Rollin rolloin rollin, keep dem Ohio Republican scandals rollin, RAWHIDE!!!

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050817/ap_on_re_us/governor_charges

Ohio Gov. Charged Over Unreported Gifts

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 23 minutes ago

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. Bob Taft was charged with four ethics violations Wednesday for failing to report dozens of gifts that included dinners, golf games and professional hockey tickets, deepening a scandal that has rocked Ohio's Republican Party.

Taft, a Republican and member of a distinguished U.S. political family, becomes the first governor in Ohio history to be charged with a crime. The charges are also an embarrassment for a politician who has pushed for high ethical standards in his office.

Taft, could be fined $1,000 and sentenced to six months in jail on each count if convicted, though time behind bars was considered unlikely.

Taft will respond publicly on Thursday and is not planning to resign, spokesman Mark Rickel said. Prosecutors said they expected the governor to appear in court Thursday but declined to say whether a plea agreement was in the works.

The gifts were worth about $5,800 and given over four years, prosecutors said. Taft earlier had revealed that he failed to report some outings but said the omissions were accidental.

Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said the gifts included two golf outings worth $100 each paid for by embattled coin dealer Tom Noe. Noe is a Republican fundraiser whose $50 million investment of state money in rare coins launched the scandal that led to Taft's revelation that he failed to list golf outings on financial disclosure forms.

State law requires officeholders to report all gifts worth more than $75 if the donor wasn't reimbursed.

O'Brien said the gifts also included meals and tickets for a Columbus Blue Jackets hockey game.

Taft spent Wednesday in his office, announcing the signing of two minor bills in a statement that came less than an hour before the charges were revealed. He returned to the governor's residence without making any comment.

Brian Hicks, Taft's former chief of staff, said the governor's golf outings were a break from the pressure of work.

"I don't believe for one minute that anybody got a contract, got an investment, got a policy decision made because they played golf with the governor," Hicks said.

Hicks was convicted of an ethics violation in July and fined $1,000.

The Ohio Ethics Commission last week concluded its investigation into Taft's golf outings and forwarded the results to prosecutors.

A state task force and the commission are investigating public employees for similar offenses and O'Brien said he expected more serious felony charges to be charged, although not against Taft.

The alleged ethics violations against Taft are another blow to the GOP in the Republican-controlled state that won President Bush re-election. Democrats have found hope for the next election in the investment scandal and a surprisingly close congressional race this month for an open seat in a GOP stronghold.

Taft's great-grandfather was President William Howard Taft — who later was chief justice — and both his father and grandfather were U.S. senators from Ohio.

In a speech in May, the governor stressed the importance of ethical behavior for public employees.

"Public employees can enjoy entertainment, such as golf or dining out, with persons working for a regulated company, or one doing business with the state, ONLY if they fully pay their own way," he said in the speech at Xavier University.

Taft released records Aug. 5 showing he accepted invitations to 21 golf outings since 1999, including one in 2001 with Noe. The coin dealer has contributed $22,190 to Taft's political campaigns, state records show.

Taft's golf partners included
John Snow, then the head of transportation company CSX Corp. and now the U.S. Treasury secretary; and Tony Alexander, president and chief executive of Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp.

Some partners have said Taft paid for the golf; others have said they picked up the tab.

Taft's former chief of staff Brian Hicks pleaded no contest last month to failing to report stays at Noe's million-dollar Florida home. He was fined $1,000.

Noe has acknowledged that up to $13 million is missing from the rare coins fund, and Attorney General Jim Petro has accused him of stealing as much as $4 million.

Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor in 2006, said the charges are part of a "culture of corruption" in Ohio.

Some residents also are fed up with the corruption.

"It's a sad state of affairs," said Bruce Lively, a Maumee resident who said he had backed Taft in the past but now thinks he should step down.

Other Ohio governors have come under investigation, including Republican George Voinovich, investigated for unproven allegations he laundered campaign money, and Democrat Richard Celeste, whose connections to a contributor who owned the failed Home State Savings Bank were examined.

Taft was elected governor in 1998, following the most expensive campaign in state history. He also had been secretary of state, a state representative and a county commissioner in his hometown of Cincinnati.
 
LOL, neo cons hate to respond to this. They hope no one will see their own men embroiled in huge fucking scandals if this thread goes away LOL!!!
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050819...WC.aYMGw_IE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3OXIzMDMzBHNlYwM3MDM-

Ohio GOP Reeling With Governor Conviction

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, Associated Press Writer 16 minutes ago

GROVE CITY, Ohio - In November, Ohio was at the center of the national political stage, delivering the White House to President Bush.

Eight months later, the state's Republican Party is reeling: its leader convicted of ethics violations; a narrow win in a gimmie congressional district; an investment scandal that won't go away.

The troubles play out as the casualty rate climbs from the war in
Iraq and the state economy remains stuck in a slump. The war could hurt Bush's standing in Ohio, mirroring a decline in his popularity nationally. His overall job approval was at 42 percent in a recent poll, with just 38 percent approving of his handling of Iraq.

Diane McCune, who lives in this solidly GOP Columbus suburb, bucked her Democratic roots twice and voted for President Bush, but now she's having second thoughts.

"I'm not feeling so good," McCune said. "I think we maybe made a mistake putting him in there."

As for Ohio's Gov. Bob Taft, convicted Thursday for not reporting that he was treated to dozens of golf outings, the 50-year-old teacher's aide shook her head. "Taft, I feel, has kind of made a joke out of all of us."

Republicans have had a firm grip on Ohio for a decade, controlling the Legislature, all statewide offices and a majority of congressional seats. Not long ago the talk was which of the three GOP candidates would win the primary for governor next year and presumably the job itself.

That talk has changed.

GOP Senate President Bill Harris, an ex-Marine and Vietnam veteran, said support remains strong for the president and the war. But he acknowledged that the people he represents in small cities and rural areas north of Columbus are concerned about the losses.

"They're saying to me, 'Get this settled, and move forward. We can't continue to let it (the war) drag out,'" Harris said.

After years of slight Democratic gains, the landscape has changed.

"This disastrous development for Taft and the Ohio Republicans opens a great opportunity for the Democrats next year to argue for a complete housecleaning in Columbus," said Alec Lamis, a Case Western Reserve University political scientist.

Hundreds of people lined Grove City streets last week for the funeral procession of Lance Cpl. Eric J. Bernholtz, one of 16 Ohio Marines killed in three attacks in Iraq since July 28.

The funeral was held just down the street from the high school where a marching band feted Vice President
Dick Cheney and his wife, Lynne, during a fall campaign appearance.

Earlier this month, Republican Jean Schmidt barely kept the 2nd Congressional seat — long a GOP freebie — in Republican hands. Democrat Paul Hackett combined his credentials as an Iraqi war vet with a campaign that repeatedly attacked Bush and labeled his opponent as a "Bob Taft Republican."

Now Taft's problems have given Democrats more fodder than they could possibly have wished for.

A scandal that began with a prominent GOP contributor's investment of state money in rare coins has ballooned to include 15 state and federal agencies investigating allegations of risky investments and illegal campaign contributions to Bush.

Taft, the grandson of President William Howard Taft, ended up in a courtroom that usually hears theft and traffic cases, concluding one of the most stunning political stumbles in state history. Taft was fined $1,000 for each of four misdemeanor counts.

On Friday, he fulfilled part of his court-ordered sentence by apologizing via e-mail to all state employees. He already apologized to all of Ohio with a statement to the media.

"It is an embarrassing and sad time for all Ohioans," said state Rep. Chris Redfern, the top-ranking House Democrat in the market for a run for some statewide office.

Democrats for the most part have held off calling for Taft's resignation — he insists he's staying — preferring to use his woes and the investment scandal in next year's election. But on Friday, Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman, who is seeking the Democratic nomination, became the first to publicly ask Taft to step down.

"We cannot afford one more day in which the governor is preoccupied with these scandals at the expense of a focus on creating jobs, reforming education, and moving Ohio forward," Coleman said in a statement.

Five candidates want Taft's job, including Coleman and Republican Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, who was criticized for his handling of voting procedures in Ohio's close presidential race.

Coleman, who has a son in the same Ohio-based unit that lost 14 Marines in two days, suggested the war is a ripe issue for Democrats.

"There is a growing sense of opposition to the policies that led us to this war, but also growing support for the warriors," said Coleman, who has twice had to wait for hours to learn of his son's fate following reports of heavy losses.

Lifelong Republican Tim Massaro said he's not ready to change his political allegiance, saying Taft's problems reflect a reality of political behavior. But he acknowledges that support for the war probably has waned.

"Just so many people getting killed, and not finding any weapons of mass destruction," Massaro said.
 
Yeah, this reminds me of the street preacher that used to hang outside the union in college. He was so dedicated, but everyone just thought he was a joke. I'd listen to him for awhile, out of pity and politness but I soon learned that he was nothing but a fucking joke.
 
marshalt said:
Yeah, this reminds me of the street preacher that used to hang outside the union in college. He was so dedicated, but everyone just thought he was a joke. I'd listen to him for awhile, out of pity and politness but I soon learned that he was nothing but a fucking joke.
Ooooh that was good. I bet that argument will cause this GOP scandal to disappear, yessiree!
 
LovingTongue said:
Ooooh that was good. I bet that argument will cause this GOP scandal to disappear, yessiree!

Noe and his lawyers have issued a warning of sorts in the press. His wife was hung out to dry for her part in controlling the election recount in her area of Ohio.

COLUMBUS - Tom Noe yesterday asked Gov. Bob Taft to issue a public statement correcting his accusation Thursday that Mr. Noe "made a great effort to conceal" his role in the state's $50 million investment in rare coins.



If Mr. Taft does not acknowledge that he made a "simple mistake," then Mr. Noe "will help people to understand that it was incorrect," said Mr. Noe's attorney, William Wilkinson.

Mr. Wilkinson would not elaborate but said again that Mr. Noe spoke face to face with Mr. Taft about the Bureau of Workers' Compensation rare-coin investment as they stood among others at an undisclosed location in May, 2001, in Toledo.

<clip>

http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050821/NEWS24/508210419
 
ruminator said:
Noe and his lawyers have issued a warning of sorts in the press. His wife was hung out to dry for her part in controlling the election recount in her area of Ohio.
Torpedo in the water! Torpedo in the water!

I can't wait to see how this pans out.
 
Bob Taft is ugly.

Do you actually read the articles you post or do they bore the shit out of you also?
 
adajh588 said:
Bob Taft is ugly.

Do you actually read the articles you post or do they bore the shit out of you also?
Great argument, Amanda! You'll get your fellow Republican acquitted on appeal with that piece of work, I guarantee it! :D :nana:
 
LovingTongue said:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050817/ap_on_re_us/governor_charges

Ohio Gov. Charged Over Unreported Gifts

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 23 minutes ago

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. Bob Taft was charged with four ethics violations Wednesday for failing to report dozens of gifts that included dinners, golf games and professional hockey tickets, deepening a scandal that has rocked Ohio's Republican Party.

Taft, a Republican and member of a distinguished U.S. political family, becomes the first governor in Ohio history to be charged with a crime. The charges are also an embarrassment for a politician who has pushed for high ethical standards in his office.

Taft, could be fined $1,000 and sentenced to six months in jail on each count if convicted, though time behind bars was considered unlikely.

Taft will respond publicly on Thursday and is not planning to resign, spokesman Mark Rickel said. Prosecutors said they expected the governor to appear in court Thursday but declined to say whether a plea agreement was in the works.

The gifts were worth about $5,800 and given over four years, prosecutors said. Taft earlier had revealed that he failed to report some outings but said the omissions were accidental.

Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said the gifts included two golf outings worth $100 each paid for by embattled coin dealer Tom Noe. Noe is a Republican fundraiser whose $50 million investment of state money in rare coins launched the scandal that led to Taft's revelation that he failed to list golf outings on financial disclosure forms.

State law requires officeholders to report all gifts worth more than $75 if the donor wasn't reimbursed.

O'Brien said the gifts also included meals and tickets for a Columbus Blue Jackets hockey game.

Taft spent Wednesday in his office, announcing the signing of two minor bills in a statement that came less than an hour before the charges were revealed. He returned to the governor's residence without making any comment.

Brian Hicks, Taft's former chief of staff, said the governor's golf outings were a break from the pressure of work.

"I don't believe for one minute that anybody got a contract, got an investment, got a policy decision made because they played golf with the governor," Hicks said.

Hicks was convicted of an ethics violation in July and fined $1,000.

The Ohio Ethics Commission last week concluded its investigation into Taft's golf outings and forwarded the results to prosecutors.

A state task force and the commission are investigating public employees for similar offenses and O'Brien said he expected more serious felony charges to be charged, although not against Taft.

The alleged ethics violations against Taft are another blow to the GOP in the Republican-controlled state that won President Bush re-election. Democrats have found hope for the next election in the investment scandal and a surprisingly close congressional race this month for an open seat in a GOP stronghold.

Taft's great-grandfather was President William Howard Taft — who later was chief justice — and both his father and grandfather were U.S. senators from Ohio.

In a speech in May, the governor stressed the importance of ethical behavior for public employees.

"Public employees can enjoy entertainment, such as golf or dining out, with persons working for a regulated company, or one doing business with the state, ONLY if they fully pay their own way," he said in the speech at Xavier University.

Taft released records Aug. 5 showing he accepted invitations to 21 golf outings since 1999, including one in 2001 with Noe. The coin dealer has contributed $22,190 to Taft's political campaigns, state records show.

Taft's golf partners included
John Snow, then the head of transportation company CSX Corp. and now the U.S. Treasury secretary; and Tony Alexander, president and chief executive of Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp.

Some partners have said Taft paid for the golf; others have said they picked up the tab.

Taft's former chief of staff Brian Hicks pleaded no contest last month to failing to report stays at Noe's million-dollar Florida home. He was fined $1,000.

Noe has acknowledged that up to $13 million is missing from the rare coins fund, and Attorney General Jim Petro has accused him of stealing as much as $4 million.

Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor in 2006, said the charges are part of a "culture of corruption" in Ohio.

Some residents also are fed up with the corruption.

"It's a sad state of affairs," said Bruce Lively, a Maumee resident who said he had backed Taft in the past but now thinks he should step down.

Other Ohio governors have come under investigation, including Republican George Voinovich, investigated for unproven allegations he laundered campaign money, and Democrat Richard Celeste, whose connections to a contributor who owned the failed Home State Savings Bank were examined.

Taft was elected governor in 1998, following the most expensive campaign in state history. He also had been secretary of state, a state representative and a county commissioner in his hometown of Cincinnati.


I've been your ALT for two posts now and I'm already fucking exhausted.
 
LovingTongue said:
Great argument, Amanda! You'll get your fellow Republican acquitted on appeal with that piece of work, I guarantee it! :D :nana:

What can I say? I have extreme talent in that area.
 
adajh588 said:
What can I say? I have extreme talent in that area.
Typical neo con response. When your party is being exposed for its scandals you try and make like it's nothing at all.

:nana: Meanwhile, Taft continues to burn in media hell!! :nana:
 
LovingTongue said:
Typical neo con response. When your party is being exposed for its scandals you try and make like it's nothing at all.

:nana: Meanwhile, Taft continues to burn in media hell!! :nana:

Burning in media hell? Maybe in your own little world, he's featured on the news like once a day, they featured the dog that won the dog show more than that. It's an "ethic violation", not murdering children.

Now Ohio needs to get rid of Mike Coleman.
 
adajh588 said:
Burning in media hell? Maybe in your own little world, he's featured on the news like once a day, they featured the dog that won the dog show more than that. It's an "ethic violation", not murdering children.

Now Ohio needs to get rid of Mike Coleman.
"We just hit an iceberg, passengers, no need to worry, nothing to see here, move along, move along. Band, please keep playing."
 
LovingTongue said:
"We just hit an iceberg, passengers, no need to worry, nothing to see here, move along, move along. Band, please keep playing."

Typical lovingtongue response. When you can't think of anything to say you just say your regular boring ass shit that no one but you thinks is funny.
 
Ah, you know, you're so right... I should know, I moved down here to a red state by choice. You know, kinda figured the progressives down here (and there are a few) needed some help...
Did live in Ohio for a while, but that was back when Dick Celeste (with the lovely Dagmar) was governor, and the Senators were John Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum. Now, it's Taft, Mikey DeWhine, and Voinovich...what happened? (Don't try to answer that one, it's just too depressing...)
 
adajh588 said:
Typical lovingtongue response. When you can't think of anything to say you just say your regular boring ass shit that no one but you thinks is funny.
Typical adajh response. I say something that is absolutely correct and you whine like a bitter little Republican whose party is embroiled in a ton of scandals.

No matter how much shit you talk, these scandals will continue to bite you in the ass. There's not a god damned thing you can say that will make them go away. But God, I do love watching you squirm.
 
LovingTongue said:
Typical adajh response. I say something that is absolutely correct and you whine like a bitter little Republican whose party is embroiled in a ton of scandals.

I did not whine, hell I didn't even bitch which is quite irregular for me.

Does saying the same things over and over to every single person that you disagree with ever get tiring?

You always call people Neo cons, say they whine, call them bitter, and any other words you get around to looking up in your thesaurus. You should really work on new material. And now I'm done talking to you for today, I know, lucky you.
 
adajh588 said:
I did not whine, hell I didn't even bitch which is quite irregular for me.

Does saying the same things over and over to every single person that you disagree with ever get tiring?
The truth will never get tiring. And Taft is still in trouble in Ohio, along with his whole party, and I'm still laughing about it. So now, exactly what have you achieved here with your bullshit?
 
adajh588 said:
Burning in media hell? Maybe in your own little world, he's featured on the news like once a day, they featured the dog that won the dog show more than that. It's an "ethic violation", not murdering children.

Now Ohio needs to get rid of Mike Coleman.


Do you think Tom Noe could damage Taft if he wanted to? Do you think the actions of Bernadette in the 2004 election is appropriate? She was loyal to Taft and Blackwell but they both turned on her when the going got tough.
 
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