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Carrie Johnson, R.I.P. (By Ed Slavin, David Nolan, First Coast News, St. Augustine Record, et al.)

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Christmas won't be the same without her. Lincolnville won't be the same without her. I miss her already.   Her "soul fire," as Andrew Young would call it, was contagious.

In the early 1990s -- at a time when St. Augustine was still smeared, bleared and teared by "an invisible vapor" of segregationist history -- Carrie Johnson moved back here.  She  promoted healing and brotherhood, every day, in every single way.

I shall always fondly remember one night seated by her, in a rally and a moment that changed the course of our history in our Nation's Oldest (and Oddest) City.

Background: During 2005-2006, controversial St. Augustine City Manager WILLIAM BARRY HARRIS and his henchmen dumped a landfill in a lake -- contaminated solid waste was illegally dumped in our Old City Reservoir.  In late 2006, taciturn, laconic City Attorney James Patrick Wilson quit his job, later stating publicly, "I worked there for fourteen years.  They dumped a landfill in a lake.  They didn't ask me.  They didn't tell me.  So I figured it was time to move on."

It was Environmental Racism at its worst.

Lincolnville was targeted for dumping of 2000 truckloads of contminated solid waste, a proposition endorsed by three Commissioners -- ERROL JONES, DONALD CRICHLOW and Mayor JOSEPH LESTER BOLES, at a dodgy meeting early in the morning after the November 2007 Veterans Day observance holiday. Public comment was forbidden and arrests were threatened by BOLES, in violation of the promise in the St. Augustine Record editorial that we'd be able to speak.  (Evidently, Commissioners Susan Burk and George Gardner disapproved of the scheme, but left the early morning meeting early rather than state their opposition and vote against it.)

Unjust stewards in our City and State wanted to dump 40,000 acres of contaminated solid waste on public land at the south end of Lincolnville, plop dirt on to and call it a "park."

We, the People, organized, resisted, litigated and stopped this unethical scheme.  The waste is now in a Class I landfill in Nassau County.

The hare-brained scheme was on the advice of malfeasant City Attorney RONALD WANYE BROWN and AKERMAN SENTERFITT attorneys and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP stands for "Don't Expect Protection," as David Thundershield Queen put it best).

Louche lawyers tried to euchre us.  Residents were not believing them and then-assistant City Manager John Patrick Regan, P.E. conceded was a "counterintuitive" scheme -- on orders of City Manager WILLIAM BARRY HARRISS, who gave orders not to agree without a court order to dump the waste in a Class I landfill, no matter what.

Seven of us challenged HARRISS in an administrative complaint, then pending before the Florida Department of Administrative hearings, defined by polluter lawyers WILLIAM PENCE and THOMAS O'NEAL INGRAM from AKERMAN law firm.

Flummoxed, the itty-bitty-City, through then-Commissioner ERROL DONLEDY JONES, said it would drop this plan, to applause from the assembled multitude filling an hours-long meeting at St. Paul A.M.E. Church.

After that, I carefully wrote a legible note to Carrie, asking her to lead the crowd in song.  There was not a dry eye in the church.  We ALL sang, "WE SHALL OVERCOME."








Collection of articles on Carrie Johnson follows:

By David Nolan, from St. Augustine Record and Historic City News:



Opinion
GUEST COLUMN: She did music in the key of ’C’arrie

By David Nolan / St. Augustine
Posted Nov 27, 2018 at 9:18 PM
Updated Nov 27, 2018 at 9:18 PM

St. Augustine’s most beloved citizen passed away at 7 a.m. Tuesday. Carrie Johnson was 83 years old.

I had a phone call from her daughter June Lester that her mother had been under Hospice care for lung cancer.

“The Voice of Lincolnville” or “Miss Carrie,” as she was widely known, had been a prominent figure in the community since she returned to her childhood hometown in the early 1990s after the devastation caused by Hurricane Andrew to Miami, where she had lived for many years, raising a family and worked as a teacher’s aide.

Always entrepreneurial, she used her extraordinary voice as a street singer on St. George Street, until the city banned singers. Then a group of admirers paid to produce a tape of her singing, which she sold at many performances around the state of “Black History Through Song” and a one-woman show where she portrayed the indomitable Harriet Tubman of the Underground Railroad.

In earlier years she had been a member of the famous Salt and Pepper Gospel Choir that performed at Yale University and on the steps of the nation’s Capital in Washington, D.C.

Returning to the Ancient City at a time when there was still what she often called “an invisible vapor” left over from the age of racial segregation, she launched a personal effort against it by greeting everyone — black and white — as she traversed the town on the three-wheeled vehicle, which she variously described as her “Rolls Royce” or “Lamborghini.” “HELLO, DARLING” was the greeting broadcast in a booming voice from the birdlike, grey-haired great grandmother. The force of her personality and goodwill proved irresistible and, without the worldly benefits of wealth or power, she managed to become a significant force in the community. Her picture regularly graced the front pages of newspapers and magazines, and she appeared in many films about St. Augustine.

She was a founder of ACCORD, the organization formed in 2002 to honor the participants in the civil rights movement in St. Augustine. She also served as vice president of the Fort Mose Historical Society, which promoted the important story of the pioneer free black community dating back to 1738 that formed the northern defense of St. Augustine in Spanish colonial times. For many years she sponsored Christmas Caroling, and established a foundation to help students from homeless families. In 2016, she promoted a celebration of the 150th anniversary of Lincolnville.

She had been honored most recently by being selected to light the city Christmas tree in the plaza. Family members stood in for her, as her health did not permit her to appear.

It would take an encyclopedia to list all of the community events where she was a major speaker or organizer or singer. Suffice it to say that she was an inspiration to all, encouraging everyone to do their best — and more.


I was just thinking the other day that Carrie’s first St. Augustine home was in a building, no longer standing, at the corner of Bravo and Weeden streets at the northern end of Lincolnville. She was living almost in the backyard of that site, at the corner of Bravo and Riberia streets in 2016 when Hurricane Michael hit and inundated her house with several feet of water. Given the increase of real estate prices, she was unable to find any affordable nearby place to live, and spent her last two years — the legendary “Voice of Lincolnville” — living in St. Augustine Shores.

How appropriate if the city would rename Bravo Street, where she had her first and last Lincolnville homes, in honor of our beloved Carrie Johnson!

Please pass the word on to those who knew and loved her, that Carrie has now taken her voice to heaven.

Opinion editor’s note: David Nolan is Lincolnville’s most prolific and intimate historian — and among its more valuable friends in terms of the recognition and respect his interest has lent to an almost forgotten city within one of the nation’s more storied ones. Miss Carrie wore her rearing well — for so many souls to touch and to hear.





From St. Augustine Record:

GOODBYE, DARLING: ’The Voice of Lincolnville, Carrie Johnson passes at 83

Previous
HIDE CAPTION
Dr. Robert Hayling embraces Maude Jackson as Carrie Johnson stands nearby during the unveiling of a Freedom Trail Marker in front of his former house at 160 Martin Luther King Ave. Friday afternoon, November 20, 2009. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson stands on the front steps of her Lincolnville home in 2013. Dubbed “The Voice of Lincolnville” and the organizer of the Lincolnville Community Christmas Caroling tradition, Johnson died Tuesday morning at age 83. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Riding her tricycle, Carrie Johnson leads the second annual St. Patrick’s Day parade through the streets of downtown on Saturday morning, March 10, 2012. Johnson is flanked by Helene and Dan Sullivan and followed closely by County Commission Chairman Mark Miner, left, and Mayor Joe Bolles, right. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson sits in her Lincolnville home on October 9, 2015. [RECORD FILE]
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Lincolnville resident Carrie Johnson hugs Jo Curtis during a surprise birthday party Saturday afternoon, February 28, 2009, at St. Paul’s AME Church. Johnson was presented with a new purple tricycle at the birthday bash. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johns sits in the living room of home in Linclonville on Friday afternoon, Feb. 8, 2013. [RECORD FILE]
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Carrie Johnson gets excited Friday, December 7, 2001, after passing the Olympic flame from the torch she carried to a cauldron at the St. Augustine celebration of the Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Torch Relay. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johns stands in the front yard of her home.
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson leans on her three-wheel bike as she talks to the crowd gathered for a groundbreaking ceremony for her Habitat for Humanity home that will be built on DeHaven Street in St. Augustine on Wednesday, October 10, 2012. By PETER WILLOTT, peter.willott@staugustine.com
HIDE CAPTION
Dr. Robert Hayling embraces Maude Jackson as Carrie Johnson stands nearby during the unveiling of a Freedom Trail Marker in front of his former house at 160 Martin Luther King Ave. Friday afternoon, November 20, 2009. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson stands on the front steps of her Lincolnville home in 2013. Dubbed “The Voice of Lincolnville” and the organizer of the Lincolnville Community Christmas Caroling tradition, Johnson died Tuesday morning at age 83. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Riding her tricycle, Carrie Johnson leads the second annual St. Patrick’s Day parade through the streets of downtown on Saturday morning, March 10, 2012. Johnson is flanked by Helene and Dan Sullivan and followed closely by County Commission Chairman Mark Miner, left, and Mayor Joe Bolles, right. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson sits in her Lincolnville home on October 9, 2015. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Lincolnville resident Carrie Johnson hugs Jo Curtis during a surprise birthday party Saturday afternoon, February 28, 2009, at St. Paul’s AME Church. Johnson was presented with a new purple tricycle at the birthday bash. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johns sits in the living room of home in Linclonville on Friday afternoon, Feb. 8, 2013. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson gets excited Friday, December 7, 2001, after passing the Olympic flame from the torch she carried to a cauldron at the St. Augustine celebration of the Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Torch Relay. [RECORD FILE]
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johns stands in the front yard of her home.
HIDE CAPTION
Carrie Johnson leans on her three-wheel bike as she talks to the crowd gathered for a groundbreaking ceremony for her Habitat for Humanity home that will be built on DeHaven Street in St. Augustine on Wednesday, October 10, 2012. By PETER WILLOTT, peter.willott@staugustine.com
HIDE CAPTION
Dr. Robert Hayling embraces Maude Jackson as Carrie Johnson stands nearby during the unveiling of a Freedom Trail Marker in front of his former house at 160 Martin Luther King Ave. Friday afternoon, November 20, 2009. [RECORD FILE]
Next

By Jared Keever
Posted at 2:01 AM
The streets of St. Augustine and the halls of its convalescent homes will be a little quieter this holiday season.

Carrie Johnson, “The Voice of Lincolnville” and the organizer of the Lincolnville Community Christmas Caroling tradition, died Tuesday morning.

She was 83.

Johnson, or “Miss Carrie” as she was known to most, is perhaps best remembered for her “Hi, Darling” greeting that she offered for years as she rode the streets of Lincolnville on her adult-sized tricycle.

“That was quite a trademark,” St. Augustine historian David Nolan told The Record on Tuesday. “I bet half the town remembers that.”

Certainly everyone who spoke with The Record upon news of Johnson’s death remembered it.

“That I think, more so than anything, has stuck with a lot of people,” Johnson’s daughter, Carrie McCrary, shared.

It was something that she said she thought exemplified her mother’s “core nature” of love.

“She loved freely,” the daughter said.

Upon receiving news that her mother’s health was failing, McCrary, who lives out of town, said she came to visit as did other family members who lived out of the area.

Johnson, she said, was scheduled to throw the switch earlier this month for Light Up! Night, the kickoff for the city’s annual Night of Lights display, but she was too weak to make it.

Family members stepped in to do the honors for her, but her absence was likely conspicuous for many who had come to equate her face with holiday cheer in downtown St. Augustine.

For more than 20 years Johnson, with the help of others, would organize carolers to visit the city’s nursing and convalescent homes.

It’s why St. Augustine Police Chief Barry Fox and his department honored her last year with a surprise greeting in the plaza as Johnson and her troupe of well-wishers made the rounds on one of the red St. Augustine Sightseeing Trains for their annual caroling effort.

“I just wanted to let her know how much the department loved her,” Fox said on Tuesday.

Johnson, he said, was among the first people he got to know in the Lincolnville neighborhood in the early years of his career patrolling the downtown area.

“Miss Carrie has always been very near and dear to me,” he said.

She was to plenty of others, too, likely a product of that generous and loving spirit that McCrary spoke of.

A 2015 article in The Record, after she was selected as one of that year’s “10 Who Make a Difference,” noted that not only did Johnson organize the carolers, she also founded Miss Carrie’s Foundation for Homeless Students, to provide resources for the youngest of the county’s most vulnerable residents and was on the planning committee for the Lincolnville 150th anniversary celebration.

A letter from Nolan on Tuesday said she also helped found the Anniversary to Commemorate the Civil Rights Demonstrations, or ACCORD, organization and served as vice president of the Fort Mose Historical Society

“It would take an encyclopedia to list all of the community events where she was a major speaker or organizer or singer,” Nolan wrote. “Suffice it to say that she was an inspiration to all, encouraging everyone to do their best — and more.”

“She put the ‘saint’ in St. Augustine,” he said.




From First Coast News:

St. Augustine's sweetheart, Miss Carrie, will be missed by many

St. Augustine's 'Sweetheart' Miss Carrie dies at 83

"In spite of her passing, it's a time for rejoicing because Momma would not want people to be sad."
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. – “In spite of her passing, it’s a time for rejoicing because Momma would not want people to be sad.”
With those words, Carrie McCrary characterized her mother, Carrie Johnson, who held the sentimental title, “St. Augustine’s Sweetheart”. Johnson passed away Tuesday morning at the age of 83 after a battle with lung cancer.
“She defies categorization, she didn’t have a resume,” said St. Augustine mayor Nancy Shaver Tuesday night. To that point, Carrie Johnson never held office, nor even an official title in her life, according to her family. But if the value of a life can be measured in nicknames, Johnson – perhaps best known as “Miss Carrie” and “The Voice of Lincolnville” – indeed stands above most. She accomplished much without need of political power.
“The Accord Freedom Trail, the Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center,” Mayor Shaver noted as just some of Johnson’s devotions. “Miss Carrie was a part of the founding of [the Accord Freedom Trail],” which commemorates participants in the Civil Rights Movement, so much of which was rooted in her beloved Lincolnville neighborhood of St. Augustine.
But those who knew Johnson best say she was not strident in striking down racism, instead choosing to defeat it the only way she saw fit.
“She always said ‘You might not be able to change a whole group at one time’,” daughter June Lester recalled, “’but you can undo racism one person at a time’.”
And always with a consistent demeanor, according to Mayor Shaver, who also calls Lincolnville home.
“She loved her fellow man, and everyone knew that.”
As much as Johnson decried injustice, friends say they’ll remember her for singing rejoice.
“The Christmas caroling thing with the Red Trains in town, I did that with her for seven years,” St. Augustine Police officer Mark Samson recalled.
Even her means of getting around town – a distinctive tricycle she called her “Lambourghini,” was known ubiquitously.
“She would ride her bicycle – tricycle, actually – all day, every day, around,” said Samson’s fellow St. Augustine Police officer Dee Brown.
Mayor Shaver told First Coast News you could not live in Lincolnville without seeing Johnson and her precious ride.
“She held a biblical truth in her being, and it’s how she walked the streets, or actually rode the streets on her tricycle,” the mayor said.
Even police, whose job it is to serve and protect, say Johnson was an invaluable resource who could easily have been considered an honorary officer.
“If we needed anything in the community, she was the person to go to,” Brown asserted.
The same warmth she used to change society, they say, is the warmth with which Johnson greeted every person she met.
“Everybody was darling, sweetheart, or baby, and she meant it,” daughter Carrie McCrary described her mother’s disposition. “Yeah, she meant that!,” her sister June agreed.
“Hello darling! … Bye!,” the mayor affected her best impression with a gentle southern lilt.
And, through it all, Carrie Johnson – Miss Carrie, St. Augustine’s Sweetheart, and the Voice of Lincolnville – achieved so much by way of so much modesty.
“An ordinary woman that lived an extraordinary life,” Brown concluded.

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SEASIDE VILLAS IN ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH -- BIG FINE$ COMING OVER BIG CODE VIOLATIONS?

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Deepak Israni



A California corporation owned by DEEPAK ISRANI (above), and the current employer of Commissioner and ex-Mayor RICHARD BURTT O'BRIEN (STEVEN CUPOLO, above in top photo at right, above with his tenant-victim Jennifer LeBluff), face the possibility of big fines over horrific housing conditions at Seaside Villas.

The two corporations will be fined -- and could also be punished criminally and found liable in civil litigation -- if they don't comply with orders of the St. Augustine Beach Code Enforcement Board to inspect and to remedy massive code violations at a 35 year old 164 unit condominium complex that is mostly owned by non-resident corporations.

For years, there have been tenant complaints and desuetude (non enforcement) by City staff.  Then triple-dipping incompetent corrupt Planning and Zoning Director GARY LARSON quit.  On December 4, 2018, BRIAN WILLIAM LAW started work.  Suddenly, law enforcement became a priority, where before then it was only favoritism.

The St. Augustine Beach Code Enforcement Board met today and heard unrebutted testimony from Code Enforcement inspector Bill Ward, tenant Jennifer LeBuff, and STEVE CUPELO, developer and owner of COLDWELL BANKER PREMIER PROPERTIES, and a building manager for PACIFICA COMPANIES, a California corporation whose CEO is DEEPAK MISRANI, a businessman with offices in India, whose parent company reportedly does $442 million in business annually and has 2000 employees, doing $8 billion in deals in Mexico, U.S. and India since 1987.

Mr. Ward's testimony about code violations was reasoned and documented, as was Ms. LeBuff's testimony.

Then there was much finger-pointing between unsworn non-lawyer representatives for two reckless, feckless, soulless absentee landlord corporations.  

But the hardy Code Enforcement Board voted to order action.  

Unanimously.  

I wanted to sing the Star Spangled Banner.

I spoke in favor of the tenants, and in favor of stronger law enforcement against landlords who risk tenants' lives with mold and other hazards.

Good job by St. Augustine Beach City government. Kudos.

After the meeting, I was grateful for SABPD's presence (unusual for a Code Enforcement meeting), when STEVE CUPOLO, developer and owner of COLDWELL BANKER PREMIER PROPERTIES emitted insults at me, in the presence of witnesses, in retaliation for First Amendment protected activity.

I wear STEVEN CUPOLO's scorn as a badge of honor.   (CUPOLO is the employer of St. Augustine Beach's disgraced ex-Mayor RICHARD BURTT O'BRIEN, so I can feel his pain, when he called me a "pig," said "you don't even live here," and stuff and stuff.  I did not ask this greedy landlord a single question, and spoke the truth.

CUPOLO on the other hand, who has a COLDWELL BANKER franchise with 49 Realtors, seems to have emotional problems with First Amendment protected activity (just like (O"BRIEN)

The St. Augustine Record's reporter, Jared Keever, was there, covering the meeting.  Mr. Keever and the Record have printed four stories about this troubled property since 2016.  Good work by the Record, good work by the City of St. Augustine Beach, and utter insensitivity by corporations, which are not very well regulated here in Florida.

As former U.S. Department of Labor Chief Administrative Law Judge Nahum Litt, explained to me years ago, coal companies run the government in West Virginia and developers think they own the government in Flori-DUH.  Our job as citizens is to hold the developers accountable for their actions.

Hints to the Code Enforcement Board:

1. Don't engage in ex parte discussions before your meetings.
2. If you do engage in ex parte discussions, disclose them.
3. Swear in all of the witnesses.  (Not one was sworn in.)
4. Televise your meetings.
5. Make witnesses go the microphones, not call out from the audience.
6. Don't put up with disrespectful, condescending unsworn testimony from the likes of PACIFICA and STEVE CUPELO, PREMIER PROPERTIES owner.
7. Make corporations appear through lawyers.
8. Fine PREMIER and PACIFICA.
9. Don't accept excuses about why the City can't inspect 164 apartments, when it can inspect 175 rooms at EMBASSY SUITES.
10. Enforce the laws without fear or favor of Big Business.
11. Hold City Attorney JAMES PATRICK WILSON to a higher standard of care -- he sat there like a proverbial bump on a log, not making any suggestions and responding incompletely to one direct question.
12. Direct the City Attorney to contact the Florida and California Attorneys General.
13. Direct the City Attorney to contact the General Counsel for PACIFICA:

Thomas Preston Sayer Jr #120715


License Status: Active
Address: 9984 Scripps Ranch Blvd # 284, San Diego, CA 92131-1825
County: San Diego County
Phone Number: (858) 335-9590 
Fax Number: (800) 796-4203
Law School: California Western SOL; San Diego CA 
14. Direct the City Attorney to contact the General Counsel for the parent company of COLDWELL BANKER, REALOLOGY:
Marilyn Wasser
Marilyn.wesser@realology.com,
15. Disclose contacts from Commissioner RICHARD BURTT O'BRIEN on behalf of his employer, STEVEN CUPOLO, franchisee owner of COLDWELL BANKER PREMIER PROPERTIES.


Here's CUPOLO pleading and wheedling with City staff after the meeting.

Here's City staffers BRIAN WILLIAM LAW and WILLIAM WARD avoiding photography, not unlike Mafiosi afraid of news photos:






From St. Augustine Record:

Beach officials demand action from Seaside Villas, while company denies responsibility


By Jared Keever
Posted Oct 26, 2018 at 6:10 PM
Updated Oct 26, 2018 at 6:10 PM

After years of complaints from tenants, St. Augustine Beach officials are demanding action at a troubled apartment complex on Pope Road.

In a letter dated Oct. 16, the city’s code enforcement officer, Bill Ward, told Pacifica Anastasia LLC, that the “time for further action has now presented itself” at Seaside Villas and requested correspondence to include a maintenance plan from the company to rehabilitate the properties and address documented safety and building violations.

“This letter sets the tone and steers them down the right path,” city building director Brian Law told The Record on Thursday. “If they choose not respond ... we will proceed without them.”

That, Law said, can include code enforcement action that, if ignored, might end up in daily fines being levied.

“That’s a worst-case scenario, nobody wants that,” he said.

The letter was sent following completion of exterior inspections in the complex (the law does not allow officials access to the inside of the apartments without being invited in by an owner or a tenant), and Law said he is aware that some permits have been issued to begin work on the exteriors of some of the buildings, but in light of recent history further action seemed warranted.

It’s not the first time the city has sent a letter to the San Diego office of Pacifica Anastasia — a subsidiary of California-based Pacifica SD Management.

A representative from that company, Sharlene Blake, a regional manager, told The Record on Friday though that there is a good deal of confusion about who is responsible for what at the property.

Pacifica, she said, does not own the buildings, but rather 110 individual units inside the overall complex. The remaining 54 units in the complex, she said, are owned by private individuals. She described the situation as a “broken condo” and said that as owners of the units they pay dues to a homeowner’s association that is managed by a local company called Premier Properties.

A call to Premier on Friday was not immediately returned.

It is that company, Blake said, who is responsible for fixing many of the exterior problems.

“They are sending letters to the wrong office,” she said.

Blake, like Law, pointed out that some of the exterior problems are starting to be addressed.

But in an August letter to the company, Ward also referenced concerns about interior issues including tenant mold exposure and mildew as well as a litany of other problems both inside and out including wood rot, “major plumbing issues,” “windows screwed shut,” air conditioners in disrepair or not working, air handlers leaking into units, and stairways and railings in need of repair.

The list appears nearly identical to a list in a letter that the city’s former building official, Gary Larson, sent to the company in September 2016.

The August letter noted that tenants said on-site management had been “slow at best in responding to their needs,” and Ward referenced two specific units in which tenants had paid to have independent mold inspections done.

Results of those inspections had been sent to the city by the tenants and The Record received them as part of a public records request in September.

In both apartments an inspection company detected the presence of mold including Stachybotrys, a mold commonly referred to as “black mold” that literature included with one report says has the ability to produce “mycotoxins” which “may cause a burning sensation in the mouth, throat and nasal passages.” Chronic exposure, the information says, “has been known to cause headaches, diarrhea, memory loss and brain damage.”

Blake said that her company, too, had paid for an expert to inspect the units.

“I think they found spores, but it was nothing where the units were unlivable,” she said.

Asked whether that disagreed with the findings of the tenants’ experts, she declined to comment further.

Blake said Friday that much of the management arrangement at the complex has been explained to city officials in the past.

In response to The Record’s recent public records request that generated roughly 300 pages of documents there was little sign of response from Pacifica to the city’s previous letters and Law, who started with city less than a year ago, said it was his understanding that it had been “very challenging” to communicate with the company.

“Which is why we sent the certified letter,” he said.

(The request did turn up correspondence from the “community association manager” with Premier who, in one email, said they are “responsible for the exterior of the buildings except windows and doors or equipment such as a/c or electric boxes that exclusively serves one unit.”)

Apart from a maintenance plan that the city has asked to be submitted within 30 days, the most recent letter also asks that the company carry out a “proper investigation” to rule out water intrusion in all units and to address concerns about recent “re-piping” efforts that were noted to have been performed with “a variety of non-compliant installations and proper call-in inspections.”

How Pacifica will manage those demands in conjunction with Premier Properties remains unclear, though Blake said concerns about the interiors of the units they own, where livability is involved, will always be addressed.

“If it is reported to us then we are going to get in there,” she said. “Absolutely we are going to jump on that.”







From Jax Daily Record:

TUESDAY, NOV. 13, 201212:00 PM EST
OFFICE Profile: Coldwell Banker Premier Properties

by: Daily Record Staff

Broker/owner Steve Cupolo opened Premier Properties in 1999 and got a Coldwell Banker franchise in 2010. The company is a full-service real estate company located in St. Augustine Beach at 661 A1A Beach Blvd. The broker/manager of the office is Rob West.

Who does what?

Cupolo oversees all branch offices and departments including sales, long term rentals, vacation rentals and community association management. He is the ultimate decision maker on most every issue including personnel and budgeting. His main responsibility is to manage the growth of the company through expansion, recruiting and mergers/acquisitions. He is very involved in the day-to-day operations and is available to all agents in any office for any issue requiring his attention.

West oversees the day-to-day operations of the main office. He implements and manages strategic organizational systems, procedures and policies for the company as a whole. He also trains, mentors, supports sales associates and support staff, produces and interprets monthly performance and financial reports for short and long term business planning, budgeting and organizational goals.

How many agents?

There are 49 agents and they are actively recruiting more.

Why go with a franchise?

"Two years ago, we came to the realization that as an independent company you can kind of reach a plateau and can't go any further," said Cupolo. "The advent of Coldwell Banker has been phenomenal for us. It's allowed us to bring on the top most motivated professionals and it's given us the opportunity to enhance our training program." Coldwell Banker has an international presence in 52 countries with 1,500 offices and 130,000 agents worldwide.

Other locations?

Coldwell Banker Premier Properties has seven locations including St. Augustine Beach, Palm Coast, Ormond Beach/Daytona Beach, World Golf Village, two onsite condo offices and an office that does strictly property management and short-term rentals in St. Augustine. There are 95 agents in the seven offices.

Newest office?

Their newest location is in the World Golf Village and opened last month. Karen Palmer is the broker/manager of that office which has 14 agents so far, but they are actively recruiting. Sharon McCafferty is the office manager. Mo Hotchkiss of International Golf Realty merged her office with the new office and brought her agents and rentals with her.

"With her 300 rentals and our rentals I think we will become unquestionably the largest real estate rental office in the area," said Cupolo.

What will new office do for you?

Cupolo said it will open a whole new area for his company to handle including greater WGV area, Palencia, Nocatee, 210 corridor and Vilano Beach. "The reason we chose that location is because it is right in the center of the hub," said Cupolo. "If you take an eight-mile circle from our office, you pick up everything in the Northwest quadrant. It was the perfect location for a new office."

Team meetings?

The office has meetings the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. During those meetings they touch base on current events and what is happening in the community. "We will often take a specific contract and break it down individually," said Cupolo. "We will then do virtual tours on our flat screen television. We used to do caravans and the neighbors suffered because we parked all over the place and it was invasive. Now with the advent of videos, Youtube.com and virtual tours we can sit in that room for 30 minutes and see virtual tours of our nicest properties. We are saving gas and conserving energy and not ticking off the neighbors."

Who is in the office?

Beth Clark, Bill Miller, Caleb Cooper, Carmen Gilliland, Charles Ellis, Chris Philcox, Gay Marsh, Cindy Zimmermann, D.J. Della Sala, David Youngblood, Diane Grady, Donia and Doug Carr, Doug Detrick, Ellen Banob, Eric Huey, Jane Wolfe, Jean Meme, Jeanne Somerset, Jennifer Sauvage, Jill Little, John McKrow, Joy Tomlinson, Judi Schuyler, Julie Knowles, Karol Young, Kathy Addison, Lindsey Maguire, Manu Ruggeri, Maureen Loliva, Max Vinzant, Noel David, Paula David, Rick Mc Chesney, Robert Spence, Roxanne Gibes, Steve Gay, Teri Krause, Vicki Sicuranza, Vince Fattizzi, Wanda Chambers, Wendy Echols and Winston Burrell are agents. Cindy Reis is the Relocation director, Brittney Lewis is the Marketing & Social Media director, Gail Griswold is the agent/property manager, Janice Lindsey is the agent/rental manager, Joanne Gray is the rental assistant, Matt Kelley is an agent/rental manager, Kathy Trela is the office manager and Susan Strump is the marketing and public relations director.

Specialize in?

Residential and commercial real estate sales, long and short-term rentals and community association management.

Current real estate market in St. Augustine?

"It is a stabilized market," said West. "The balance of supply and demand is equitable and in balance. The inventory is low and the median prices have seen a modest increase this year."

Cupolo said the market is really coming back and his office has been swamped with business.

Is Vilano Beach an up and coming area?

With the new Publix and various new shops in the area, business is picking up in the Vilano Beach area. "It is an up and coming area," said Cupolo. "For years the Vilano Beach had beautiful beaches, but the Vilano Bridge was questionable and not reliable. The advent of the bridge in 1995 has put it in a much more desirable location. That is why we thought having an office close to it will be advantageous to us. Vilano does not have a lot of empty space to build, but since the values have leveled, re-sales are coming on strong."

Type of agents?

Cupolo said he hires new and experienced full-time real estate professionals.

How do you compete in this market?

Cupolo said his agents are heavily involved in the community giving them a presence and allowing the people in the community to see them getting involved. "People want to see Realtors more than just the day they are trying to list their home for sale," said Cupolo.

Training?

"We offer probably the most extensive, professional training programs in any real estate company." The agents have access to Coldwell Banker University and there is also in-house training often at the office.

Area your office covers?

The office covers St. Augustine, St. Augustine Beach, Flagler Beach, Palm Coast, Ormond Beach and Daytona.

How do you compete in this market?

"Though the name helps, it's all about the people.

—by Michele Gillis

St. Augustine City Commission holding mobility workshop Tuesday, December 4, 2018. (CoSA press release)

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November 29, 2018

City Commission to hold mobility workshop
Discussion includes presentation of the Vehicle for Hire Study and update on upcoming King Street Complete Street Master Plan

On Tuesday, December 4, starting at 9:00am in The Alcazar Room of City Hall, located at 75 King St., the St. Augustine City Commission will hear a presentation from the professional consulting firm HNTB about the findings of the Vehicle for Hire study conducted in 2017.

Additionally, an update on the coming King Street Complete Street Master Plan will be given including overview of the project and tentative schedule. The project is set to begin in the first part of the new year.

For additional information, contact the Mobility Office at 904.209.4211 or send an email to Mobility@CityStAug.com. Visit the Mobility website at www.CityStAugMobility.com.

_

Poll: Majority of Republicans break with Trump on climate change. (Earth.com)

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We in the "reality-based community"welcome the majority of Republicans to the ineluctable truth of climate change.  As Governor RICHARD LYNN SCOTT once said, "Let's get to work."

With the inauguration of John Valdes on December 1, 2018 as St. Augustine's newest City Commissioner, it's time for some real broken-field running.

Led by Mayor Nancy Shaver, can the City of St. Augustine become a local, regional and national leader on adaption and resiliency, starting with support for adaptation areas, susceptible of being included in the St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore?

Yes we can!



A new poll shows that Trump is now at odds with the majority of people who understand the ramifications of climate change.
11-29-2018ENVIRONMENT

Poll: Majority of Republicans break with Trump on climate change

President Donald Trump has made some undeniably galling claims about climate change over the years. 
From his assertion that climate change was a hoax created by the Chinese government, to his comments on cold weather snaps somehow proving that climate change wasn’t real, the President has stubbornly stood by his denial of climate change science.
Then, as we reported last week, Trump denied the findings of a shocking climate report released by his own government.
This week, after being asked about the Congressionally mandated climate assessment, the President said he didn’t believe it, even going so far as to suggest that he was too intelligent to accept the report’s findings. 
“One of the problems that a lot of people like myself, we have very high levels of intelligence, but we’re not necessarily such believers,” Trump told the Washington Post. “You look at our air and our water, and it’s right now at a record clean.”
What is confusing about the President’s comments on the new report is that a group of federal agencies conducted the assessment and the findings focus heavily on the economic ramifications of climate change. 
However, as the President stubbornly refutes even the slightest mention of human-made climate change, a new poll shows more and more people agree with the realities of climate change. 
The new Monmouth University poll found that 78 percent of the general population agrees that climate is happening, compared to 70 percent three years ago. The poll even found that 64 percent of Republicans think that climate change is real, compared to 49 percent three years ago. 
According to The Guardian which reported on the survey results, the poll shows that the President and his administration are now at odds with the majority of people who understand the ramifications of climate change, including members of the President’s own party and base. 
By Kay VandetteEarth.com Staff Writer 



$2.7 Million Verdict Buried on Page 3 -- University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences Student Victims Sue, 10 Day Jury Trial, $2.7 Million Verdict, Record Blows Coverage. (SAR)

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After midnight on November 21, 2018, a St. Johns County jury returned a huge jury verdict against University of St. Augustine for six students victimized by negligent misrepresentations about an unaccredited orthopedic assistant graduate program. This case was a story assiduously covered by Jake Martin, now himself a journalism graduate student in New York, where is girlfriend is also a journalism student.

Blowing the years of coverage invested in this case, the St. Augustine Record printed a story a week after the post-midnight verdict.

The Record blew an opportunity to coverage a rare civil jury trial involving big damages against a local sacred cow.

After midnight on Thanksgiving Eve, a St. Johns County jury returned a $2.7 million verdict for six students against a local educational institution for negligent misrepresentation, awarding damages for costs of attending school, lost past and future wages and emotional distress. No Record reporter attended and took notes at the 12:10 AM verdict, or any of the trial proceedings. The trial lasted ten days.

A week later, the Record printed a dull story lacking in details, on a subject its former reporter Jake Martin had written numerous informative well-researched page articles.

Q: What kind of "reporter" and what kind of "newspaper" failed to attend and provide daily coverage of a negligent misrepresentation case against University of St. Augustine, a local sacred cow?
A: Travis Gibson -- most noted for being credulous, depending on Rev. RONALD RAWLS, and incapable of counting the number of protesters at the November 17, 2018 Nights of Lights ligtup -- blew the St. Augustine Record's coverage. ]

GateHouse is cheap on overtime, but what a dramatic series of articles there would have been if the Record had attended and taken notes, as when founder Stanley Paris and other witnesses testified. What a lost opportunity to inform readers about how civil litigation works, or to cover what may be Circuit Court Judge J. Michael Traynor's last major jury trial before his upcoming retirement at age 70.

Coverage would have raised reader consciousness of white collar crime and corruption in education, and improved upon the thorough education about education we Record readers received reading Jake Martin's stories.

Among the witnesses were University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences founder Stanley Paris, who was a management representative sitting at counsel table. Since the school was bought by an international chain, among those serving on the parent firm's advisory boards was former President Bill Clinton.

If some of us had known this trial was ongoing, we would formed a car pool and gone to watch a ten day jury trial in a complex case about students euchred into a program with no job prospects in Florida.

The late conservative U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist called the right to civil jury trials "a bulwark against oppression."

But civil jury trials are in danger, thanks to settlement pressure, rule changes and mandatory cramdown arbitration agreements hidden in contract fine print, even in employment contracts formed as contracts of adhesion when you file a job application. The Record neglected its duty to inform its readers about civil litigation.

Swayed by putrid propaganda from Big Business, tortfeasors, insurance companies and their defense lawyers, many of our St. Johns County residents are utterly uninformed about the civil justice system and how it protects their rights. The Record keeps them thattaway, having never in the 20 years I've lived here bothered much about the Courthouse except in criminal cases (and even then increasingly rarely unless there's a bloody body or other criminal case).

As J.D. Pleasant once told em, if you want a secret kept in St. Augustine, tell the St. Augustine Record.

Paris several times attempted several times to solo yacht around the world -- he came closer to that goal than the Record does fulfilling the Founding Fathers' intentions in writing the First Amendment.

Next time there's a big civil jury trial in St. Johns County Courthouse, will the Record kindly promise to tell us as it happens?

Stsy tuned.





The University of St. Augustine could be on the hook to pay more than $2.7 million in damages to six former students who were involved in a now-defunct program that the students said the for-profit school misrepresented in order to get them to enroll.
In each individual case, court documents show, the jury found that the University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences LLC made negligent misrepresentations about the Master of Orthopedic Physician Assistant Program, a program with a tuition price tag of more than $70,000.
“It was definitely a David vs. Goliath situation,” said Kevin Jakab, founder and managing attorney at Jakab Law in Jacksonville who represented the students.
Launched in May 2011 on the school’s St. Augustine campus, the program was packaged as a two-year graduate program consisting of instructional and clinical study. Months before the program’s inaugural class graduated, USA informed students and faculty that the program’s name would be changing to Master of Orthopedic Assistant as the “orthopedic physician assistant” profession was not licensable in the state of Florida.
Students questioned whether their investment of nearly two years and more than $100,000 in tuition, fees and living expenses would be worth a degree granting them no more freedom to work in medicine in Florida than what’s allowed with a high school diploma. A civil lawsuit followed in 2013.
The jury found the university did not conceal any material facts concerning the program, according to court documents, but recommended the university reimburse the plaintiffs the cost of the program, compensate them for past lost and future wages along with compensation for mental anguish. Six plaintiffs — Michelle Hemingway, Holly Wheeler, Christina Mollica, Lauren Hofius, Elihu Watts and Dustin Janzen — were part of the civil lawsuit.
The jury reached its verdict on Nov. 21, Jakab said.
“We are disappointed that the situation escalated to trial,” university spokesperson Joe Cockrell wrote in a statement to The Record. “Although the jury granted financial reimbursement to these former students, the jury also decided that the plaintiffs did not prove their allegations of fraud against the University. The program involved in this case has not been offered for several years. We are grateful to have this behind us.”
Hemingway’s was the only case in which the jury found clear and convincing evidence that punitive damages were warranted, but Judge Michael J. Traynor ruled that punitive damages were not warranted and issued a directed verdict, Jakab said.
Jakab said he hopes to get a final judgement in the case from Traynor, who is scheduled to retire in December, or a replacement judge as soon as possible.
A similar case involving two more former St. Augustine University students is pending and could go to trial early next year, Jakab said.

Miami judge rules red-light cameras break state law. Will it help you beat your ticket? (Miami Herald)

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Good news. Righteous ruling. Here in St. Augustine Beach, red light cameras were proposed by City Hall burghers, led by SABPD Chief Robert Hardwick, who had police chiefs from other jurisdictions come and present unreliable "testimony" that was not worthy of belief. The late Robert Kahler, Tom Reynolds (a/k/a "Who the hell is Tom Reynolds?) and I led the forces opposed to red light cameras. Defeated. Done. Gone. ATS has now changed his name, but remains a vicious viperous cancer on the State of Florida. Even rebarbative retromingent St. Johns County" Sheriff" DAVID SHOAR opposes red light cameras, a stench in the nostrils of our Nation.




Duration 1:44
2017 Florida’s Worst Red Light Runners

Miami judge rules red-light cameras break state law. Will it help you beat your ticket?

November 28, 2018 03:50 PM
Updated 8 hours 8 minutes ago 

How a future Trump Cabinet member gave a serial sex abuser the deal of a lifetime (Miami Herald)

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It happened in South Florida. ALEXANDER ACOSTA, then United States Attorney, now Secretary of Labor, our next Attorney General? We're grateful for dogged investigative reporting of the Miami Herald:





Duration 12:20
The story behind a Palm Beach sex offender’s remarkable deal
Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein is a free man, despite sexually abusing dozens of underage girls according to police and prosecutors. His victims have never had a voice, until now. 

How a future Trump Cabinet member gave a serial sex abuser the deal of a lifetime

Perversion of Justice logo
A decade before #MeToo, a multimillionaire sex offender from Florida got the ultimate break.
On a muggy October morning in 2007, Miami’s top federal prosecutor, Alexander Acosta, had a breakfast appointment with a former colleague, Washington, D.C., attorney Jay Lefkowitz. 
It was an unusual meeting for the then-38-year-old prosecutor, a rising Republican star who had served in several White House posts before being named U.S. attorney in Miami by President George W. Bush. 
Instead of meeting at the prosecutor’s Miami headquarters, the two men — both with professional roots in the prestigious Washington law firm of Kirkland & Ellis — convened at the Marriott in West Palm Beach, about 70 miles away. For Lefkowitz, 44, a U.S. special envoy to North Korea and corporate lawyer, the meeting was critical.
His client, Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein, 54, was accused of assembling a large, cult-like network of underage girls — with the help of young female recruiters — to coerce into having sex acts behind the walls of his opulent waterfront mansion as often as three times a day, the Town of Palm Beach police found.
Home 02 Epstein EKM.jpg
At this home on El Brillo Way in Palm Beach, young girls, recruited by other young girls, would arrive by car or taxi, be greeted in the kitchen by a member of Jeffrey Epstein’s staff and ascend a staircase. They were met by Epstein, clad in a towel.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
The eccentric hedge fund manager, whose friends included former President Bill Clinton, Donald Trump and Prince Andrew, was also suspected of trafficking minor girls, often from overseas, for sex parties at his other homes in Manhattan, New Mexico and the Caribbean, FBI and court records show.
Facing a 53-page federal indictment, Epstein could have ended up in federal prison for the rest of his life.
But on the morning of the breakfast meeting, a deal was struck — an extraordinary plea agreement that would conceal the full extent of Epstein’s crimes and the number of people involved.
Not only would Epstein serve just 13 months in the county jail, but the deal — called a non-prosecution agreement — essentially shut down an ongoing FBI probe into whether there were more victims and other powerful people who took part in Epstein’s sex crimes, according to a Miami Herald examination of thousands of emails, court documents and FBI records.
The pact required Epstein to plead guilty to two prostitution charges in state court. Epstein and four of his accomplices named in the agreement received immunity from all federal criminal charges. But even more unusual, the deal included wording that granted immunity to “any potential co-conspirators’’ who were also involved in Epstein’s crimes. These accomplices or participants were not identified in the agreement, leaving it open to interpretation whether it possibly referred to other influential people who were having sex with underage girls at Epstein’s various homes or on his plane. 
As part of the arrangement, Acosta agreed, despite a federal law to the contrary, that the deal would be kept from the victims. As a result, the non-prosecution agreement was sealed until after it was approved by the judge, thereby averting any chance that the girls — or anyone else — might show up in court and try to derail it.
This is the story of how Epstein, bolstered by unlimited funds and represented by a powerhouse legal team, was able to manipulate the criminal justice system, and how his accusers, still traumatized by their pasts, believe they were betrayed by the very prosecutors who pledged to protect them.
“I don’t think anyone has been told the truth about what Jeffrey Epstein did,’’ said one of Epstein’s victims, Michelle Licata, now 30. “He ruined my life and a lot of girls’ lives. People need to know what he did and why he wasn’t prosecuted so it never happens again.”
Now President Trump’s secretary of labor, Acosta, 49, oversees a massive federal agency that provides oversight of the country’s labor laws, including human trafficking. He also has been on a list of possible replacements for former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who resigned under pressure earlier this month.
Acosta did not respond to numerous requests for an interview or answer queries through email.
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Alexander Acosta, now President Donald Trump’s secretary of labor, was the U.S. attorney for Southern Florida when he negotiated an end to the federal investigation of Jeffrey Epstein.
Florida International University 
But court records reveal details of the negotiations and the role that Acosta would play in arranging the deal, which scuttled the federal probe into a possible international sex trafficking operation. Among other things, Acosta allowed Epstein’s lawyers unusual freedoms in dictating the terms of the non-prosecution agreement.
“The damage that happened in this case is unconscionable,” said Bradley Edwards, a former state prosecutor who represents some of Epstein’s victims. “How in the world, do you, the U.S. attorney, engage in a negotiation with a criminal defendant, basically allowing that criminal defendant to write up the agreement?”
As a result, neither the victims — nor even the judge — would know how many girls Epstein allegedly sexually abused between 2001 and 2005, when his underage sex activities were first uncovered by police. Police referred the case to the FBI a year later, when they began to suspect that their investigation was being undermined by the Palm Beach State Attorney’s Office. 

NOT A ‘HE SAID, SHE SAID’

“This was not a ‘he said, she said’ situation. This was 50-something ‘shes’ and one ‘he’ — and the ‘shes’ all basically told the same story,’’ said retired Palm Beach Police Chief Michael Reiter, who supervised the police probe.
More than a decade later, at a time when Olympic gymnasts and Hollywood actresses have become a catalyst for a cultural reckoning about sexual abuse, Epstein’s victims have all but been forgotten.
The women — now in their late 20s and early 30s — are still fighting for an elusive justice that even the passage of time has not made right. 
Like other victims of sexual abuse, they believe they’ve been silenced by a criminal justice system that stubbornly fails to hold Epstein and other wealthy and powerful men accountable.
“Jeffrey preyed on girls who were in a bad way, girls who were basically homeless. He went after girls who he thought no one would listen to and he was right,’’ said Courtney Wild, who was 14 when she met Epstein.
Courtney Wild NEW 02 EKM.jpg
Courtney Wild, 31, was a victim of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein beginning at the age of 14. Epstein paid Wild, and many other underage girls, to give him massages, often having them undress and perform sexual acts. Epstein also used the girls as recruiters, paying them to bring him other underage girls.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
Over the past year, the Miami Herald examined a decade’s worth of court documents, lawsuits, witness depositions and newly released FBI documents. Key people involved in the investigation — most of whom have never spoken before — were also interviewed. The Herald also obtained new records, including the full unredacted copy of the Palm Beach police investigation and witness statements that had been kept under seal. 
The Herald learned that, as part of the plea deal, Epstein provided what the government called “valuable consideration” for unspecified information he supplied to federal investigators. While the documents obtained by the Herald don’t detail what the information was, Epstein’s sex crime case happened just as the country’s subprime mortgage market collapsed, ushering in the 2008 global financial crisis. 
Records show that Epstein was a key federal witness in the criminal prosecution of two prominent executives with Bear Stearns, the global investment brokerage that failed in 2008, who were accused of corporate securities fraud. Epstein was one of the largest investors in the hedge fund managed by the executives, who were later acquitted. It is not known what role, if any, the case played in Epstein’s plea negotiations.
The Herald also identified about 80 women who say they were molested or otherwise sexually abused by Epstein from 2001 to 2006. About 60 of them were located — now scattered around the country and abroad. Eight of them agreed to be interviewed, on or off the record. Four of them were willing to speak on video. 
The women are now mothers, wives, nurses, bartenders, Realtors, hairdressers and teachers. One is a Hollywood actress. Several have grappled with trauma, depression and addiction. Some have served time in prison. 
A few did not survive. One young woman was found dead last year in a rundown motel in West Palm Beach. She overdosed on heroin and left behind a young son.

SUPPORT INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM

The Miami Herald obtained thousands of FBI and court records, lawsuits, and witness depositions, and went to federal court in New York to access sealed documents in the reporting of "Perversion of Justice." The Herald also tracked down more than 60 women who said they were victims, some of whom had never spoken of the abuse before.
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As part of Epstein’s agreement, he was required to register as a sex offender, and pay restitution to the three dozen victims identified by the FBI. In many cases, the confidential financial settlements came only after Epstein’s attorneys exposed every dark corner of their lives in a scorched-earth effort to portray the girls as gold diggers.
“You beat yourself up mentally and physically,’’ said Jena-Lisa Jones, 30, who said Epstein molested her when she was 14. “You can’t ever stop your thoughts. A word can trigger something. For me, it is the word ‘pure’ because he called me ‘pure’ in that room and then I remember what he did to me in that room.’’
Now, more than a decade later, two unrelated civil lawsuits — one set for trial on Dec. 4 — could reveal more about Epstein’s crimes. The Dec. 4 case, in Palm Beach County state court, involves Epstein and Edwards, whom Epstein had accused of legal misdeeds in representing several victims. The case is noteworthy because it will mark the first time that Epstein’s victims will have their day in court, and several of them are scheduled to testify.
JenaLisa 05 Epstein EKM.jpg
Jena-Lisa Jones, with her 18-month-old son, Raymond, says she was 14 when she was introduced to Jeffrey Epstein and was paid $200 by him to give him a massage at his home. Jones says Epstein told her to take off all of her clothes and that he fondled her during the massage.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
A second lawsuit, known as the federal Crime Victims’ Rights suit, is still pending in South Florida after a decade of legal jousting. It seeks to invalidate the non-prosecution agreement in hopes of sending Epstein to federal prison. Wild, who has never spoken publicly until now, is Jane Doe No. 1 in “Jane Doe No. 1 and Jane Doe No. 2 vs. the United States of America,” a federal lawsuit that alleges Epstein’s federal non-prosecution agreement was illegal. 
Federal prosecutors, including Acosta, not only broke the law, the women contend in court documents, but they conspired with Epstein and his lawyers to circumvent public scrutiny and deceive his victims in violation of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. The law assigns victims a series of rights, including the right of notice of any court proceedings and the opportunity to appear at sentencing. 
“As soon as that deal was signed, they silenced my voice and the voices of all of Jeffrey Epstein’s other victims,’’ said Wild, now 31. “This case is about justice, not just for us, but for other victims who aren’t Olympic stars or Hollywood stars.’’
In court papers, federal prosecutors have argued that they did not violate the Crime Victims’ Rights Act because no federal charges were ever filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, an argument that was later dismissed by the judge. 
Duration 6:55
How a teen runaway became one of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims
Virginia Roberts was working at Mar-a-Lago when she was recruited to be a masseuse to Palm Beach hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein. She was lured into a life of depravity and sexual abuse. 
Despite substantial physical evidence and multiple witnesses backing up the girls’ stories, the secret deal allowed Epstein to enter guilty pleas to two felony prostitution charges. Epstein admitted to committing only one offense against one underage girl, who was labeled a prostitute, even though she was 14, which is well under the age of consent — 18 in Florida.
“She was taken advantage of twice — first by Epstein, and then by the criminal justice system that labeled a 14-year-old girl as a prostitute,’’ said Spencer Kuvin, the lawyer who represented the girl. 
“It’s just outrageous how they minimized his crimes and devalued his victims by calling them prostitutes,’’ said Yasmin Vafa, a human rights attorney and executive director of Rights4Girls, which is working to end the sexual exploitation of girls and young women.
“There is no such thing as a child prostitute. Under federal law, it’s called child sex trafficking — whether Epstein pimped them out to others or not. It’s still a commercial sex act — and he could have been jailed for the rest of his life under federal law,” she said.
It would be easy to dismiss the Epstein case as another example of how there are two systems of justice in America, one for the rich and one for the poor. But a thorough analysis of the case tells a far more troubling story.
A close look at the trove of letters and emails contained in court records provides a window into the plea negotiations, revealing an unusual level of collaboration between federal prosecutors and Epstein’s legal team that even government lawyers, in recent court documents, admitted was unorthodox.
Acosta, in 2011, would explain that he was unduly pressured by Epstein’s heavy-hitting lawyers — Lefkowitz, Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, Jack Goldberger, Roy Black, former U.S. Attorney Guy Lewis, Gerald Lefcourt, and Kenneth Starr, the former Whitewater special prosecutor who investigated Bill Clinton’s sexual liaisons with Monica Lewinsky.

‘AVOID THE PRESS’ PLAN

That included keeping the deal from Epstein’s victims, emails show.
“Thank you for the commitment you made to me during our Oct. 12 meeting,’’ Lefkowitz wrote in a letter to Acosta after their breakfast meeting in West Palm Beach. He added that he was hopeful that Acosta would abide by a promise to keep the deal confidential.
“You ... assured me that your office would not ... contact any of the identified individuals, potential witnesses or potential civil claimants and the respective counsel in this matter,’’ Lefkowitz wrote.
In email after email, Acosta and the lead federal prosecutor, A. Marie Villafaña, acquiesced to Epstein’s legal team’s demands, which often focused on ways to limit the scandal by shutting out his victims and the media, including suggesting that the charges be filed in Miami, instead of Palm Beach, where Epstein’s victims lived. 
“On an ‘avoid the press’ note ... I can file the charge in district court in Miami which will hopefully cut the press coverage significantly. Do you want to check that out?’’ Villafaña wrote to Lefkowitz in a September 2007 email. 
Federal prosecutors identified 36 underage victims, but none of those victims appeared at his sentencing on June 30, 2008, in state court in Palm Beach County. Most of them heard about it on the news — and even then they didn’t understand what had happened to the federal probe that they’d been assured was ongoing.
Edwards filed an emergency motion in federal court to block the non-prosecution agreement, but by the time the agreement was unsealed — over a year later — Epstein had already served his sentence and been released from jail.
Brad Edwards 01 Epstein EKM (1).jpg
Attorney Bradley Edwards is representing several young women who say they were sexually abused as minors by Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein. Edwards’ Fort Lauderdale law office is packed with files relating to the Epstein case.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
“The conspiracy between the government and Epstein was really ‘let’s figure out a way to make the whole thing go away as quietly as possible,’ ’’ said Edwards, who represents Wild and Jane Doe No. 2, who declined to comment for this story.
“In never consulting with the victims, and keeping it secret, it showed that someone with money can buy his way out of anything.’’
It was far from the last time Epstein would receive VIP handling. Unlike other convicted sex offenders, Epstein didn’t face the kind of rough justice that child sex offenders do in Florida state prisons. Instead of being sent to state prison, Epstein was housed in a private wing of the Palm Beach County jail. And rather than having him sit in a cell most of the day, the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office allowed Epstein work release privileges, which enabled him to leave the jail six days a week, for 12 hours a day, to go to a comfortable office that Epstein had set up in West Palm Beach. This was granted despite explicit sheriff’s department rules stating that sex offenders don’t qualify for work release.
epsteinsexoffender-resized-600.png
Jeffrey Epstein, accused of sexually abusing dozens of underage women, grins for his mugshot on Florida’s sex offender registry. He once compared his crimes to ‘stealing a bagel.’
Florida sex offender registry 
The sheriff, Ric Bradshaw, would not answer questions, submitted by the Miami Herald, about Epstein’s work release.
Neither Epstein nor his lead attorney, Jack Goldberger, responded to multiple requests for comment for this story. During depositions taken as part of two dozen lawsuits filed against him by his victims, Epstein has invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, in one instance doing so more than 200 times.
In the past, his lawyers have said that the girls lied about their ages, that their stories were exaggerated or untrue and that they were unreliable witnesses prone to drug use.
In 2011, Epstein petitioned to have his sex offender status reduced in New York, where he has a home and is required to register every 90 days. In New York, he is classified as a level 3 offender — the highest safety risk because of his likelihood to re-offend.
A prosecutor under New York County District Attorney Cyrus Vance argued on Epstein’s behalf, telling New York Supreme Court Judge Ruth Pickholtz that the Florida case never led to an indictment and that his underage victims failed to cooperate in the case. Pickholtz, however, denied the petition, expressing astonishment that a New York prosecutor would make such a request on behalf of a serial sex offender accused of molesting so many girls. 
“I have to tell you, I’m a little overwhelmed because I have never seen a prosecutor’s office do anything like this. I have done so many [sex offender registration hearings] much less troubling than this one where the [prosecutor] would never make a downward argument like this,’’ she said.

THE HOUSE ON EL BRILLO

The women who went to Jeffrey Epstein’s mansion as girls tend to divide their lives into two parts: life before Jeffrey and life after Jeffrey.
Before she met Epstein, Courtney Wild was captain of the cheerleading squad, first trumpet in the band and an A-student at Lake Worth Middle School.
After she met Epstein, she was a stripper, a drug addict and an inmate at Gadsden Correctional Institution in Florida’s Panhandle.
Wild still had braces on her teeth when she was introduced to him in 2002 at the age of 14.
She was fair, petite and slender, blonde and blue-eyed. Wild, who later helped recruit other girls, said Epstein preferred girls who were white, appeared prepubescent and those who were easy to manipulate into going further each time.
“By the time I was 16, I had probably brought him 70 to 80 girls who were all 14 and 15 years old. He was involved in my life for years,” said Wild, who was released from prison in October after serving three years on drug charges.
The girls — mostly 13 to 16 — were lured to his pink waterfront mansion by Wild and other girls, who went to malls, house parties and other places where girls congregated, and told recruits that they could earn $200 to $300 to give a man — Epstein — a massage, according to an unredacted copy of the Palm Beach police investigation obtained by the Herald.
The lead Palm Beach police detective on the case, Joseph Recarey, said Epstein’s operation worked like a sexual pyramid scheme.
Joe Recarey 01 Epstein EKM.jpg
Joseph Recarey, the former Palm Beach police detective who led the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, said the millionaire’s solicitation of sex with underage girls resembled a pyramid scheme. Its unraveling was similar, with one victim leading to two others, each of whom led to others, and so on.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
“The common interview with a girl went like this: ‘I was brought there by so and so. I didn’t feel comfortable with what happened, but I got paid well, so I was told if I didn’t feel comfortable, I could bring someone else and still get paid,’ ’’ Recarey said. 
During the massage sessions, Recarey said Epstein would molest the girls, paying them premiums for engaging in oral sex and intercourse, and offering them a further bounty to find him more girls.
Recarey, in his first interview about the case, said the evidence the department collected to support the girls’ stories was overwhelming, including phone call records, copies of written phone messages from the girls found in Epstein’s trash and Epstein’s flight logs, which showed his private plane in Palm Beach on the days the girls were scheduled to give him massages.
Epstein could be a generous benefactor, Recarey said, buying his favored girls gifts. He might rent a car for a young girl to make it more convenient for her to stop by and cater to him. Once, he sent a bucket of roses to the local high school after one of his girls starred in a stage production. The floral-delivery instructions and a report card for one of the girls were discovered in a search of his mansion and trash. Police also obtained receipts for the rental cars and gifts, Recarey said.
Epstein counseled the girls about their schooling, and told them he would help them get into college, modeling school, fashion design or acting. At least two of Epstein’s victims told police that they were in love with him, according to the police report.
The police report shows how uncannily consistent the girls’ stories were — right down to their detailed descriptions of Epstein’s genitalia.
“We had victims who didn’t know each other, never met each other and they all basically independently told the same story,’’ said Reiter, the retired Palm Beach police chief.
Epstein_Reiter 01 EKM.jpg
Michael Reiter is the former chief of police in the Town of Palm Beach, and was the chief during the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein. He says the young women lured to Epstein’s mansion didn’t necessarily know each other but they told nearly identical stories.
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
Reiter, also speaking for the first time, said detectives were astonished by the sheer volume of young girls coming and going from his house, the frequency — sometimes several in the same day — and the young ages of the girls.
“It started out to give a man a back rub, but in many cases it turned into something far worse than that, elevated to a serious crime, in some cases sexual batteries,’’ he said.
Most of the girls said they arrived by car or taxi, and entered the side door, where they were led into a kitchen by a female staff assistant named Sarah Kellen, the report said. A chef might prepare them a meal or offer them cereal. The girls — most from local schools — would then ascend a staircase off the kitchen, up to a large master bedroom and bath. 
They were met by Epstein, clad in a towel. He would select a lotion from an array lined up on a table, then lie facedown on a massage table, instruct the girl to strip partially or fully, and direct them to massage his feet and backside. Then he would turn over and have them massage his chest, often instructing them to pinch his nipples, while he masturbated, according to the police report.
At times, if emboldened, he would try to penetrate them with his fingers or use a vibrator on them. He would go as far as the girls were willing to let him, including intercourse, according to police documents. Sometimes he would instruct a young woman he described as his Yugoslavian sex slave, Nadia Marcinkova, who was over 18, to join in, the girls told Recarey. Epstein often took photographs of the girls having sex and displayed them around the house, the detective said.
Once sexually gratified, Epstein would take a shower in his massive bathroom, which the girls described as having a large shower and a hot pink and mint green sofa.
Kellen (now Vickers) and Marcinkova, through their attorneys, declined to comment for this story. 

NEVER ENOUGH

One girl told police that she was approached by an Epstein recruiter when she was 16, and was working at the Wellington mall. Over the course of more than a year, she went to Epstein’s house hundreds of times, she said. The girl tearfully told Recarey that she often had sex with Marcinkova — who employed strap-on dildos and other toys — while Epstein watched and choreographed her moves to please himself, according to the police report. Often times, she said, she was so sore after the encounters that she could barely walk, the police report said.
But she said she was firm about not wanting to have intercourse with Epstein. One day, however, the girl said that Epstein, unable to control himself, held her down on a massage table and penetrated her, the police report said. The girl, who was 16 or 17 at the time, said that Epstein apologized and paid her $1,000, the police report said. 
Most of the girls came from disadvantaged families, single-parent homes or foster care. Some had experienced troubles that belied their ages: They had parents and friends who committed suicide; mothers abused by husbands and boyfriends; fathers who molested and beat them. One girl had watched her stepfather strangle her 8-year-old stepbrother, according to court records obtained by the Herald. 
Many of the girls were one step away from homelessness.
“We were stupid, poor children,’’ said one woman, who did not want to be named because she never told anyone about Epstein. At the time, she recalled that she was 14 and a high school freshman.
“We just wanted money for school clothes, for shoes. I remember wearing shoes too tight for three years in a row. We had no family and no guidance, and we were told that we were going to just have to sit in a room topless and he was going to just look at us. It sounded so simple, and was going to be easy money for just sitting there.”
Duration 5:41
Where are they now? The biggest players in the Jeffrey Epstein case
The girls who were abused by Jeffrey Epstein and the cops who championed their cause remain angry over what they regard as a gross injustice, while Epstein's employees and those who engineered his non-prosecution agreement have prospered. 
The woman, who went to Epstein’s home multiple times, said Epstein didn’t like her because her breasts were too big. The last time she went, she said, one girl came out crying and they were instructed to leave the house and had to pay for their own cab home.
Some girls told police they were coached by their peer recruiters to lie to Epstein about their ages and say they were 18. Epstein’s legal team would later claim that even if the girls were under 18, there was no way he could have known. However, under Florida law, ignorance of a sex partner’s age is not a defense for having sex with a minor.
Wild, who worked for Epstein until she was 21, said he was well aware of their tender ages — because he demanded they be young.
“He told me he wanted them as young as I could find them,’’ she said, explaining that as she grew older and had less access to young girls, Epstein got increasingly angry with her inability to find him the young girls he desired.
“If I had a girl to bring him at breakfast, lunch and dinner, then that’s how many times I would go a day. He wanted as many girls as I could get him. It was never enough.’’

THE PYRAMID CRUMBLES

Epstein’s scheme first began to unravel in March 2005, when the parents of a 14-year-old girl told Palm Beach police that she had been molested by Epstein at his mansion. The girl reluctantly confessed that she had been brought there by two other girls, and those girls pointed to two more girls who had been there.
By the time detectives tracked down one victim, there were two and three more to find. Soon there were dozens.
Epstein plane 01 EKM.jpg
Jeffrey Epstein’s current private plane, painted a distinctive blue, is parked at an executive hub at Palm Beach International Airport on Thursday morning, May 24, 2018. It is how he shuttles between his homes in the Town of Palm Beach, New York City, New Mexico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. During the decade when, police say, he sexually abused dozens of underage girls, he used a different plane, which tabloids nicknamed ‘The Lolita Express.’
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
“We didn’t know where the victims would ever end,” Reiter said.
Eventually, the girls told them about still other girls and young women they had seen at Epstein’s house, many of whom didn’t speak English, Recarey said. That led Recarey to suspect that Epstein’s exploits weren’t just confined to Palm Beach. Police obtained the flight logs for his private plane, and found female names and initials among the list of people who flew on the aircraft — including the names of some famous and powerful people who had also been passengers, Recarey said.
A newly released FBI report shows that at the time the non-prosecution deal was executed, the agency was interviewing witnesses and victims “from across the United States.” The probe stretched from Florida to New York and New Mexico, records show. The report was released by the FBI in response to a lawsuit filed by Radar Online and was made available on the bureau’s website after the Miami Herald and other news organizations submitted requests, said Daniel Novack, the lawyer who filed the Freedom of Information Act case pro bono.
One lawsuit, still pending in New York, alleges that Epstein used an international modeling agency to recruit girls as young as 13 from Europe, Ecuador and Brazil. The girls lived in a New York building owned by Epstein, who paid for their visas, according to the sworn statement of Maritza Vasquez, the one-time bookkeeper for Mc2, the modeling agency.
Mike Fisten, a former Miami-Dade police sergeant who was also a homicide investigator and a member of the FBI Organized Crime Task Force, said the FBI had enough evidence to put Epstein away for a long time but was overruled by Acosta. Some of the agents involved in the case were disappointed by Acosta’s bowing to pressure from Epstein’s lawyers, he said.
Mike Fisten 01 Epstein EKM.jpg
Mike Fisten, a former Miami-Dade police sergeant and homicide detective who is now a private investigator with Bradley Edwards, attorney for some of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims, says the punishment Epstein received was a ‘joke.’
Emily Michot emichot@miamiherald.com 
“The day that a sitting U.S. attorney is afraid of a lawyer or afraid of a defendant is a very sad day in this country,’’ said Fisten, now a private investigator for Edwards.

SUIT/COUNTERSUIT

Now, a complex web of litigation could reveal more about Epstein’s crimes. A lawsuit, set for trial Dec. 4 in Palm Beach County, involves the notorious convicted Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein, in whose law firm Edwards once worked.
In 2009, Epstein sued Edwards, alleging that Edwards was involved with Rothstein and was using the girls’ civil lawsuits to perpetuate Rothstein’s massive Ponzi operation. But Rothstein said Edwards didn’t know about the scheme, and Epstein dropped the lawsuit.
Edwards countersued for malicious prosecution, arguing that Epstein sued him to retaliate for his aggressive representation of Epstein’s victims. 
Several women who went to Epstein’s home as underage girls are scheduled to testify against him for the first time. 
Florida state Sen. Lauren Book, a child sex abuse survivor who has lobbied for tough sex offender laws, said Epstein’s case should serve as a tipping point for criminal cases involving sex crimes against children.
“Where is the righteous indignation for these women? Where are the protectors? Who is banging down the doors of the secretary of labor, or the judge or the sheriff’s office in Palm Beach County, demanding justice and demanding the right to be heard?’’ Book asked.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Villafaña, in court papers, said that prosecutors used their “best efforts’’ to comply with the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, but exercised their “prosecutorial discretion’’ when they chose not to notify the victims. The reasoning went like this: The non-prosecution deal had a restitution clause that provided the girls a chance to seek compensation from Epstein. Had the deal fallen through, necessitating a trial, Epstein’s lawyers might have used the prior restitution clause to undermine the girls’ credibility as witnesses, by claiming they had exaggerated Epstein’s behavior in hopes of cashing in. 
Acosta has never fully explained why he felt it was in the best interests of the underage girls — and their parents — for him to keep the agreement sealed. Or why the FBI investigation was closed even as, recently released documents show, the case was yielding more victims and evidence of a possible sex-trafficking conspiracy beyond Palm Beach.
Upon his nomination by Trump as labor secretary in 2017, Acosta was questioned about the Epstein case during a Senate confirmation hearing.
“At the end of the day, based on the evidence, professionals within a prosecutor’s office decided that a plea that guarantees someone goes to jail, that guarantees he register [as a sex offender] generally and guarantees other outcomes, is a good thing,’’ Acosta said of his decision to not prosecute Epstein federally. 
California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, in opposing Acosta for labor secretary, noted that “his handling of a case involving sex trafficking of underage girls when he was a U.S. attorney suggests he won’t put the interests of workers and everyday people ahead of the powerful and well-connected.’’
Marci Hamilton, a University of Pennsylvania law professor who is one of the nation’s leading advocates for reforming laws involving sex crimes against children, said what Acosta and other prosecutors did is similar to what the Catholic Church did to protect pedophile priests.
“The real crime with the Catholic priests was the way they covered it up and shielded the priests,’’ Hamilton said. “The orchestration of power by men only is protected as long as everybody agrees to keep it secret. This is a story the world needs to hear.’’
This article has been updated to acknowledge Radar Online’s role in securing the release of FBI documents on Jeffrey Epstein.

SUPPORT INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM

The Miami Herald obtained thousands of FBI and court records, lawsuits, and witness depositions, and went to federal court in New York to access sealed documents in the reporting of "Perversion of Justice." The Herald also tracked down more than 60 women who said they were victims, some of whom had never spoken of the abuse before.

Read more here: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/article220097825.html#storylink=cpy

Florida Is Second Highest State in Uninsured Children -- Number of uninsured children rises for first time in a decade. (Georgetown University/Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times)

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Put up or shut up, "pro-life" Florida.

Florida is just ahead of Texas: we're the state that is second-highest in numbers of uninsured children.

Ex-Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) rightly said: “The Moral (sic) Majority (sic) supports legislators who oppose abortions but also oppose child nutrition and day care. From their perspective, life begins at conception and ends at birth.”

Republicans are pro-life until the child is born, then they oppose spending to help poor children. Denying children health care in our rich country is a form of child abuse.

Camus said, "Perhaps we cannot prevent this world from being a world in which children are tortured. But we can reduce the number of tortured children. And if you don’t help us, who else in the world can help us do this?" ALBERT CAMUS, statement made at the Dominican Monastery of Latour-Maubourg in 1948.—Camus, Resistance, Rebellion and Death, trans. Justin O’Brien, p. 73 (1961).

Red and Blue Americans agree: Health care is a fundamental right, too long denied poor people here in Florda, where radical reactionary ME-Publicans once had a codlock on political power.  They're shaken up by DONALD JOHN TRUMP and the magnificent 40-seat victory for Democratic control of the U.S. House of Representatives. They're shaken up by election of Democrat Nikki Fried to the cabinet as Secretary of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

As these findings make clear, it's time for Tallahassee to solve health care.

From The Herald and Tampa Bay Times:








Number of uninsured children rises for first time in a decade




Florida has the second highest number of uninsured children in the country
Crawling after learning to walk may be unusual behavior, but it’s what you could say is happening with children’s health insurance rates nationwide.
The steady progress those rates enjoyed for the past ten years brought numbers to a historic low of 4.7 percent of children uninsured in 2016.
But for the first time in ten years, that ticked upward to 5 percent in 2017, leaving a little more than 3.9 million children without coverage, according to an annual state-by-state analysis of children’s health coverage by the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families.
“While this may not seem like a huge change, these increases are unprecedented when examining this for the last decade” said Joan Alker, lead author of the report and executive director of the Center. “More troubling is that it increased during a time of economic strength, when one would expect the uninsured rate to go down.”
Research routinely reveals children’s access to health insurance has impacts beyond life-saving immunizations and prescriptions. When kids are sick, they miss out on more school days, increasing chances of falling behind and not graduating on time. Kids with coverage are also more likely to have better economic outcomes, creating more opportunity for them to grow into productive adults.
While more children nationwide were covered by employer sponsored insurance in 2017, those numbers were not enough to offset the number of children who lost coverage overall.
Most of those who did were enrolled in marketplaces, and state and federally funded Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) programs designed to serve lower-income families.
More than one in five uninsured children in the U.S. live in Texas, where the largest share of children lacked coverage. It likewise saw the largest jump in percentage of uninsured children.
Other states where the most children without health insurance live are Florida, Georgia and California.
“I’ve written this for eight years and I found it even more notable that no state, except for the District of Columbia, saw any progress in reducing the number of uninsured children in 2017,” Alker said.
Three-quarters of children who lost coverage live in states that have not expanded Medicaid coverage to parents and other low-income adults.
That includes Florida, which is second only to Texas for highest number of uninsured children in the country. In 2017, Florida had 7.3 percent of children uninsured, adding 37,000 more children to the uninsured over the course of one year. 
Since the majority of children who are uninsured are eligible for Medicaid or CHIP coverage, Alker said the reversal in progress may be due to confusion and uncertainty surrounding access.
In 2017, “Repeal and replace” became a catch phrase at the top of the new administration’s to-do list, while cuts in Medicaid and a delay by Congress to renew CHIP allowed its funding to lapse until early the next year.
Although the Affordable Care Act wasn’t ultimately repealed, its individual mandate was and removed and the Trump administration undermined ACA Marketplaces by shortening the open enrollment period and cutting back on funding for outreach and navigators who connect families with programs.
Immigration policy has also had an impact.
One quarter of children nationwide have a parent who is an immigrant. Because immigrant communities are being targeted for possible deportation, parents are deterred from contacting any governmental agency, despite the fact that most of their children are U.S. citizens.
With the added weight of states possibly adopting work requirements to receive Medicaid benefits and the proposed changes to the public charge rule, which would penalize immigrants seeking permanent status for using certain public benefits, Alker expects the numbers of uninsured children to increase.
“Without serious efforts the decline is likely to continue in 2018 and may in fact get worse for America’s children,” she said.
The number one action that could remedy the increase of uninsured children is for states to expand Medicaid to include low-income parents because “we know that when parents have a coverage option, children are more likely to get covered too,” she said.
A solution for mixed-status families is a “tougher nut to crack,” she added.
A copy of the report can be found at ccf.georgetown.edu.

Walgreens and CVS are the latest targets in Pam Bondi’s opioid lawsuit. (Tamps Bay Times)

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Damning allegations about opioid selling by the two-firm oligopoly drug store chains in Florida.   Departing Attorney General Pamela Jo Bondi, perhaps wishing to burnish her resume to be United States Attorney General, sued CVS and Walgreens.

The Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald report: "The two pharmacy giants, which have more than 1,500 locations between them in Florida, broke Florida law by ignoring suspicious orders, 'all while claiming misleadingly to the public that they were fulfilling their duties as pharmacists,' Bondi's lawyers say. 'Walgreens and CVS joined the race to sell as many opioids as possible, including by failing to institute safeguards and by marketing opioids to their vast networks of retail pharmacy stores and in-store pharmacists,' her lawyers wrote.

PREDICTION: You won't see much about this in newspapers with CVS and Walgreens ads.

Purchase of newspaper ads gives "corporate malefactors of great wealth," as FDR called, them, an undue influence and chilling effect on journalism, as Tom Wicker points out in On Press (1978).

From The Tampa Bay Times/Miami Herald report:




Walgreens and CVS are the latest targets in Pam Bondi’s opioid lawsuit

"Walgreens and CVS joined the race to sell as many opioids as possible" in Florida, lawyers for the attorney general say.


Attorney General Pam Bondi gives a press conference announcing that her office has filed a lawsuit against five large drug manufacturers and distributors of opioids while flanked by state, local government officials and other families affected by the opioid epidemic at the Riverside Recovery of Tampa. [OCTAVIO JONES | Times] 






Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi has named the nation's two largest pharmacy chains in its massive opioid lawsuit, accusing Walgreens and CVS of racketeering in their "relentless campaign" to supply Floridians with opioids.
The two pharmacy giants, which have more than 1,500 locations between them in Florida, broke Florida law by ignoring suspicious orders, "all while claiming misleadingly to the public that they were fulfilling their duties as pharmacists," Bondi's lawyers say.
"Walgreens and CVS joined the race to sell as many opioids as possible, including by failing to institute safeguards and by marketing opioids to their vast networks of retail pharmacy stores and in-store pharmacists," her lawyers wrote.
The claims are part of an amended complaint Bondi and her lawyers filed last week against the opioid makers and distributors that they claim created the nation's opioid crisis.
In addition to Walgreens and CVS, Bondi also added Insys Therapeutics to the new list of defendants. One of that company's former executives pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston on Wednesday to conspiring to bribe doctors to prescribe its powerful drug Subsys, a pain relieving spray that contains fentanyl, which is 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine.
A spokesman for Insys said the company is under new management and is "committed to a culture of compliance, ethics and integrity."
"The attorney general's complaint pertains to allegations of past misdeeds by former employees," spokesman Joseph McGrath said in an email Thursday.
Walgreens declined to comment. CVS did not respond to a request for comment.
In suing Walgreens and CVS, Florida's attorney general joins her counterparts in several other states, plus more than a thousand cities and counties across the country, that have taken the nation's largest companies to court to try to recoup the costs of the opioid epidemic.
That includes the city of Clearwater, which earlier this month sued many of the same  companiesthat Bondi has sued, including Walgreens.
Lawyers for the city say its workers compensation and employee health care plans have shelled out nearly $200,000 on opioid prescriptions alone over the past six years, and it's spent $71,841 in grants to a facility that treats city residents for addiction.
That's on top of the human cost. Between 2014 and 2016 alone, 643 people in Pinellas County died from opioid-related causes.
"There are repercussions from the opioid issue that we do have to deal with," Clearwater City Attorney Pam Akin said. "It's important for us to protect our position and potentially recover some of those costs."
Bondi's lawsuit could reap billions for the state.
Between 1999 and 2016, more than 200,000 people nationwide have died from overdoses related to prescription opioids, including thousands of Floridians, according to Bondi's lawyers. Opioids killed nearly 6,000 people in the state in 2016 alone, their complaint states.
Florida continues to suffer "massive losses" from opioids, her lawyers say, including from medical, unemployment and law enforcement costs, and from lost productivity and tax revenue.
In May, she sued some of the nation's largest drug makers and distributors, including Purdue Pharma, the creator of the opioids OxyContin and Dilaudid; Endo Pharmaceuticals, which makes the drugs Percocet and Opana; and Johnson & Johnson and some of its subsidiaries, which make the drugs Duragesic and Tapentadol.
Last week's amended complaint adds new details about what her lawyers describe as an elaborate, decades-long scheme to ship billions of opioids to Floridians.
Lawyers note in particular how the companies paid influential pain management doctors and funded chronic pain organizations in order to spread "misinformation" about opioids.
The companies gave millions to organizations like the American Pain Foundation, for example, which described itself as "the largest advocacy organization for people with pain."
Although it described itself as an independent nonprofit, 88 percent of the group's funding came from drug makers, and it spread misinformation about the risks of opioid addiction before shutting down in 2012, according to the complaint.
Cephalon, an opioid maker, relied on such front organization to gain a foothold into the drug market. The company cited a study authored by Dr. Russell Portenoy, an influential pain doctor, and co-authored by several doctors on Cephalon's speakers' bureau, lawyers wrote.
Portenoy, who is not a defendant in Florida's lawsuit, did not respond to a request for comment. But in 2012, he told the Wall Street Journal that he was having second thoughts about what he'd said about the drugs.
"Did I teach about pain management, specifically about opioid therapy, in a way that reflects misinformation? Well, against the standards of 2012, I guess I did," Portenoy told the paper. "We didn't know then what we know now."
The drug distributors also "turned a blind eye" to the sheer number of opioids and suspicious orders throughout the state, lawyers allege.
The distributors paid data miners for "highly detailed data on opioid prescribing, sales, and distribution"— including data from other companies — that showed the massive amount of pills being shipped to, and prescribed in, Florida.
A single pharmacy in Hudson, with a population of 34,000, bought 2.2 million opioids in 2011 alone, for example.
Florida law requires distributors to note such suspicious actions, but none of the companies named in the lawsuit notified any law enforcement or regulatory body in Florida about them, according to Bondi's lawyers.
"Defendants knew that widespread diversion of opioids was occurring in Florida, but turned a blind eye in order to earn higher profits," the lawyers state.

In wake of Sheriff's office embezzlement, Clerk of Court and Comptroller Hunter S. Conrad to Provide "Spin?"

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At the Tuesday, December 4, 2018 County Commission meeting, Clerk of Courts and Comptroller HUNTER S. CONRAD is set to make a presentation on financial controls and checks and balances. It's agenda item 5.

In violation of St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners's "13-day rule" for BoCC agenda items, the paperwork for item 5 for December 4, 2018 was only filed on Tuesday, November 27, 2018.

Ask CONRAD questions, including the role of disgraced former St. Augustine City Manager WILLIAM BARRY HARRISS in SJSO spending, including the ST. JOHNS COUNTY SHERIFF's OFFICR FOUR STAR ASSOCIATION, INC.

Ask CONRAD about how Deputy JEREMY BANKS paid legal fees for his lawsuit against FDLE Special Agent Rusty Ray Rodgers.

HUNTER S. CONRAD is Sheriff SHOAR's mentee, a callow fellow hand-picked by Governor RICHRD LYNN SCOTT over the career deputy who filed to run for the job.

Political opportunist looking to cover for the County political boss."

The "spin" presentation comes just two weeks after nearly $700,000 embezzlement resulted in arrest of Sheriff's Finance Director.

Here's the only document on the County's website on this presentation:
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
Hunter S. Conrad, St. Johns County Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller, will provide an overview of the financial controls in place for the Board of County Commissioners. All departments of the St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners are subject to a system of checks and balances as prescribed by State law that includes the Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller, an independent, elected constitutional officer. The Clerk function provides a separation of duties through financial reporting, day-to-day accounting, and auditing activities. In addition, the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report is conducted annually per Florida Statute as an independent audit.



Ask questions. Demand answers. Expect Democracy. There's a forensic audit, in progress. Don't take no for an answer. Insist that constitutional officers present their annual budgets one month earlier, as Florida law allows Commission to require. 

Then give Sheriff Shoar what Judge Nahum Litt would call the thermal equivalent of a "proctological examination with dental tools." Leave no stone untunrnd. And don't let SHOAR get away with any more Trumpery, flummery, dupery and nincompoopery, like lying to Commissioners about $2 million FBI check that did not exist





On the campaign trail
Janet and Dale Westling (front) welcome (from left) Clerk of Circuit Court Hunter Conrad, Sheriff David Shoar and former Jacksonville Sheriff and congressional candidate John Rutherford to the Aug. 19 candidate meet and greet held at their Ponte Vedra Beach home.
Janet and Dale Westling (front) welcome (from left) Clerk of Circuit Court Hunter Conrad, Sheriff David Shoar and former Jacksonville Sheriff and congressional candidate John Rutherford to the Aug. 19 candidate meet and greet held at their Ponte Vedra Beach home.
PHOTO BY SUSAN GRIFFIN, Ponte Vedra Recorder

Posted Thursday, August 25, 2016 12:00 am
Local residents had an opportunity to meet some of the candidates whose names will appear on the Aug. 30 primary election ballot last week, when Dale and Janet Westling held a free “candidate meet and greet” at their Sawgrass Country Club home.
Among the candidates in attendance were Clerk of Circuit Court Hunter Conrad and St. Johns County Sheriff David Shoar – both of whom are running for re-election – and former Jacksonville Sheriff John Rutherford, who is running for U.S. Congress in the 4th congressional district.




Nikki Fried announces full transition team, job openings on new website: Agriculture and Consumer Services Commissioner

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Wonderful news. Democrat Nikki Fried's inauguration means there's a Democrat in the Cabinet, to protect consumers and the environment.  She's one of four votes in the Board of the Florida Internal Improvements Trust, which means any land acquisition, lease or sale will now be scrutinized carefully.  Salud, Commissioner Fried.





Nikki Fried announces full transition team, job openings on new website

Team member of note: Former Senator Denise Grimsley, also a one-time agriculture commissioner candidate

Nikki Fried [News Service of Florida]
At the end of election day in November, it appeared that Democrat Nicole "Nikki:" Fried had lost to Republican Matt Caldwell for the Florida Cabinet post of agriculture commissioner.
But after late vote tallies in Broward and other counties showed she was actually ahead, Fried claimed victory and started working on a transition.
The state division of elections had just ordered automatic machine recounts for three statewide races, including Fried's, but she moved on anyway and announced her transition leadership.
Her transition team, she said then, will be led by former U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy, who represented the large agriculture community of Martin County. Also on the team is U.S. Rep. Darren Soto and Fred Guttenberg, a gun-control activist whose daughter, Jaime, was murdered in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting last February.
On Friday, Fried announced the rest of her team and unveiled a new transition website. The team will be working out of the Department of Agriculture in the state capitol.
"We have brought people together from all corners of our state and all walks of life to help build a Department that will respect the priority issues of the people and work hard to deliver results," Fried said Friday. "From Democratic, Republican, and independent leaders, to leaders in Florida's agriculture and environmental communities, public safety, energy, consumer protection, and marijuana industries—our transition team reflects the values of all Floridians."
The team includes:
  • Former Senator Denise Grimsley, one-time agriculture commissioner candidate who served 14 years on the Agriculture committee and three years as Chairman.
  • State Attorney Dave Aronberg, a former assistant Attorney General and state Senator where he served as Chair of the Everglades Restoration Committee.
  • Former Congressman Allen Boyd, who represented the Panhandle area from 1997 to 2011
  • Susanne Clemons, a fifth-generation Floridian from Highlands County who once served as the first female state chairman of the USDA State Farm Service Committee.
  • Darin Cook, co-founder and co-CEO of Infinite Energy, a Florida-based energy provider.
  • Former Sen. Rick Dantzler, who also served in the Florida House of Representatives and ran for Governor in 1998. Dantzler was appointed by President Obama in 2013 to serve as State Executive Director for the Farm Service Agency. He works for an organization that funds research for the Florida citrus industry and is primarily involved in fighting citrus greening.
  • Sheriff Jerry Demings, the recently elected Mayor of Orange County.
  • Chris Hand, a Jacksonville-based attorney and former speechwriter and press secretary for former Florida Governor and then-U.S. Senator Bob Graham.
  • Former Florida House Speaker Jon Mills, who helped draft the Florida Water and Land Conservation Initiative in 2014, the Florida Medical Marijuana Legalization Initiative in 2016, and the Voting Rights Restoration for Felons Initiative in 2018.
  • Sam Poole, former director of the South Florida Water Management District.
  • Scheril Murray Powell, a Fort Lauderdale Agricultural and Cannabis Attorney based in Fort Lauderdale.
  • Former State Rep. Dean Saunders, who spearheaded significant Florida land conservation initiatives during his time in the Legislature.
The general counsel for the office will be Benedict Kuehne, a trial and appellate lawyer and election law specialist. He represented Vice President Al Gore in the 2000 recount trial and also represented Fried's campaign in the recent recount.
The transition team staff include Eric Johnson as executive director, former campaign manager Shelby Scarpa as deputy executive director, Deborah Tannenbaum as senior advisor, Jordan Anderson as director of operations and former campaign spokesman Max Flugrath as communications director.
The team must also fill around two dozen jobs within the office's many departments, which are listed on her new website.

The NRA should not dictate who licenses concealed weapons. (Sun Sentinel editorial)

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Marion Hammer and the NRA have bossed and bullied Tallahassee legislators for long enough. Prediction: Nikki Fried will triumph over this tedious tendentious termagant.




The NRA should not dictate who licenses concealed weapons | Editorial

Sun Sentinel Editorial Board
Marion Hammer, the public face and political enforcer of the National Rifle Association in Florida, is in a snit about Democrat Nikki Fried having been elected commissioner of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the agency that issues concealed weapon permits.
Hammer is lobbying to move weapons permitting to the office of Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, a Republican. She adamantly opposes putting it in the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which performs background checks on applicants and where it rightly belongs.
Hammer argues that such an important function should be overseen by someone who is elected, not the state’s top cop. Her argument ignores the fact that the FDLE commissioner reports to four people elected statewide — the governor, attorney general, CFO and agriculture commissioner. Why the Florida Cabinet is insufficient oversight for Hammer defies explanation — other than it’s easier to control one person than four.
Before the November election, Hammer was pleased as punch to have concealed weapon permits issued by the Agriculture Department, which for the last eight years has been led by Adam Putnam, a Republican who calls himself a “proud NRA sellout.” She stood by Putnam even after it was revealed that his team had neglected to review background checks for 13 months and had issued permits to a couple hundred people who never should have had them.
Hammer is used to getting her way with the Republican lawmakers who dominate the Florida Legislature. It’s not about the money the NRA contributes to their campaigns, which isn’t what it used to be. Rather, it’s their desire to secure the NRA’s A+ rating and avoid the wrath of Hammer’s emails to NRA members, many of whom are single-issue voters.
Credit Hammer for the Stand Your Ground law, which has spread from Florida to other states and is reliably blamed for an increase in homicides. She’s also the force behind laws that forbid employers from banning guns on their property, punishing local officials who try to regulate firearms, and making criminals of doctors, including psychiatrists, for asking whether guns are kept in patients’ homes. A federal court rightly trashed that last one.
Though the Legislature rarely stands up to her, it did so earlier this year in raising to 21 the minimum age to buy a rifle. Hammer opposed that change, despite the 17 murders at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School by a 19-year-old former student who had legally bought a military-style assault rifle.
Now is another time for legislators to say no to Hammer.
Sen. Lauren Book, D-Plantation, and some colleagues are daring to do that.
Book has introduced legislation (Senate Bill 108) to move weapons permitting to FDLE. Sen. Linda Stewart, D-Orlando, who worked with her on that, told the Times they intend to consult Fried on the matter. As Stewart points out, there’s no need for an intermediary when law enforcement can do it all.
Today, Agriculture gets its state crime data from FDLE, as well as information from other states that it can’t get directly because the FBI doesn’t consider it a law enforcement agency. The same problems would occur, of course, under Patronis.
During the campaign, Fried, who narrowly won over Republican Matt Caldwell, said the permitting office had been poorly run and needed a full audit. She also discussed moving concealed weapon permits to FDLE.
Fried says she told Hammer that “neither the department nor its employees will carry out the interests of the NRA, or any outside group that seeks to unduly influence the rules that apply to them.”
Unaccustomed to hearing such back talk, Hammer began pushing for change. She says it has nothing to do with Fried being a Democrat. Rather, it’s about what she has said.
”It's a commissioner who has vowed to tinker with the program, to try to fix something that isn't broken, and to generally disrupt the program that currently serves over 1.8 million Floridians," Hammer told the Tampa Bay Times.
In a statement issued through a spokesman Friday, Fried said the promised audit will be her “first priority” on taking office next month. “It is critical to Florida’s public safety that we determine where and how failures have occurred, and ensure that permits are only issued under my administration after the completion of background checks — as plainly required under Florida law.”
As to the future, Fried agreed that “we must start the conversation of the permit process to take politics out of public safety.” Law enforcement, she noted, “is not subject to the whims of the political party that happens to be in power, and could provide diligent oversight of the program.”
Fried sounds as if she fully means to run it right. But she can be commissioner for eight years at most, and there’s no guarantee that a successor would hold the NRA at arm’s length.
The FDLE should be the eventual destination. The worst possible outcome would be to give Hammer what she wants. She has done enough damage already.
Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O'Hara, David Lyons and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.

Carl Hiaasen's "Memo to Donald Trump’s gut: Shut up. Just. Shut. Up." (Miami Herald)

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For DAVID SHOAR, the DONALD JOHN TRUMP-loving corrupt conman Sheriff of St. Johns County and his henchmen, and the mendacious members of the St. Johns County Republican Executive Committee and its "TRUMP CLUB": this chump's for you.

From The Miami Herald:



Anthony Scaramucci was briefly, and memorably, President Trump’s White House spokesman.

Memo to Donald Trump’s gut: Shut up. Just. Shut. Up.

November 30, 2018 05:41 PM
Updated 2 hours 15 minutes ago 

Trump should be freaked out right about now (WaPo)

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I love Jennifer Rubin.  In her Washington Post opinion column, she concludes: "Cohen is helping Mueller to tie Trump — financially, personally, politically — to the highest levels of the Russian government. Whether that amounts to crimes (apart from efforts to obstruct justice) remains to be seen. It does, however, mean that Trump lied his way into the presidency, in part, to protect financial interests in Russia and perhaps to get Russian assistance (e.g., in disclosing dirt on Hillary Clinton). Trump has every reason to panic."








Trump should be freaked out right about now

Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying to Congress about Moscow project
President Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen pleaded guilty on Nov. 29 to lying to Congress about a Trump Organization real estate project in Russia.
Opinion writer
The Post reports on the latest plea deal with President Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen:
President Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty Thursday in New York to lying to Congress about a Moscow real estate project that Trump and his company pursued at the same time he was running for president.
In a nine-page filing, prosecutors laid out a litany of lies that Cohen admitted he told to congressional lawmakers about the Moscow project — an attempt, Cohen said, to minimize links between the proposed development and Trump as his presidential bid was well underway.
Cohen’s guilty plea — his second in four months — is the latest development in a wide-ranging investigation by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Activity in that probe has intensified this week, as one planned guilty plea was derailed, and, separately, prosecutors accused Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort of lying to them since he pleaded guilty.
[…] Cohen previously said the project stalled in January 2016, prompting him to email a top aide to Russian President Vladi­mir Putin seeking help. Cohen previously said that he never received a response and that the project was halted that month.
Just hours after that news broke, Trump decided to cancel a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Buenos Aires, perhaps fearing a replay of the disastrous appearance with Putin in Helsinki, when Trump sided with him over the conclusive findings of the U.S. intelligence community that Russia meddled in our election.
“Cohen was Trump’s fixer and was clearly part of the effort to conspire with Russia,” said Max Bergmann, who heads the Moscow Project. “Most worrying for Trump, Cohen knows what Trump knew and when he knew it. The walls are closing in.”
There are multiple issues here.
Opinion | The Trump-Russia investigation looks like a mob case
Michael Cohen flipping? Opinion writer Jennifer Rubin says the Mueller investigation is looking more and more like a mafia case. 
First, Trump recently turned in his written answers to Mueller. If Mueller asked about the Moscow Trump Tower deal and Trump lied, saying that it had ended in January, that would be a strong basis for a perjury charge. Trump might say that he didn’t know Cohen was continuing in talks with Russia, but the tantalizing detail from the indictment, namely that Cohen communicated with Individual 1 (presumably Trump) three times, suggests that Mueller may have some definitive evidence of the conversations. (Did Cohen tape them?) The Post reports: “Prosecutors seemed to make a point in the document of emphasizing how Cohen had talked with Trump himself — whom they didn’t name — about the project. The document said Cohen lied because he hoped his testimony would limit the ongoing Russia investigations.” In other words, both Cohen and Trump tried to disguise the extent of Trump’s ties with Russia, which, in the context of the campaign, may have been part of a conspiracy to help get him elected.
Second, Trump appears to be conducting foreign policy to avoid implicating himself in wrongdoing, it seems, and therefore has to cancel a meeting to avoid underscoring the appearance that he is under Putin’s thumb. The idea that Trump would meet with Putin and read him the riot act appears to be out of the question.
Third, Cohen plainly is cooperating with Mueller — and not communicating with Trump. Unlike the situation with Manafort, Trump has no way of seeing inside the Cohen-Mueller talks. That creates enormous uncertainty and risk. Trump may already have contradicted himself under oath.
Fourth, if it weren’t obvious already, Cohen’s plea agreement shows that the Mueller probe is not a “witch hunt.” Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), in line to chair the House Judiciary Committee, issued a statement, which read in part:
The Special Counsel has now secured guilty pleas from President Trump’s personal attorney, his campaign manager, his deputy campaign manager, a foreign policy advisor to his campaign, and his National Security Advisor. He has filed 191 charges against more than thirty individuals—almost all of whom are in President Trump’s orbit, Vladimir Putin’s orbit, or both. The President can pretend that this investigation has nothing to do with him and nothing to do with Russia, but these indictments speak for themselves. We must allow this investigation to run its course without interference from the President or his allies on Capitol Hill. As the new Congress begins, these developments make clear that my colleagues and I must step in and provide accountability. No one is above the law, not even the President, and our job will be to check his impulse to abuse his office to protect himself. We will do everything in our power to allow the Special Counsel to finish his work and follow the facts and the law to their conclusion.
Fifth, the Cohen revelations emphasize the need for legislation to protect Mueller. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) implored his colleagues to do just that: “It’s a reminder that there has been a remarkable volume of criminal activity uncovered by the special counsel’s investigation. No one — especially not the president — can credibly claim that the investigation is a fishing expedition. Calling Mueller’s investigation a ‘witch hunt’ is just a lie. Plain and simple. A lie.” He continued, “The president’s actions clearly show he has a lot to hide, but he is afraid of the truth and doesn’t want Mueller or anyone else to uncover it. . . . Let’s not forget, President Trump has already fired the attorney general and replaced him with a lackey, without Senate approval, a nominee whose only qualification seems to be that he has a history of criticizing the special counsel.”
Finally, if Cohen is telling the truth, Trump lied during the campaign in flatly denying any deals in Russia. That in itself is a big deal. Trump took a bizarrely pro-Putin stance during the campaign and in the debates specifically. The notion that a candidate would take the side of a foreign foe of the United States while negotiating business deals in that country should be seen as wholly unacceptable, perhaps even an attempt to defraud voters. If he was doing it to assist his own economic interests, it can be seen as a quid pro quo.
But was it illegal or impeachable? If lying about the Trump Tower deal was part of a scheme to conspire/collude with Russia, the latest revelation will be one more fact in a conspiracy charge (or campaign finance violation against Trump). Trump’s shocking insistence Thursday that he was “allowed to do whatever I wanted during the campaign” seems to leave open the possibility that he did not comprehend the ramifications of working with the Russians to feather his own nest and get him elected.
Lying about Russia deals also might be considered one in a series of impeachable acts. Constitutional law professor Laurence Tribe told me, “The only pre-election lying (or other misconduct) that becomes impeachable if and when the candidate wins office is conduct that contributes materially to a fraudulent victory, which much of Trump’s activity with Russia during the 2016 campaign may well have done.” Remember, Article One of Richard Nixon’s impeachment included “making or causing to be made false or misleading public statements for the purpose of deceiving the people of the United States.”
Cohen is helping Mueller to tie Trump — financially, personally, politically — to the highest levels of the Russian government. Whether that amounts to crimes (apart from efforts to obstruct justice) remains to be seen. It does, however, mean that Trump lied his way into the presidency, in part, to protect financial interests in Russia and perhaps to get Russian assistance (e.g., in disclosing dirt on Hillary Clinton). Trump has every reason to panic.
Read more:

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ACCUSED OF 'RAMPANT' ETHICS ABUSES AFTER 6 MORE OFFICIALS CITED FOR HATCH ACT VIOLATIONS. (Newsweek)

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Once again, the independent Office of Special Counsel has found Hatch Act violations by federal employees working for DONALD JOHN TRUMP. Tete cheesy unjust stewards are making America "grate" again.




TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ACCUSED OF 'RAMPANT' ETHICS ABUSES AFTER 6 MORE OFFICIALS CITED FOR HATCH ACT VIOLATIONS
BY ALEXANDRA HUTZLER ON 11/30/18 AT 2:49 PM


Six members of the Trump administration have been found guilty of violating the Hatch Act for using their official social media accounts to promote the president’s political messages and “Make America Great Again” campaign slogans.

On Friday, the Office of the Special Counsel, the investigative and prosecutorial agency that is responsible for handling cases of government corruption, cited six staffers with violating federal law. The office was informed of the infractions with a complaint filed from the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics.

Some of the more noteworthy offenders include White House deputy press secretary Raj Shah; Trump’s executive assistant Madeleine Westerhout; Vice President Mike Pence’s press secretary Alyssa Farah; and White House deputy director of communications Jessica Ditto. Jacob Wood, the deputy communications director for the Office of Management and Budget, and former White House director of media affairs Helen Aguirre Ferré were also found to be in violation of the federal rule.

Under the Hatch Act, executive branch employees are barred from using their offices to influence elections or for political purposes. The relatively small infraction had been committed by many high-profile Trump officials, including White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, Melania Trump’s former communications director Stephanie Grisham and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.

Earlier this year, the Office of the Special Counsel determined that any use of Trump’s 2016 campaign slogan “Make America Great Again” or “MAGA” was a violation of the federal law. In this batch of violations, four of the staffers had included the campaign phrase in their social media posts.

Shah, the White House deputy press secretary, violated the rule by tweeting, “Fantastic @RNCResearch release #Winning: 500 Days of American Greatness.” He included in his tweet a link to an RNC web page titled “#Winning: 500 Days of American Greatness.”

Westerhout, Trump’s executive assistant, broke the Hatch Act when she posted the message “Congratulations to Mike Pompeo! He was a great CIA Director and will be an extraordinary Secretary of State! #MAGA.” In another post in violation of the rule, she retweeted a message from Donald Trump’s account, which read, “JOBS, JOBS, JOBS! #MAGA.”

Officials who violate the Hatch Act can face a $1,000 fine and disciplinary action such as suspension or termination.

Noah Bookbinder, the watchdog group’s director, celebrated the Office of Special Counsel’s findings in a statement, but added that “warnings have not been enough to deter Trump Administration officials from using their official positions to engage in partisan political activity in direct violation of the law.”

“Simply put, [the Office of Special Counsel] must consider additional measures to prevent these rampant abuses,” Bookbinder wrote.

Trump’s Lawyer Discussed Business Deal With Putin’s Office -- That's COLLUSION. (Mother Jones Magazine)

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Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller, III and his staff are national heroes.  Enough of TRUMP.  This traitor was in negotiations for a lucrative business deal, and planned to offer a BRIBE, a $50 million penthouse condo unit, at a TRUMP TOWER in Moscow.

Any St. Johns County Republican leader would do well to study the facts and stop supporting a corrupt madman.  Now.



Here’s Evidence of Collusion: Trump’s Lawyer Discussed Business Deal With Putin’s Office

Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying to Congress and reveals that Trump’s company hooked up with Moscow.

More lying and more evidence of a significant Trump-Russia connection—that’s the story behind Michael Cohen’s latest guilty plea. And it shows that Donald Trump’s company in 2016 was trying to collude with Russian President Vladimir Putin in order to develop a Trump business project in Moscow.
On Thursday morning, special counsel Robert Mueller released a court filingexplaining the charge of lying to Congress to which Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, has pleaded guilty. The charge is based on statements that Cohen made to the House and Senate intelligence committees about a deal Trump was pursuing in 2015 and 2016 to build a Trump tower in the Russian capital. 
On this Moscow venture, Trump and Cohen were working with Felix Sater, an ex-felon and real estate developer who had previously done business with the pair, and the wheeling-and-dealing was occurring while Trump was running for president. During this stretch, Trump the candidate often spoke positively about Putin and refused to criticize him—and never publicly disclosed that he was attempting to negotiate a big deal in Russia that could not proceed if Putin’s government opposed it. This meant that Trump hid from voters one of the most significant conflicts of interest in the modern history of US political campaigns. 
News of Trump’s secret deal in Russia did not emerge until after the 2016 election. And when the story came out, Cohen insisted that though Trump had been involved in the project, he (Cohen) ended the venture on his own in January 2016. Cohen also said he had tried to contact Dmitry Peskov, a top aide to Putin, for assistance, but that he had only used an email address he found on the internet for Peskov’s office and never heard back. That’s the tale he told the congressional committees: He killed the project before the 2016 primaries began, and he did not make contact with Putin’s office.  
This was all a lie. 
According to the document Mueller filed, negotiations for the Moscow deal went on at least until June 2016, when Trump was the presumptive GOP nominee, and Cohen did make contact with Putin’s office. Cohen also admitted to Mueller that he spoke with Trump more often about the Russia project than he had told Congress. 
The real story, Cohen acknowledged, was that Cohen emailed Peskov’s office twice, seeking help from Putin’s aide. According to the filing, Cohen heard back from Peskov’s personal assistant, who asked that he call her. Cohen called her and explained the project, providing the name of the Russian development company with which the Trump Organization was working. Cohen asked her for help in moving the project forward, both in securing land for the proposed Trump tower and finding financing for the endeavor. Peskov’s assistant asked detailed questions, took notes, and said she would take up the matter with others in Russia. The next day, Sater contacted Cohen and asked Cohen to call him, noting, “It’s about [the President of Russia] they called today.” 
A fair reading of this is that Cohen’s call to Peskov’s office paid off: The next day someone connected to Putin got involved. 
This is a stunning development. During the campaign and afterward, Trump repeatedly said he had no business links with Russia. On July 27, 2016, he proclaimed, “I have nothing to do with Russia. I don’t have any jobs in Russia. I’m all over the world but we’re not involved in Russia.” And during a January 2017 press conference, he said, “I have no deals that could have been Russia, because we’ve stayed away.” These statements had already been proved false by the previous news of the Moscow deal. But the Mueller filing shows that Trump was even more involved in this deal and that it included a major interaction between the Trump Organization and Putin’s office. 
The Mueller filing depicts Cohen as attempting a partial coverup once the story broke. According to the document, Cohen said he lied to minimize the links between the Moscow project and Trump and to give the false impression that the Russia venture ended before “the Iowa caucus and…the very first primary.” Cohen noted he wanted to limit any Trump-Russia investigation. Appearing in federal court, Cohen said, “I made these [false] statements to be consistent with [Trump’s] political messaging and to be loyal to [Trump].” This all raises the question: Did Trump know that Cohen was lying about this project? If so, Trump allowed this limited coverup to proceed. And if Trump encouraged Cohen to lie to Congress, he might be guilty of a crime.
The filing notes that Cohen and Sater continued discussing the project until June 2016—and this included talk of both Cohen and Trump making visits to Moscow that would presumably help the deal advance. Cohen discussed with Trump the possibility of Trump jetting to Russia in connection with the project. “My trip before Cleveland,” Cohen told Sater in May. “[Trump] once he becomes the nominee after the convention.” Sater informed Cohen that Peskov wanted to invite Cohen to attend the St. Petersburg Forum in mid-June—a possible sign that Putin’s office remained involved in the project. But Cohen ended up not making that trip. And Trump never traveled to Russia during the campaign. The Mueller filing reports that Cohen briefed Trump family members about the project. 
Here’s the bottom line: Trump was secretly interacting with Putin’s office in order to make money while he was campaigning for president. And it seems Putin’s office tried to help. The venture, though, never came together. But its existence is especially tantalizing given that the first memo in the infamous Steele dossier, which was written in June 2016, claimed that the Kremlin had attempted to cultivate and co-opt Trump in part by “offering him various lucrative real estate development business deals in Russia.”
No surprise, Trump immediately tried to downplay Cohen’s guilty plea. “When I’m running for president that doesn’t mean I’m not allowed to do business,” he told reporters on Thursday morning. But Trump is on record exclaiming that he had done no business with Russia. And he certainly never acknowledged his fixer had reached out to Putin’s office for help on a Moscow project, when Trump was seeking the presidency and speaking positively about Putin. Trump also falsely claimed the Moscow deal had always been publicly known. “Everybody knew about it,” Trump said. “It was written about in newspapers. It was a well-known project.” Cohen is “lying about a project that everybody knew about,” Trump insisted. “We were very open with it.” That, too, is a lie. (During the 2016 campaign, Trump denied knowing Sater—possibly to prevent disclosing this Moscow project.) 
Trump, of course, couldn’t resist dumping on his former lawyer, and he called Cohen “a weak person and not a very smart person.” Yet it is Trump who signed the paperwork on the Moscow deal and kept it secret from voters. And with this deal, Trump sent the message to Moscow—at the same time its hackers were penetrating Democratic targets—that he wanted to do business with Putin and Russia. Imagine how all this looked to Putin, who had already implemented the first steps of a plan to attack the American election. Trump was willing to secretly engage with him for Trump’s own personal benefit. That, no doubt, was the type of fellow Putin would prefer sitting in the White House. 

Trump Admits He “Lightly Looked” at Developing a Russian Building Project During the Election But he insisted it was all “very legal and very cool.” (Mother Jones)

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For our Republican friends. Hoping they repent of their misguided, uncritical support for DONALD JOHN TRUMP, who lied to them about business deals being negotiated with VLADIMIR PUTIN at a time when TRUMP betrayed our Nation by going all soft and squishing on Russia.

Call it what the law calls it -- conspiracy, treason, mone-laundering, international corporate bribery, or in the language of the Constitution of the United States impeachment clause: "High crimes and misdemeanors." 

It's time for TRUMP to go.

From Mother Jones Magazine:



Trump Admits He “Lightly Looked” at Developing a Russian Building Project During the Election

But he insisted it was all “very legal and very cool.”


President Donald Trump attempted to downplay the stunning admission by his former personal attorney that he had lied to Congress about efforts to develop a Trump Tower project in Moscow well into the presidential election, insisting in a pair of tweets Friday morning that his business dealings were “very legal and very cool.”
The tweets marked the second time since Michael Cohen entered his guilty plea Thursday morning that Trump has sharply departed from long-standing denials that he had any financial ties to Russia. “We were thinking about building a building,” he told reporters outside the White House shortly after Cohen appeared in court. “I decided ultimately not to do it. There would have been nothing wrong if I did do it.” 
The remarks undercut his previous and very public statements claiming he had “nothing to do with Russia.” As Mother Jones‘ David Corn explained, while news of the potential Moscow project had already been reported, Thursday’s explosive development showed that Trump was far more involved in the negotiations than previously known:
The Mueller filing depicts Cohen as attempting a partial coverup once the story broke. According to the document, Cohen said he lied to minimize the links between the Moscow project and Trump and to give the false impression that the Russia venture ended before “the Iowa caucus and…the very first primary.” Cohen noted he wanted to limit any Trump-Russia investigation. Appearing in federal court, Cohen said, “I made these [false] statements to be consistent with [Trump’s] political messaging and to be loyal to [Trump].” This all raises the question: Did Trump know that Cohen was lying about this project? 
Shortly after Cohen entered his guilty plea, Trump, who is in Buenos Aires for the G-20 summit, abruptly canceled his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, citing Russia’s seizure of Ukrainian ships.










House Democrats to unveil political reform legislation as ‘H.R. 1’. (WaPo)

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The Democrats' first bill in the 116th Congress, H.R. 1, will propose "public financing of elections, voting rights reforms and new ethics strictures for federal officials."







House Democrats to unveil political reform legislation as ‘H.R. 1’


House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), center, joined by, from left, Democratic Reps. John Lewis (Ga.), Joe Kennedy III (Mass.), Eric Swalwell (Calif.) and Joyce Beatty (Ohio). (AP) (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
House Democratic leaders on Friday unveiled the outline of a broad political overhaul bill that will include provisions for public financing of elections, voting rights reforms and new ethics strictures for federal officials.
The bill has been in the works for months as part of Democrats'“For the People” campaign platform, a framework that helped them win the House majority in this month’s midterm elections.
Numerous outside groups aligned with Democrats have pushed the party’s House leaders to schedule a reform bill as their first order of business, and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) announced before the election that the bill would be designated “H.R. 1” — a symbolic title meant to emphasize its importance, even if it is unlikely to be the first piece of legislation to get a House vote in the new Congress.
“It’s folks from across the political spectrum that are demanding this,” said Rep. John Sarbanes (D-Md.), the principal author of the plan, who stood alongside Pelosi and several members of the incoming freshman class at a news conference.
Elements of the legislation include new donor disclosure requirements for political organizations, a system to multiply small donations to political campaigns, a mandatory new ethical code for the Supreme Court, an end to most first-class travel for federal officeholders, and a broad effort to expand voting access and reduce partisan gerrymandering.
Pelosi and Sarbanes sketched out parts of the bill in a Washington Post op-ed last week.
Asked if she expects buy-in on the legislation from Republicans, including President Trump, Pelosi suggested they could be swayed by public pressure. “Our best friend in this debate is the public,” she said.
The effort was applauded Friday by the government watchdog Common Cause. “Congress is finally listening to the growing demands for reform from the American people,” the group’s president, Karen Hobert Flynn, said in a statement. “On Election Day, voters from coast-to coast sent a clear message that we are ready for bold, comprehensive democracy reforms.” 
Elise Viebeck and John Wagner contributed to this report.

Trump admin approves seismic airgun surveys for Atlantic drilling. (WaPo/ Associated Press)

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After reading this article, I wrote our Mayors and City and County Commissioners:

Sent: Fri, Nov 30, 2018 5:34 pm
Subject: URGENT: Trump admin approves seismic surveys for Atlantic drilling.


Dear Mayors Shaver and George, Vice Mayor England, Chairman Waldron, Vice Chair Smith, and the City and County Commissioners of 
City of St. Augustine,
City of St. Augustine Beach, and 
St. Johns County, Florida: 

1. Please authorize litigation seeking a TRO to halt the seismic surveys -- a subject on which our local governments have already taken a stand.  

2. Don't let violations of NEPA, ESA, Due Process, the Administrative Procedure Act and common sense go unchallenged.

3. Don't let Big Oil's greed destroy our tourist economy, based upon our pristine beaches, free of oil pollution, tarballs, toxicants and dead critters..

4. Please ask learned city and county counsel to join our three local jurisdictions as plaintiffs in legal challenges to seismic drilling surveys.

See November 30, 2018 3:10  pm Associated Press article in The Washington Post:


Trump admin approves seismic surveys for Atlantic drilling


Thank you!



With kindest regards, I am,








Trump admin approves seismic surveys for Atlantic drilling


WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Friday authorized use of seismic air guns to find oil and gas formations deep underneath the Atlantic Ocean floor, reversing Obama administration policies and drawing outrage from critics who say the practice can disturb or injure whales, sea turtles and other marine life.
The National Marine Fisheries Service said it has authorized permits under the Marine Mammal Protection Act for five companies to use air guns for seismic surveys in the mid-Atlantic, from Delaware to central Florida.
The surveys are part of President Donald Trump’s bid to expand offshore drilling in the Atlantic. The plan has drawn opposition from East Coast lawmakers and governors, who say it could hurt commercial fishing and tourism.
Seismic surveys have not been conducted in the region for at least 30 years.
Administration officials said that under terms of the law that protects marine life, the permits would allow “harassment” of whales and sea turtles but would not allow companies to kill them.
Survey vessels will be required to have observers on board to listen and watch for marine life and alert operators if a protected species comes within a certain distance, officials said, and acoustic monitoring will be used to detect those swimming beneath the ocean surface.
Surveys will be shut down when certain sensitive species or groups are observed and penalties can be imposed for vessels that strike marine animals, officials said.
None of those precautions were enough for environmental groups and East Coast lawmakers who decried the surveys as cruel and unnecessary. The Trump administration’s call for offshore drilling has generated widespread, bipartisan opposition from states up and down the Atlantic seaboard.
“Seismic testing risks injuring and killing critically endangered species, severely disrupting economically important fisheries and threatening the Jersey shore,” said Rep. Frank Pallone, a New Jersey Democrat who is set to lead the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee in January.
Pallone called an environmentally sound coast critical to New Jersey’s economy and said lawmakers from both parties “will work tirelessly to fight this reckless decision by the Trump administration.”
Diane Hoskins, campaign director at the environmental group Oceana, said approval of the seismic surveys “flies in the face of massive opposition to offshore drilling and exploration from over 90 percent of coastal municipalities in the proposed blast zone.”
The Obama administration rejected the permits last year because of the known harm seismic air gun blasting causes, Hoskins said.
“President Trump is essentially giving these companies permission to harass, harm and possibly even kill marine life, including the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale - all in the pursuit of dirty and dangerous offshore oil,” she said, vowing ongoing opposition.
The American Petroleum Institute, the largest lobbying group for the oil and gas industry, hailed the administration’s action and said seismic surveys are just “one of many steps along a rigorous permitting process” that helps to ensure that any future drilling in the Mid-and South Atlantic would be properly managed and conducted to have minimal impact on the marine environment.
The surveys are needed to ensure oil and gas companies “can make the discoveries of resources that our economy will need for decades to come,” the group said in a statement.
Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

George Herbert Walker Bush, R.I.P.

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Thanks to Mississippi Clarion Ledger editorial cartoonist Marshall Ramsey, for capturing the mood of George Herbert Walker Bush and Barbara Bush. From The  Washington Post and Mississippi Clarion Ledger:







How this emotional George H.W. Bush cartoon went viral — touching even his family


Mississippi Clarion Ledger 2018 (Marshall Ramsey)
Marshall Ramsey was awakened by his wife late Friday night with the news: President George H.W. Bush had just died. Right away, Ramsey thought back to his idea.
When former first lady Barbara Bush died in April, Ramsey — the editorial cartoonist for the Mississippi Clarion Ledger — created a memorial illustration that went viral. Days later, when her husband of 73 years became ill, Ramsey began thinking about a companion cartoon to salute the former president.
“But he’s tough as nails and bounced back,” Ramsey tells The Washington Post’s Comic Riffs, “so I just filed the idea away.”
Until Friday night, when Ramsey learned the 41st president had died at age 94, according to Bush spokesman Jim McGrath.
“I drew it as quickly as I could and then posted” it on social media, Ramsey says of the tribute. “It seems like I’ve [drawn] so many obituary cartoons this year — 2018 has been cruel. But since the last one was so well-received by the Bush family and by parents who had lost children, I wanted to make sure this one was right.”
This one was indeed right, based on swift public embrace of the work, which readers called “beautiful” and “touching.” The tribute cartoon in April pictured Barbara Bush in heaven, being reunited with her daughter Pauline Robinson “Robin” Bush, who died of leukemia in 1953. The Bush parents had called Robin’s death, at age 3, their greatest sorrow.
In the new cartoon, George H.W. Bush, the former Navy pilot and World War II hero, has flown a TBM Avenger to the pearly gates to be reunited with wife and daughter.
“I consider this cartoon and the Barbara Bush cartoon to be bookends,” says Ramsey, who was humbled by the praise that the cartoon drew — especially that of Jenna Bush Hager, the Bushes' granddaughter.
“This brought me such comfort this morning,” Hager wrote Saturday on Facebook, with a shared image of the cartoon. “I had the opportunity to talk with my grandpa about the afterlife.
“This is what he said: ​He answered without any hesitation. ‘Yes, I think about it. I used to be afraid. I used to be scared of dying. I used to worry about death. But now in some ways I look forward to it.’ And I started crying. I managed to choke out, ‘Well, why? What do you look forward to?’ And he said, ‘Well, when I die, I’m going to be reunited with these people that I’ve lost.’ ”
When Hager asked her grandfather whom he hoped to see when reunited, she wrote that he replied: “I hope I see Robin, and I hope I see” Barbara.
The former president added, she wrote, that he hoped that upon this reunion, Robin would still be age 3 — “the little girl he held tightly: who spoke the phrase I have heard Gampy repeat for my entire life, forever knitting Robin’s voice into the tightly woven fabric of our family. ‘I love you more than tongue can tell.’ ”
Hager’s Facebook update has been shared more than 40,000 times and has received more than 100,000 responses.
“To read what Jenna wrote — let’s just say I’m honored beyond words,” Ramsey told The Post. “Let’s put politics aside for a moment — the Bush family is remarkably kind and gracious.”

Mississippi Clarion Ledger 2018 (Marshall Ramsey)
When Ramsey was creating the Barbara Bush cartoon in April, he recalls thinking: “Here’s a person who has had just about everything go right in her life: mother and wife of presidents, big successful family, a successful platform of her own. But I thought: You know, she lost a child. And I know from friends who have lost kids that it is about as painful as it gets.”
Ramsey said about his cartoon honoring George H.W. Bush: “I wanted to incorporate his service to our country because, love or hate him, he served our country in about every capacity.” Ramsey noted he had recently flown in an Avenger, so the experience informed the artwork.
Ramsey notes, too, that it has been exactly 30 years since he first saw George H.W. Bush in person — and drew a caricature of him. The cartoonist was a student at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville in 1988 when then-Vice President Bush — while campaigning for the presidency — visited the campus. The cartoon Ramsey drew featured a lineup of presidential candidates angling for party nominations — including a Bush caricature that Ramsey, a two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, says “did get better over time.”
Three decades later, Ramsey appreciates the responses from such figures as Hager and McGrath.
“But I also just got an email from a mother who shared her conversation with her dying 5-year-old about them reuniting in heaven,” Ramsey says. “Honestly, that moved me to tears.”
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