gotsnowgotslush
skates like Eck
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- Dec 24, 2007
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Scott Walker, hero of selfish trillionaires
7/16/ 2015
This particular John Doe proceeding -- conducted in secret -- investigated got kicked off in 2012 because, as the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel notes, prosecutors suspected that Walker's gubernatorial campaign illegally coordinated with the Wisconsin Club for Growth.
The special prosecutor referred to it as an "a criminal scheme" and to prove it, investigators pointed to documents that seemed to show Walker urging donors to contribute to the advocacy groups, according to the Wisconsin State Journal.
“The four justices whose opinion halts an investigation and possible prosecution of Walker's campaign and allies and orders records to be destroyed were the beneficiaries of at least $10 million in campaign spending by parties named in the investigation,” said a statement from progressive group One Wisconsin Now issued after the decision.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...-lose-to-walker-in-wisconsin-again-again.html
Kevin Kennedy with the Government Accountability Board said such a decision “would result in candidate’s direct control over millions of dollars of undisclosed corporate and individual contributions without limitation on the amounts accepted. A candidate could operate secret committees and direct them to run overwhelming and negative advertising, while the candidate remains above the fray and the public would not know the true source of the contributions and expenditures.”
The two Justices that dissented in the ruling shared similar concerns, saying the ruling will replace the state’s campaign finance rules with “anything goes,” which “will profoundly affect the integrity of our electoral process.”
http://thinkprogress.org/election/2...g-scott-walkers-alleged-illegal-coordination/
The motion passed with a 12-4 vote along party lines.
Finance committee member Sen. Jon Erpenbach, D-Middleton, who lost an open records lawsuit brought by a conservative organization last year, said this change would basically guarantee legislators will knowing and unknowingly break the law.
Journalists often use open records to investigate and report on suspicious activity among lawmakers.
“I have been in office since 1998 and this is the darkest day,” Erpenbach said at the meeting. “The darkest day.”
https://badgerherald.com/news/2015/07/03/finance-committee-votes-to-gut-public-records-access/
7/16/ 2015
This particular John Doe proceeding -- conducted in secret -- investigated got kicked off in 2012 because, as the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel notes, prosecutors suspected that Walker's gubernatorial campaign illegally coordinated with the Wisconsin Club for Growth.
The special prosecutor referred to it as an "a criminal scheme" and to prove it, investigators pointed to documents that seemed to show Walker urging donors to contribute to the advocacy groups, according to the Wisconsin State Journal.
“The four justices whose opinion halts an investigation and possible prosecution of Walker's campaign and allies and orders records to be destroyed were the beneficiaries of at least $10 million in campaign spending by parties named in the investigation,” said a statement from progressive group One Wisconsin Now issued after the decision.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...-lose-to-walker-in-wisconsin-again-again.html
Kevin Kennedy with the Government Accountability Board said such a decision “would result in candidate’s direct control over millions of dollars of undisclosed corporate and individual contributions without limitation on the amounts accepted. A candidate could operate secret committees and direct them to run overwhelming and negative advertising, while the candidate remains above the fray and the public would not know the true source of the contributions and expenditures.”
The two Justices that dissented in the ruling shared similar concerns, saying the ruling will replace the state’s campaign finance rules with “anything goes,” which “will profoundly affect the integrity of our electoral process.”
http://thinkprogress.org/election/2...g-scott-walkers-alleged-illegal-coordination/
The motion passed with a 12-4 vote along party lines.
Finance committee member Sen. Jon Erpenbach, D-Middleton, who lost an open records lawsuit brought by a conservative organization last year, said this change would basically guarantee legislators will knowing and unknowingly break the law.
Journalists often use open records to investigate and report on suspicious activity among lawmakers.
“I have been in office since 1998 and this is the darkest day,” Erpenbach said at the meeting. “The darkest day.”
https://badgerherald.com/news/2015/07/03/finance-committee-votes-to-gut-public-records-access/