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To: weegee

I didn't see a mention of party ... so I'm guessing he's a Dem?


5 posted on 12/08/2004 1:22:51 AM PST by Mo1 (Should be called Oil for Fraud and not Oil for Food)
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To: Mo1

Mayor Brown was (and was Clinton's Drug Czar to boot). The office of mayor in Houston is technically "non-partisan" but the Comical makes sure to make it about party when a Republican enters the race.


6 posted on 12/08/2004 1:26:39 AM PST by weegee (WE FOUGHT ZOGBYISM November 2, 2004 - 60 Million Voters versus 60 Minutes - BUSH WINS!!!)
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To: Mo1
Sylvia Garcia is also a Democrat.

Here's a lengthy article on Oliver Spellman Oliver's Story - Houston's former parks director tried to expand his résumé with a political job. He may have torched it instead. (November 7, 2002)

The 49-year-old Spellman's sudden departure kicked up a flurry of City Hall rumors, the most persistent being that he flunked a random drug test earlier this month. Three different sources with close administration ties gave the same account.

[snip]

After Brown was safely out of media range on the Middle East jaunt, Spellman announced his departure on a Thursday night in a terse three-sentence e-mail that described his reasons for leaving as "personal" and his location as "out of town, spending time with my family." The mayor's staff then released the statement on Brown's letterhead the next day without any clarification or spin.

Seems to have a lot of "convenient" personal reasons for leaving jobs.

The stocky, sedate, balding bureaucrat hardly cuts the figure of a secretly wild and crazy guy. During his four-year tenure as parks and recreation director, he drew rave reviews as the best and brightest of the mayor's appointees. His reputation as a sober, competent administrator makes the mystery surrounding his resignation and disappearance that much more intriguing.

"I honestly and truly do not know," commented Councilwoman Annise Parker on the reports that drug testing led to Spellman's resignation. "If it's true, then he took the appropriate action."

As for Spellman's reputation as a straight arrow in the Brown administrative jungle, she opines, "That just speaks to our myths and biases about who might be using drugs and what kind of drugs. If so, it's sad for him, it's sad for his family, it's bad for the city, and it's stupid."

"To me he was a very stable, very calm, mannered, nice guy, one of the nicest directors I ever worked with," recalls Councilwoman Carol Alvarado, a former senior aide to Mayor Brown before winning office last fall. "Parks was in my portfolio, so I worked with him a lot, and he was very effective, very smart."

Spellman's decision to leave the parks post for the political role of chief of staff last February puzzled a number of City Hall veterans. Under Brown's rather fuzzy lines of administration (see "Brown's Diss-functional City Hall Family," March 22, 2001), the mayor's office became a free fire zone for power seekers and backstabbers. Particularly hazardous was the chief of staff position, which chewed up three previous occupants, Jay Aiyer, Cheryl Dotson and Jordy Tollett. One source sees the hand of City Attorney Hall, widely viewed as the real power behind the throne in Brown's waning term, in orchestrating Spellman's job change.

"What I was told is that Anthony was the one who selected him and recommended him to the mayor," says the source, "supposedly because he wanted somebody that was not as strong as Jordy, somebody who could be controlled and manipulated."

[snip]

A councilmember believes it was less a matter of manipulation than mission. "Oliver could certainly hold his own. He's a very smart guy, but I don't think he was as strong a personality or as passionate about things as Jordy, particularly things about downtown. I think he saw his job not as an advocate but to carry out the mayor's initiatives."

[snip]

Some City Hall observers saw political motivations in the timing of Spellman's resignation. It came after the mayor suffered perhaps the biggest defeat of his administration earlier this month when City Council voted to award a lucrative Hobby Airport food concession contract to Four Families rather than the administration choice, CA One. The swing vote belonged to Councilman Gabe Vasquez, who is considered one of Spellman's closest council friends. Keller suspects that Spellman caught some of the heat for that loss, and became expendable.

"I'm not necessarily buying the flunk-a-drug-test story," says Keller. "I think they're blaming him for some of their losses. There's more to it than just peeing in a cup."

Vasquez calls that speculation "leftover gossip" from the food fight. "I'm disappointed because I think the city lost a good director, a good administrator," says Vasquez. "I don't know any of the details surrounding his departure, and it's a surprise to me as much as anybody else."


7 posted on 12/08/2004 1:41:02 AM PST by weegee (WE FOUGHT ZOGBYISM November 2, 2004 - 60 Million Voters versus 60 Minutes - BUSH WINS!!!)
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To: Mo1
Have to wonder what this man may have seen in Houston's Democrat machine:

Slipping into Darkness - A lobbyist's last tango: politics, sex, drugs, death (December 4, 2003)

Houston Police Department homicide investigators face a daunting task in sorting out the last hours in the life of 46-year-old municipal lobbyist Ross Allyn. Possible murder suspects range from the male hustlers-for-hire he occasionally took to his Timbergrove Manor rental house, to a circle of cocaine dealers he patronized for years, to local business folk and politicos with grudges over his recent city contract successes.

On his final evening, Allyn confided to a friend over dinner at the Heights-area Hickory Hollow barbecue joint that he believed his phones were tapped. He told another associate that he had done drugs with public officials and had tape-recorded another politician making illegal demands for a cut of a government contract.

[snip]

Whoever shot the popular, perpetually wired Allyn in the neck drew a smoky veil over the evidence. A fire was set that gutted the house and charred the victim and his auto. The pressure is on to solve the case quickly, with Mayor Lee Brown, acting police chief Joe Breshears and District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal closely following the investigation. But where to start on a probe with more loose ends and red herrings than a vintage CSI or Law & Order episode? The suspects, real or imagined, could make for a lineup that stretches around a city block.

Several onlookers at the scene the morning of the murder marveled that visitors -- they included state Senator John Whitmire and City Councilwoman Carol Alvarado -- were allowed inside the house for tours while evidence was still being collected. A close friend of Allyn's, attorney Lisa Liles, retrieved framed photos from the building.

There seemed to be confusion at the house, with chief arson investigator Roy Paul telling reporters he believed the fire was accidental, while homicide officers were indicating to others it was intentional -- and therefore murder. Police have declined comment on any aspect of the investigation.

The killing was the final chapter in the life of a mostly behind-the-scenes City Hall player who publicly advocated honesty in government but seemed drawn to corruption and risky business in both politics and his personal life. He moved to Houston in his teens from San Antonio, graduated from UH-Downtown and South Texas College of Law, but did not pursue a legal career.

Even though he did not speak fluent Spanish, he became the right-hand man for then-councilman Ben Reyes, arguably the most crooked city official of his era. For a time, Allyn worked in a lobbyist business with Reyes's eventual successor, John Castillo. When Reyes and Castillo were indicted for bribery-conspiracy in the federal Hotel Six sting, Allyn was swept up in the net. As it turned out, the FBI had been taping his phone conversations for months in the secret investigation.

And INITIALLY they said that it was just an accidental fire (until they had to admit he was shot).

Our city government is corrupt as the worst of them. And having another Clinton crony (Bill White) replace the last one (Lee Brown) doesn't sit well with me. Nor the fact that they were both the Chronicle's "guy".

8 posted on 12/08/2004 1:48:55 AM PST by weegee (WE FOUGHT ZOGBYISM November 2, 2004 - 60 Million Voters versus 60 Minutes - BUSH WINS!!!)
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