Posted on 11/01/2005 2:12:15 PM PST by ILLUMINATI_216
Edited on 11/01/2005 3:21:06 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
WBAL news team has announced at 5pm on The Ron Smith Show that MD4Bush has been identified as Ryan O'Doherty, a former Maryland Democrat Party operative/official.
Further details will emerge in moments.
BUMP!
So what's his DU screenname?
yep...
prime example...
murrymom...
LOL!
Exactly right. Anymore, I try to bring questionable posters to the attention of the mods and let them decide about them. Or at least alert the mods to what they are saying.
WOW!
Posted within the same time frame as post #100:
http://www.mddems.org/index.php?display=ViewBlogThread&id=192703
Ryan ODoherty
Nov 16, 2004
9:55 am
Hackerman's partner held fund-raiser for governor: Developer sought to buy preserved land from state
By David Nitkin and Andrew A. Green
Sun Staff
November 16, 2004
Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. collected $100,000 for his re-election campaign at a private fund-raiser held by a business partner of construction company owner Willard J. Hackerman this month, at the same time the governor's aides were contemplating the sale of state preservation land to Hackerman at a below-market price.
Ehrlich raised the money Nov. 4 at the Owings Mills home of Howard S. Brown, a developer and president of David S. Brown Enterprises. Brown and Hackerman's Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. are partners in a project to build a $220 million town center at an Owings Mills Metro station parking lot that would include a library and university building.
The much-delayed project is stuck in litigation in which the state and the Brown and Hackerman team are joint plaintiffs against the former owner of the lot, and the town center will rely on a variety of state approvals to be completed.
Four days after the fund-raiser, Hackerman bowed to criticism and abandoned his plan to purchase the 836-acre forest in Southern Maryland for the same price paid by the state. Hackerman stood to gain up to $7 million in federal and state tax breaks if he preserved the land, but according to documents released last week, he intended to build homes with a water view there.
Repercussions from the aborted deal are continuing. Yesterday, state Sen. Roy P. Dyson, a Southern Maryland Democrat, asked state Attorney General J. Joseph Curran Jr. for an investigation "to see if there was any criminal misconduct" involved in the proposed St. Mary's County transaction.
"I believe it is up to the attorney general's office to investigate this matter," Dyson said in a letter.
Some observers say the appearance of Ehrlich at the fund-raising event illustrates the unsavory role of money in politics and state affairs.
"I would say that sends a message that if you help raise money for the governor, you may get special treatment when it comes to bidding on state properties," said James Browning, executive director of the campaign finance watchdog group Common Cause/Maryland.
"Tragically, it is the way the system works," Browning said. "It suggests that raising money for a candidate is the price of doing business ... It is expected that you help out the campaign with one hand, while you are buying land from the state with the other hand."
Ehrlich, through a spokesman, would not comment yesterday on the fund-raising event. Brown and Hackerman did not return telephone calls seeking comment.
John Reith, Ehrlich campaign finance director, said the event at Brown's home was attended by 100 people who paid $1,000 each for the opportunity to meet the governor and view the developer's collection of modern art.
Brown had previously supported Democratic candidates, Reith said, and is part of a growing number of Jewish leaders who appreciate Ehrlich's support of Israel. The event's co-host was Hanan "Bean" Sibel, a retired food broker who has been a leading financial backer of U.S. Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, a Democrat.
"We're an equal opportunity fund-raiser," Reith said. Hackerman did not attend the function, he said.
Brown and Hackerman are partners in the development group that was selected in 2002, prior to Ehrlich's election, to build on a parking lot at the Metro station. Their group was not chosen through a bidding process but was tapped after another firm withdrew from the project.
While the parking lot is owned by the state, prior owners are fighting to get the land back, claiming they have the right to reclaim the property. The state and Hackerman and Brown are partners in a lawsuit to allow the project to proceed.
Maryland Transit Administration spokesman Richard Scher said the Ehrlich administration supports the Owings Mills project and is pleased with the development team.
"The development process is headed in the direction that the MTA wants," Scher said.
The governor's office also would not comment yesterday on Sen. Dyson's request for a criminal investigation into Hackerman's negotiations to purchase a protected St. Mary's County forest.
Deal questioned
Critics assailed the deal, wondering why the state was planning to sell land shortly after buying it without getting fresh appraisals.
Dyson wrote to Curran that constituents have told him they believe the state acted criminally in putting together the deal. Dyson said he is not sure he agrees but said the questions have merit. At best, he said, it is "a bad way for the state to do business."
Recent revelations that the Ehrlich administration is interested in selling thousands of acres of public land in other parts of the state make questions about the Hackerman deal all the more crucial.
"Somebody needs to look into this, particularly if they plan to do more of this," Dyson said. "It would have really hurt here. It has the potential to do real damage."
Curran reviewed Dyson's letter late yesterday and is contemplating his next steps, said spokesman Kevin Enright. "At this time, he has no comment," Enright said.
'Get the ball rolling'
House Speaker Michael E. Busch, an Annapolis Democrat, endorsed Dyson's request in an interview.
"Good for Roy. Somebody needed to get the ball rolling," Busch said.
Legislative critics have raised concerns that the Ehrlich administration is embarking on a broader strategy to move public land into the hands of private developers. Last week, The Sun reported a list of 64 parcels totaling nearly 3,000 acres that the state Department of Natural Resources has identified as surplus property which could be sold to private interests. Most are in state parks, forests and resource management areas.
State Del. Maggie L. McIntosh, a Baltimore Democrat who is chairwoman of the House Environmental Matters Committee, said yesterday she is planning a hearing to determine how the land was identified.
"It is certainly disturbing," she said.
Added Busch: "Every citizen pays transfer tax to preserve parks and environmentally sensitive areas, and the idea that the administration wants to sell them off to developers and large campaign contributors absolutely flies in the face of good government.
yeah...
but some are just wayyyy over the top...
it's fun to have fun with the ones that try to fight back too
Gee, I can't argue with the sentiments he expressed but why do I think he did not sincerely believe his own words? :^)
lol!
Great find.
Damian O'Doherty, spokesman for County Executive James T. Smith Jr
Senior aide Damian O'Doherty's salary would jump slightly more than 21 percent, from $112,356 to $136,000 -
O'Doherty's job is similar to that of a deputy mayor. Baltimore's two deputy mayors, Michael Enright and Jeanne Hitchcock, make $128,000 and $130,000 a year, respectively, while its chief of staff, Clarence Bishop, is paid $140,000, according to a city spokeswoman.
His brother Ryan, communications director for the Maryland Democratic Party
No, I didn't mean opening a freepmail would reveal your identity, sorry. But it somebody wants to speak with me, they can either figure out a way to do it on the forum, until I get to know them much better, or I probably don't need to read what they have to say anyway.
It's a policy that I feel has served me well. Trolls sometimes send annoying freepmails. Sometimes they post disgusting pornography that gets deleted from the thread but doesn't end up deleted from your ping page.
And then there are real varmint operatives like MD4.
Who is MD4BUSH?
Why do we care?(I really wanna know)
Thanks. Excellent excerpting. LOL
Any hard copy available on this story or is this just media whispers/speculation at this point?
Oh, I enjoy a troll thread as much as the next FReeper :^D
I was referring more to questionable posts or even posters that I recognize but who have become a detriment to the thread through personal attacks for instance. I hand it off to the mods and let them decide. Because even that sort of thing can reflect negatively on FR.
Just my little part to help keep FR litter-free.
http://newsbusters.org/node/2628
Democrat Official Outed as 'Sleaze' Source on Mayor O'Malley: Washington Post Ignored Story It Had
Posted by John Armor on November 1, 2005 - 19:04.
Thanks to the efforts of investigative reporters for WBAL in Baltimore, which has just broken the story, the former third-ranked official for the Democrat Party in Maryland has been outed as the original source for sexual slanders against Baltimores Democrat Mayor, Martin OMalley, who is currently running for Governor.
The original stories in February in the Washington Post blamed the kerfuffel on Joseph Stefan, then an aide to Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich, Jr. The aide was terminated from his position as a result of his name (but not the Democrats name) coming out at the time.
Source: www.wbal.com/shows/Smith/ Transcript should be up, shortly.
Personal note: much of the back story on this subject occurred on FreeRepublic.com, known as FR. I have written on that website, and been a speaker at several rallies in D.C., for that website and its founder, Jim Robinson. My association with the website has lasted over seven years.
Steffan was a participant in that website a year ago, under a screen name. He got into a PRIVATE conversation by Freepmail, a person to person communication system on that website, with someone whose screen name was MD4Bush. This person represented that he was a staunch Republican, in a state where Republicans are in a distinct minority. MD4Bush, in this private exchange, made several salacious sexual charges against the Mayor of Baltimore. MD4Bush, it now turns out, was Communications Director for the Maryland Democrats when he signed up on FR and as his first participation began pushing rumors that OMalley was cheating on his wife.
Steffan did not rise to the bait on most of the charges. But he responded (shades of the Libby investigation) I heard that, too, with respect to one.
Within minutes of the last private communication, two reporters for the Washington Post wrote a story outing Steffan by name as an aide to Governor Ehrlich (a Republican) for dealing in rumors about OMalley. Subsequently, Democrats in the state legislature asked for a full investigation of the Governors staff.
The speed with which the Post had the story suggests that they used MD4Bush as their source. And they must have had some reason for believing that their source was reliable. In short, it is highly likely that the Post knew they were getting information from a then-Democrat staffer in order to attack a Republican staffer and the Governor he worked for.
The understanding of the story would have been much better, and the story would have been far more honest, if the Post had reported that part of the story. But they did not. That suggests that the Post story was deliberately slanted to harm the Republicans and protect the Democrats, when they knew from the get-go that this was a set-up by a Democrat.
John_Armor@aya.yale.edu
Trackback URL for this post:
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John Armor's blog
never mind
Well lookie here. A Democrat operative. I'm shocked!
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