at a party once). So I approached Gillian during a break in the meeting to see if he'd softened his position. Sometimes people say stupid stuff and then rethink it. But Gillian stuck to his guns. He was opposed to changing the message because he was opposed to giving complainers what they wanted.

I talked with Hosty after the meeting. Hosty agreed that Gillian's statements on the issue were odd and he said of Gillian, "I don't know who peed in his Wheaties this morning."

"Common sense" is of course a bogus quality in this situation. What Calderone means when he talks about "common sense" is people doing what Calderone wants done. What Calderone wants is "common sense" and people who have concerns and objections are interlopers and the over educated.

And Gillian will do what Calderone wants, partly because they are friends and political allies. Also because Calderone is giving Gillian an exceedingly generous paycheck for a job that Gillian isn't qualified for (per the job posting). And a big part of the reason Gillian will allow Calderone to call the shots at the village is that Gillian is just lazy. He didn't prepare for meetings by reading materials when he was a village trustee. Calderone wants to be able to call department heads to tell them what to do and then hide behind the village administrator when stuff goes badly. Gillian won't mind taking the fall because he's not a professional municipal official looking to get another job someplace else.

Mike Sturino did the job with sufficient professionalism he could credibly apply for a job in some other unit of government. Gillian won't feel constrained this way.

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, August 07, 2009

Forest Park village email case Calderone gets off

Forest Park Mayor Anthony Calderone has succeeded in getting himself removed as a defendant in former-commissioner Theresa Steinbach's lawsuit about pilfered emails. See Forest Park Review (Josh Adams).
"It's hard to feel vindicated in any sense because I've always felt from day one that this was some kind of ridiculous lawsuit," Calderone said of the ruling.

Doesn't everyone think the mayor should have access to the emails of his political opposition?

Labels: ,

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

two details on Forest Park rape case

Late Saturday, August 11 or early Sunday, August 12, an encounter between a male Forest Park police officer and a female barmaid caused the woman to file a rape complaint. The complaint is now being investigated by the Illinois State Police.

The Forest Park Police Department has diligently protected the identity of the police officer. However, Proviso Probe can report the name of the bar [UPDATE2:but has thought better of it] and the name of the officer, Nick Kozak.

Kozak has never appeared by name in Proviso Probe, but he was the officer Sgt. Dan Harder wanted Chief Jim Ryan to investigate for illegally beating a handcuffed prisoner, Paul Cruikshank, who was identified as "The Wrigleyville Rapist".

Harder ultimately made a complaint to the EEOC against the Village of Forest Park alleging Harder was the victim of illegal discrimination and described Kozak's conduct this way:
...a male police officer with a crew cut punched [Paul J. Cruikshank] numerous times in the head and ribs, and kneed him in his side. This was done while Cruikshank was handcuffed and in the back of a Forest Park Police Squad Car. [The detectives] told me that Cruikshank was hurt so badly that he could not eat his meals and they worried that his allegation could compromise their case.

Kozak's wife is a police dispatcher, which may have contributed to the discipline members of the FPPD have shown in protecting Kozak's identity.

There are other unconfirmed details that, if true, are difficult to reconcile with Mayor Anthony Calderone's statement:
"There is no allegation of combative, physical harm," Calderone said in an interview Friday. "This allegation centers around what would be considered a rape."

Whether or not Kozak can be proven guilty of rape beyond a reasonable doubt at a criminal trial, Calderone's statements may be very hard to reconcile with the allegations made by the woman in this case.

[UPDATE: Kozak will not be charged with rape. See Forest Park Review (Josh Adams). Now we get to see how Chief Ryan handles discipline when it's one of his favorites accused of misconduct. Remember, Harder was fired for using the f-word and Harder misrepresenting his whereabouts on a sick day.[UPDATE: Harder has requested I add the caveat "allegedly" to the lying allegation. Ryan claims Harder lied in a phone conversation with no witnesses. I did not mean for my word choice to imply I had made a judgment about this allegations against Harder.]]

[UPDATE3: Does this mean the Forest Park PD will now open an investigation into a false complaint of a felony?]

Labels: , , ,

Monday, July 23, 2007

will Cervone implicate Calderone for alarm deal at District 89?

Many of the anti-establishment, pro-reform crowd in Forest Park suspect Mayor Anthony Calderone is a nefarious political actor and using his official position for personal benefit. The allegations are largely that he uses the implied threat of being liquor commissioner to coerce support from bar owners and that he finds various ways to convert his political influence into contracts for his alarm business, Illinois Alarm.

For example, some suspected Illinois Alarm's contract with District 89 (Maywood and Melrose Park elementary schools) looked suspicious. Later we learned Illinois Alarm made over $800,000, not including the monthly fees. (BTW, when is Forest Park Review going to do the news story on this?)

Seven people connected with the Melrose Park Police Department were indicted on Thursday, including District 89 board member Ric Cervone.

Many of the anti-Calderone people are salivating at the possibility of Cervone telling the feds that Calderone's alarm contract at District 89 was an illegal sweetheart deal.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Illinois Alarm awarded huge contract by District 89

Bill Dwyer filed a FOIA request and discovered the details of Illinois Alarm's contracts with District 89 (Maywood & Melrose Park elementary schools). Illinois Alarm is the business owned by Forest Park Mayor Anthony Calderone.

Bill Dwyer (Forest Park Review):
Then there are the contracts that Tony Calderone has inked with governmental bodies the past few years. He insists he has no political connections with Melrose Park, but the $824,000 contract his Illinois Alarm firm inked with the District 89 school district, headquartered in Melrose Park, suggests different. Signed by Calderone the day after Christmas, it pays his company nearly $660,000 for installing security equipment in 13 district buildings, as well as nearly $160,000 in monthly fees over the next three years.

I haven't received anything yet from a May 10 FOIA with Melrose Park regarding Illinois Alarm, but I'm patient. I won't even get grumpy if I have to contact the Illinois Attorney General's office for help.

I remain curious about the bid process. How many bids did District 89 get for this job?

I look forward to the Forest Park Review doing a full news story on Illinois Alarm's dealings with District 89.
ADVERTISEMENT: Need any experienced handyman that charges reasonable rates? Call Lester Rodgers, (708)514-0028.

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

A07, election analysis

Congratulations to all the candidates elected and re-elected yesterday. And congratulations to those who ran and contributed to the public discourse.

What does it all mean?

The dominant trend was consolidation of power. However, my perspective may be skewed by having more personal contact with the races in Forest Park, District 88, District 209 and Maywood.

Forest Park went from a 3-2 divide on the village council to a presumed 4-1 split. District 88 (Bellwood & Stone Park elementary schools) went from a 4-3 divide to a 6-1 divide. District 209 (Proviso Township High Schools) went from a 4-3 split to a 5-2 split with one of the minority board members scheduled to leave the board in July (he will be replaced by the majority). In Maywood the allies of the mayor won all three seats up for election.

However, there were some countervailing examples. In Westchester the Progressive Party swept all three trustee seats. This means that Village President Paul Gattuso and his allies will be in the minority. Also the Broadview TEA Party swept all three seats to create a significant opposition block to Village President Henry Vicenik. In both communities political opposition was probably energized by Chicago Joe's Tea Room applying to open a strip club.

In Melrose Park the trustee candidates supported by Village President Ron Serpico handily defeated challengers backed by Proviso Township Trustee Jesse Martinez. Martinez has his political roots in Stone Park. He's a friend Beniamino Mazzulla, the village president of Stone Park. Martinez sees his political future as being in jumping to Melrose Park, a significantly larger community with a large and growing Latino population.

In Bellwood the referendum to build a new library was defeated for the second time. Evidence has now emerged that an anonymous mailing attacking the library referendum was paid for by a political ally of village president Frank Pasquale. By defeating the referendum and helping to dump the opposition on the elementary school board Pasquale showed that he remains the head-politician-in-charge in Bellwood, an overwhelmingly African-American suburb.

Voters re-elected two of three trustees to Triton College. Irene Moskal Del Giudice, identified as the lone independent voice on the board by the Wednesday Journal, narrowly defeated Stephen Kubiczky. The leading vote getter was Thomas Gary of Oak Park.

Gary had the support of the political organization aligned with board president Mark Stephens. He also had the support of the media outlet doing the best journalism on Triton, the Wednesday Journal. And he had the support of the Proviso Township Democratic Organization. Proviso is the largest township in the district. Gary's candidacy was initially pushed by Oak Park Democratic Committeeman Don Harmon. Harmon once again showed himself to be a master deal maker on the behalf of strong candidates. Harmon was first elected to a newly created Senate seat without facing opposition in either the primary or general elections.

Gary will be the first African-American to serve on the Triton board of trustees. And in Forest Park, Rory Hoskins will be the first African-American to serve as commissioner. Like Gary, Hoskins posted dominating numbers. Hoskins was the leading vote getter, exceeding the mayor's vote total by 300 votes.

To evaluate the individual “mayors” (most of them are really village presidents) in Proviso.

Power waxing
  • Frank Pasquale, Bellwood—won in schools and library, unopposed in village races
  • Ron Serpico, Melrose Park—won in village and schools
  • Henderson Yarbrough, Maywood—won in village
  • Anthony Calderone, Forest Park—won in village

Power waning
  • Paul Gattuso, Westchester—lost in village
  • Henry Vicenik, Broadview—lost in village

Yesterday was also a defeat for Proviso Democratic Committeeman Karen Yarbrough, wife of Henderson. She put her political capital into three races, District 88, District 89 and District 209. Her allies were swept in D88, D89 (Maywood and Melrose Park elementary schools) and lost significant ground in D209.

Arnie Bryant, the president of the Bellwood library board and a strong proponent of the new library, is a contributor to Proviso Probe.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Monday, April 16, 2007

KLEPT, Illinois Alarm scores pre-election work in District 89 [D89]


Illinois Alarm is owned by Forest Park Mayor Anthony Calderone.

This picture was taken in the last month at District 89 (Maywood and Melrose Park elementary schools). District 89 is currently controlled by allies of Recorder of Deeds Eugene Moore and Melrose Park Village President Ron Serpico.

Why the need to install new alarms right before the election?

Could it be that Serpico and/or Moore were steering Calderone a contract as part of some quid pro quo?

What would Serpico and Moore want from Calderone?

If Calderone did endorse the Proviso First Party, could it be that Calderone's price for selling-out Forest Park taxpayers was to get some alarm contracts?

BTW, I'm curious about the bid process for the District 89 alarm contract.Illinois Alarm is owned by Forest Park Mayor Anthony Calderone.

This picture was taken in the last month at District 89 (Maywood and Melrose Park elementary schools). District 89 is currently controlled by allies of Recorder of Deeds Eugene Moore and Melrose Park Village President Ron Serpico.

Why the need to install new alarms right before the election?

Could it be that Serpico and/or Moore were steering Calderone a contract as part of some quid pro quo?

What would Serpico and Moore want from Calderone?

If Calderone did endorse the Proviso First Party, could it be that Calderone's price for selling-out Forest Park taxpayers was to get some alarm contracts?

BTW, I'm curious about the bid process for the District 89 alarm contract.

Labels: , ,

Friday, April 13, 2007

A07, Trib covers FP mayor contest [FP]

Chicago Tribune (Victoria Pierce) has an article that summarizes the Forest Park race for mayor. This part was new to me.
The campaign turned negative this week when automated phone messages went out to Forest Park voters alleging unsavory connections between Calderone and nearby Melrose Park, where federal indictments and investigations have been ongoing in recent years.

"The whole notion of a weird alliance with Melrose Park, if that's the best they can do they have an empty bag," Calderone said, noting that these days just the mention of Melrose Park seems somehow tainted. "Even if the pope became mayor of Melrose Park it would have a negative connotation."

Steinbach said she has no connection with the group, Citizens for Honest Government, which created the phone messages.

The two officers for Citizens for Honest Government are Timothy D Mather, chair, and Lourdes Monteaguado, treasurer. I suspect the name is misspelled and it should be Lourdes Monteagudo. Mather lives at 1404 Ridgely in Naperville and Monteaguado gives his address as 1837 W Cermak in Chicago.

Monteagudo lives at 3307 N Harding in Chicago, according to Google. He has contributed to various Latino Democrats and the Blagojevich campaign. He was with Mayor Daley's United Neighborhood Organization at some point.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Monday, April 02, 2007

ETHICS, is Bill Dwyer's column defamatory to Mayor Anthony Calderone? [FP]

Last Thursday, Forest Park Mayor Anthony Calderone told me he has contacted a lawyer about suing the Forest Park Review and Bill Dwyer for defamation based on Dwyer's column last week.

I read Dwyer's column and made a list of the assertions it makes.

1.FBI is investigating FPPD cop for brutality.
2.Calderone protected said cop from investigation requested by a commissioner (presumably Patrick Doolin).
3.FPPD has pressured cops who raised questions about brutality.
4.“Village officials” have pressured people to “keep quiet”.
5.There were more cops working for the Melrose Park security company under investigation than previously revealed.
6.Calderone (or the village administrator) ordered Chief Jim Ryan to “work with” Vito Scavo, the head of the security company under federal investigation.
7.Calderone raises money from bars and liquor stores.
8.Anthony Bruno made $100,000 on Forest Park water project.
9.The Forest Park water project was discontinued after it became known the FBI was investigating the Melrose Park water project. Money was spent to begin the project but it wasn't completed.
10.Theresa Steinbach blocked Forest Park from paying $3,600 to Bruno by asking for details of what services Bruno rendered.
11.Illinois Alarm, Calderone's company is paid by the Village of Melrose Park.

Which of these claims are false?

Points 1 & 5 don't directly connect to Calderone that strongly. Dwyer could be factually wrong, but it's not clear that it harms Calderone.

Much of this is just restating allegations made during the hearing to fire Sgt. Dan Harder.

Harder based much of his defense on the claim that Chief Jim Ryan singled out Harder for discipline for minor infractions while protecting other officers from more serious allegations, especially police brutality. Points 2-4 seem to be restating allegations Harder already made.

Point 7 is obviously true.

Point 8-11 are presumably public record.

Point 6 is probably the strongest hook for claiming defamation. Here's what Dwyer wrote:
And did Police Chief Jim Ryan really tell others, who tried to warn him off dealing with [Vito] Scavo, that he was ordered to work with Scavo?

Scavo is the target of a FBI investigation of his security company.

If Dwyer has a source who claims to have had this conversation with Ryan then he would seem to be on firm ground. If this source is unwilling to testify then Dwyer might be in trouble.

If I were to speculate, I would guess the source was Lt. Steve Johnsen. He would have been in a position to have this discussion with Ryan. If the source is Johnsen, Dwyer will have no problem getting a deposition. Calderone and Ryan have already fired Johnsen; it's not like they can do anything more to mess with him.

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, March 30, 2007

A07, candidate forum Village of Forest Park [FP]

Last night candidates for Village of Forest Park participated in a candidate forum. Forest Park Forums has a discussion.

Since, I'm a candidate it's hard for me to give an evaluation separate from my personal perspective. I was happy with the questions asked. I wasn't as smooth as I'd like, but I think I made my points.

The candidates for mayor are:


And the commissioner candidates, in order of seating:

Before the event Calderone said he was talking to the attorney who represented Illinois Supreme Court Justice Bob Thomas in his defamation suit against a local newspaper about suing Forest Park Review for Bill Dwyer's column.

Afterward, former village clerk Joan White was talking to school board member Steve Johnsen about White running as a write-in for the two-year position without a candidate filed for election. Apparently a number of people are interested in running as write-in candidates.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

F07, Forest Park election results

Cook County Clerk has the results.

With five of twelve precincts reporting:
Theresa A. Steinbach 319 30.04%
Patrick J. Doolin 207 19.49%
Anthony T. Calderone 536 50.47%


[UPDATE: Final results:
Theresa A. Steinbach 738 29.66%
Patrick J. Doolin 456 18.33%
Anthony T. Calderone 1,294 52.01%

Vote total: 2,488. Forest Park Review (Josh Adams) says the 7,987 voters are registered in Forest Park. This would make voter turnout 31.1%, which I consider high for a local election primary.]

[UPDATE2: Rockford Register Star wrote about voter turnout. In the coverage area turnout ranged from 4.8% to 23%. So Forest Park voter turnout was exceptionally high considering the type of election.]

Labels: , , , , , ,

F07, predict outcome of Forest Park mayor's race [FP]




Vote for one:
Theresa A. Steinbach 1
Patrick J. Doolin 2
Anthony T. Calderone 3

It's like American Idol. Bottom vote getter doesn't appear in the next round (April 17 election).

I want to use one of my lifelines and poll the audience. Who will get insufficient support to make it to the next round? And for the bold, predict the percentages.

Please make predictions by 8:00 AM on election day.

[UPDATE: If you see anyone working your polling place you suspect of being a government employee shanghaied into service take a picture and send me a copy RadioNyberg circled "a" Yahoo spot c0m. We'll put the Proviso Probe team on identifying who these people are.]

Labels: , ,

Sunday, February 25, 2007

F07, Calderone dominating the sign war [FP]

Yesterday I was out counting signs in Forest Park. At one point I had 85 houses (not businesses) with Anthony Calderone signs, twelve for Theresa Steinbach and four for Patrick Doolin.

Please remind your Forest Park family, friends, neighbors and co-workers to vote on Tuesday.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

F07, Six days until mayor primary [FP]





The yard signs have been placed in Forest Park.

The mayor primary is next Tuesday, six days away. It's the usual polling places. Please remind your families, friends and neighbors to vote.

Forest Park Review
has letters from Steven Backman, Peter Nicholas Marafatsos, Patrick Tierney, Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #24, Carl Nyberg, Terry Steinbach, Melissa Johnson and Barbara Plona.

[UPDATE: The Forest Park Review did profiles of all three candidates: Anthony Calderone (campaign website), Patrick Doolin (campaign website) and Theresa Steinbach (campaign website).]

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

F07, Calderone mailer delivered

Yesterday I received a mailer from Mayor Anthony Calderone’s campaign. It’s 11” X 17”, has Calderon’s picture 20 times and uses purple for color.

My first reaction was that Calderone makes claims that can be rebutted. Some people might even say Calderone’s claims are untrue.

My next reaction was that Calderone’s mailing lacks focus. He tackles too many issues. It just becomes a blur.

Combining these two ideas, it seems like it would have been a stronger mailer if Calderone stayed focused on issues associated with him and conveyed his vision for the future.

Here are the points that rubbed me the wrong way.

“Listening to the community”—Give me a break! Calderone skipped the CUFP candidate forum. Many of the problems under Calderone have been because of poor communications with residents and businesses.

“Demanding fiscal discipline and accountability”—According to Calderone’s opponents they were the ones that raised questions about dubious spending. For example, Commissioner Theresa Steinbach says Forest Park was paying Anthony Bruno $3,000 per month until she demanded an accounting of what Bruno was doing for the village. Both Steinbach and Commissioner Patrick Doolin claim they were the ones who made sure the sales tax increase went into a dedicated fund for streets and alleys, not into general revenue.

“Creating a glass door into government”—This is just false. Under Calderone citizens can no longer use the Freedom of Information Act to get information that was once available. For example, neighbors used to be able to get building plans so they could evaluate if developers were acting in the best interest of the community. Calderone ended this.

“Tough Ethics Ordinance”—An ethics ordinance was implemented, as required by state law. So far the committee created by the ethics ordinance hasn’t held hearings on any complaints. And the ordinance allows the committee to fine complainants $5,000 for filing “frivolous” (not untrue, merely frivolous) complaints. Anyone who files a complaint is exposing him/herself to a $5,000 bill. Calderone’s tough ethics ordinance is exceedingly biased toward protecting those in power already.

“Robust code enforcement”—At the community policing meetings the imperfections in code enforcement has been cited by the citizens, village staff and the mayor as a problem. Calderone and his two supporters on the village council voted 3-2 to acquire 1000 Beloit. One of the reasons given for buying the building was that it was consistently violating code.

When Calderone makes unjustified claims in some areas it undermines his legitimate claims of accomplishment in other areas.

In my opinion (IMO) Calderone would be better off sticking to stuff that’s solid. He should run as the guy who oversaw Madison Street development and has a vision for the future. When Calderone tries to position himself as being an open government guy and a reformer he comes across as pandering and bullshitting.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, February 08, 2007

F07, Calderone, Doolin & Steinback take Qs together [FP]

Last night all three candidates for mayor addressed about 170 people at Field Stevenson Middle School. As school board member Steve Johnsen observed, pretty much everyone there had already picked which candidate they were supporting.

My take, for what it's worth is that Mayor Anthony Calderone and Commissioner Patrick Doolin did quite well at presenting what they had to say. Steinbach's presentation was fine, but the other candidates excelled at the style portion of the presentation.

On the issues:

All three candidates are against home rule.

All three candidates want to develop Roosevelt Road.

All three candidates committed not to use eminent domain to acquire homes for parking.

On the Roos property Calderone said Forest Park "should embrace progress" and seemed to indicate he was more inclined to let developers do what they think is profitable. Doolin said Calderone raising money from the developers was an example of pay-to-play politics.

Doolin favors removing administrative authority for commissioners to eliminate politicians meddling in day-to-day management of the village. Steinbach said the politicians getting involved was better than leaving decisions to unelected bureaucrats. Calderone claimed that the commissioner form of government gives commissioners the right to meddle and so Doolin's proposal didn't make sense.

Doolin seemed eager to put a car dealership or a big box store on the site of the reserve center.

Doolin accused Calderone of engaging in political meddling in the police department. Steinbach indicated that her solution to problems in the police department were to hire the "best and brightest" and have them practice good management. Calderone portrayed the conflicts in the department as getting rid of bad cops who were "cheating the system" and blamed the bad PR on the newspaper.

Calderone said, "Ninety-five percent of police officers think the police department is doing well. This is what I hear from the police chief."

Regarding District 209, both Doolin and Steinbach advocated for mayors to get out of school board politics. Calderone characterized involvement as not being about politics but "forging cooperation".

Steinbach used her vote against a water rate increase to contrast herself with Calderone and Doolin and put her on the side of senior citizens. Doolin responded by saying that the village was subsidizing the cost of water so the rate increase was the fiscally responsible thing to do.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

PO-PO, Lt. Johnsen retires rather than face firing hearing [FP]

Citing financial considerations Lt. Steve Johnsen has retired from the Forest Park Police Department rather than endure a protracted hearing on Chief Ryan's decision to fire him. See Forest Park Review (Josh Adams):
In a letter to the editor submitted to the Forest Park Review, Johnsen made little mention of his former supervisor and targeted most of his anger at Mayor Anthony Calderone. According to Johnsen, Calderone intentionally hires weak administrators that he micro-manages, interjecting politics into otherwise non-political issues. Further, Johnsen defended his handling of an arrest for disorderly conduct back in July of 2005 that eventually prompted an internal investigation leading to the charges of misconduct lodged by Ryan....

"I think that Steve Johnsen truly has and continues to play politics," Calderone said. "I think it's inexcusable that a person such as he plays politics and then when he does something wrong, he denies playing politics."

Labels: , , ,