911 Call to the Anti-corruption Infantry
What does this sound like: " We can't certify wild salmon as organic because we can't verify what they are eating. Farmed salmon can be certified because we can know what they are eating, (three times the amount of other wild fish as is produced in a farmed salmon pen) and of course we make a small concession to allow the timy amounts of hormones and pesticides and dye in atlantics." That's from the Canadian government, but if you compare it to issues in the States you won't find any difference really.
This issue of feudalism settling in on Western Alaska, where the CDQ groups, for one, throw their weight around like any of your favorite land barons of the 'Old West,' or the former head of Enron, etc. Go to Nome if you think this division is sustainable. The few natural resources they haven't quite depleted yet are about all that's propping up the works.
Government has to have a lot of workers to make it look like the process is being followed in handing out permits to the extractors. Which is why we need a good law enforcement agency that has some backbone. The FBI did before, let's hope they haven't lost their nerve. This letter from Ray Metcalf in Southcentral Alaska is a compelling one for everyone interested in law and order.
This issue of feudalism settling in on Western Alaska, where the CDQ groups, for one, throw their weight around like any of your favorite land barons of the 'Old West,' or the former head of Enron, etc. Go to Nome if you think this division is sustainable. The few natural resources they haven't quite depleted yet are about all that's propping up the works.
Government has to have a lot of workers to make it look like the process is being followed in handing out permits to the extractors. Which is why we need a good law enforcement agency that has some backbone. The FBI did before, let's hope they haven't lost their nerve. This letter from Ray Metcalf in Southcentral Alaska is a compelling one for everyone interested in law and order.
Open Letter To U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder RE: Ben
Stevens
Sent by U.S.
Priority Mail on May 21, 2012
Citizens For Ethical Government,
Inc.
Post Office Box 231007
Anchorage AK 99523
Email RayinAK@aol.con 907-344-4514
U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
RE: Plea
for Continuation of FBI’s Investigation of Corruption in
Alaska.
CC: FBI Director Robert
Mueller
CC: Jack Smith, Chief of the Public Integrity
Division
Dear
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder:
We at Citizens for
Ethical Government understand that a large number of letters demanding the
federal government’s apology to the Stevens family were recently delivered to
your offices. Attached is a petition signed by 200 Alaskans who not only
disagree, they wish to see the investigations of corruption in Alaska to be
resumed.
We at Citizens for
Ethical Government are the Alaskans who initiated the FBI’s understanding of Ben
and Ted Stevens’ schemes to launder federal appropriations through the Alaska
Fish Marketing Board into the pockets of fish processors. They were kicked back
approximately one million dollars to Ben Stevens under the pretense of
consulting fees. I was also a substantial contributor to the FBI’s understanding
of Veco owner Bill Allen’s twenty-five year history of election fraud and
bribery. Attached you will find an outline of a dozen kickback received by Ben
Stevens at the hand of Ted Stevens.
I personally exposed Ted
Stevens’ real estate business partner Jon Rubini’s use of a fraudulent appraisal
to dupe the office of the Federal National Archives into paying him $3.5 million
for a property that had in fact been appraised at $1.9 million, which Jon Rubini
had purchased for $1.5 million one year earlier.
I did these things
because thousands of people who live in Alaska live in fear of their government
and the “good ol’ boy” network the above people are very much a part of. Alaska
is state where honest business owners tolerate corruption in silence, for fear
of being put out of business if they speak up.
While I
agree that tossing a conviction obtained by prosecutors who failed to play by
the rules was the right thing to do, allowing this unfortunate occurrence to
derail the cleanup of corruption that grips Alaska would be the wrong thing to
do.
The brave
few that did speak up would be left at the mercy of a corrupt, entrenched and
ruthless “good ol’ boy” system that’s already campaigning to rehabilitate its
public image.
With Veco in the driver’s
seat, corruption in Alaska reached that critical mass necessary to become self
sustaining, with or without Veco. Numerous communities across Alaska are
dominated by persons who have secured an unfair advantage over local commerce by
pouring money into the pockets of candidates who sustain their unfair advantage
in return.
Even though the Federal
Courts have convicted four former members of Alaska’s House of Representatives
for taking bribes from Veco, the remaining majority of Alaska’s House elected
the Legislature’s largest remaining recipient of Veco’s contributions, Mike
Chenault, as their presiding officer.
The depth of
Alaska’s corruption was reaffirmed when those at the top, Governor Parnell,
Congressman Young, Senator Murkowski, Anchorage Mayor Sullivan, and the
entire Alaska House of Representatives by way of resolution, proclaimed Ted
Stevens to be an innocent victim, whose reputation was ruined by an
ill-conceived, zealous, and selective prosecution. (See attached news articles.)
(See resolution below.) They, with the support of a few U.S. Senators, are
demanding apologies from your office and calling for the FBI to fire the
investigating agents.
Those whose
corrupt control of Alaska was shaken by the FBI’s investigation lost control of
the Governor’s office and both houses of Alaska’s Legislature for just long
enough to see a fair oil tax known as ACES become law. The same corrupt
influences who pulled Veco's strings have already reasserted control over
the Alaska House of Representatives, and the Governor’s office.
Through advertising expenditures, the same corrupt influences that once
controlled Veco have purchased the silence of most of Alaska's media while
falsely advertising that Alaska's tax on oil is above average among oil
producing countries. With the division of over thirty billion dollars in
profits hanging in the balance from the yet to be harvested oil in Prudhoe Bay,
it’s a sure bet that the oil companies will spend tens of millions of dollars in
an effort to take back the Alaska State Senate next year.
Alaskans cannot throw off this yoke of corruption
without help. The forces of corruption are simply too powerful. If Ted
Stevens' friends in the U.S. Senate get their apology from the U.S. Attorney,
Alaska will be doomed to years of corruption with no possibility of federal
intervention. If Sen. Lisa Murkowski is successful in getting the FBI
agents who investigated Ted fired, it will be decades before any U.S. Senator
will ever be investigated for corruption again.
The Alaska House
resolution declaring Ted Stevens’ innocence and demanding the federal
government’s apology passed by Alaska’s forty-member House, 39 to
1.
It
reads:
"BE IT RESOLVED that the
Alaska House of Representatives demands that the federal government grant
Senator Stevens permission to sue the United States Department of Justice for
redress; and be it
FURTHER RESOLVED that federal employees involved with Senator Stevens' prosecution be investigated for violations of the Hatch Act and, if found guilty, be subject to penalty under the Act; and be it
FURTHER RESOLVED that the United States Government should issue a formal apology to Senator Stevens and the People of Alaska for this heinous miscarriage of justice."
FURTHER RESOLVED that federal employees involved with Senator Stevens' prosecution be investigated for violations of the Hatch Act and, if found guilty, be subject to penalty under the Act; and be it
FURTHER RESOLVED that the United States Government should issue a formal apology to Senator Stevens and the People of Alaska for this heinous miscarriage of justice."
Only one democrat had the courage to vote
against it.
The Alaska State Senate
gave a committee chairmanship to a person known to have, while serving in the
Legislature, executed a written contract to help a “client” secure a seven
million dollar appropriation. The appropriation was made, the “client” paid as
agreed, the contracts and invoices have been delivered to the Alaska State
Troopers, published on the web and no one will prosecute. Conversely, in this
year’s graduation ceremony, the person on the receiving end of the appropriation
was awarded an honorary doctorate of law by the University of Alaska; such are
the spoils of the “good ol’ boy” system in the state of
Alaska.
Paul Jenkins, Bill
Allen’s personal media editor and spokesman for seventeen years, has been given
a weekly Sunday column in Alaska’s largest newspaper. According to Paul Jenkins’
April 5, 2009 article: –– “The federal
government's unconstitutional and outrageous conduct has cost Stevens his
reputation, his seat of 40 years in the United States Senate -- and immeasurable
personal grief. Its true cost to Alaska -- in terms of leadership and effective
representation in the Senate and a stolen election -- remains to be
seen.”
Veco’s
bribery of Alaska’s Legislators didn’t start with John Cowdery, Pete Kott, Vick
Kohring, Beverly Masek, or Tom Anderson. Veco’s bribery schemes were obvious as
far back as 1981, when I served in the Legislature.
Stevens’
choice to roll out the red carpet for Veco –– when he should have been calling
the FBI instead –– gave Veco owner Bill Allen the kind of credibility he needed
to conceal three decades of bribery while Exxon, BP and ConocoPhillips relieved
Alaska of about sixty billion dollars that rightfully belonged to
Alaska.
These are the
people who have the resources to rehabilitate their public images and regain
full control over Alaska’s commerce. If the investigations don’t resume, BP,
Exxon, ConocoPhillips will pull off the second largest heist in U.S. history,
second only the sixty plus billion dollars they gained through bribery over the
previous twenty-five years. Those of us who stepped forward to expose their
skullduggery are likely to suffer the wrath of Alaska’s “good ol’ boy” system
for the rest of our lives.
Sincerely,
Ray
Metcalfe
President and Chairman of
Citizens for Ethical Government, Inc.
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