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IN JP 2-2 RACE, GRACIA OUTRAISING, OUTSPENDING ALL

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By Juan Montoya
Call it the power of incumbency.
Or perhaps it is the success in collecting cold cash donations to fund your political campaign.

But whatever it is, campaign contribution and expenditures reports filed January 16 show that JP 2-2 incumbent Johnathan Gracia has outraised and outspent his three challengers combined.

Surprisingly Gracia, an attorney,  reported receiving $100,429 and spending $66,136 on the latest report and listed no loans or in-kind contributions in his report. He only reported money given to his campaign. Additionally, he reported having another $32,136 on hand at the time he filed the report.

Included in the report is an August 10 $20,000 contribution by himself to his campaign and $10,000 from his father Robert, a retired federal agent and current Brownsville businessman, on Oct. 11.


By comparison, challenger Javier Reyna, a captain in the Cameron County Sheriff's Department, reported raising $19,091, spending $12,517, and having another $6,573 on hand. Reyna's largest cash entry came as a result of a chicken-plate fundraiser Sept. 11 totaling $5,956, 31 percent – almost one-third – of the total contributions reported.

Diego Alonso Hernandez, a supervisor with the Cameron County District Clerk's Office, came in third reporting he had received
$1,625 in  contributions, spending $1,606 and having $18.47 on hand.  His two cash contributions were in the sums of $250 and $300.

Fred Martinez, a former bail bondsman and office manager, had not filed a report as of posting time.

That sets some people to wondering: "Why is Gracia so interested in the JP's office? The math doesn't add up."

By comparison, Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño reported raising $400 and spending $10,780. He also reported that he had $39,878 on hand and some $70,000 in unpaid loans.

 Joey Lopez, a local grocer and former trustee with the Brownsville Independent School District running for Cameron County District Clerk reported raising $17,400 in contributions and spending $34,685.

Likewise, Sylvia Garza-Perez reported raising $2,782 and spending $15,793.

Even Carlos Masso, who's running for the 197th District Court which covers Cameron and Willacy counties reported only $9,250 in contributions and $15,413 in expenditures.

Once one considers that some of the candidates are running county wide elections while Gracia only represents Brownsville, it makes the total even that more eye-opening. His fundraising would seem more on par for a County Court-at-Law, District Court, or State Rep race. Alex Dominguez, running against Rene Oliveira for Texas State Representative has reported having some $16,861 on hand while reporting he sought no contributions for the period ending December 31.

By contrast, in his filing as District 37 state rep for the same reporting period, Oliveira reports raising $126,107.70, spending 167,756.58, and having 29,640.38 on hand. He is running after being in office for 34 years to make it 36.

In the case of all the candidates in the primaries, the fund raising is not over. There are two more reports due – one 30 days and another eight days – before the primary election March 6.

And just like Oliveira, Gracia's opponents' election-time allegations of four years ago – an escapade while an assistant district attorney with a woman found walking the freeway while he slept in a hotel and his representation of an inmate client who died in custody– seem to have been forgotten by contributors. Those incidents have been overshadowed by judicial corruption trials and other scandals that erupted on the local political scene. Will they resurface?

"But it makes little sense," said a local political "activist.""Why is he so interested in the J.P. position? With those numbers he’s keeping pace with Oliveira and lapping others. But intentions don’t seem to matter. Voters have short memories and money moves politics.”

LOPEZ TO BOLT BISD, SEEK SAFE HARBOR AT THE PORT

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By Juan Montoya
From the coffee klatsch department: Brownsville Independent School District trustee (and now board president) Cesar Lopez will run for commissioner of the Brownsville Navigation District.

We sometimes sit next to tables at local coffee shops and restaurants and just happened to be sitting next to a bunch of political old timers when we overheard that Cesar Lopez had invited BND commissioner John Wood to coffee and talk.

Apparently, Lopez was feeling Wood out to see whether he was going to see reelection at the end of his four-year term in May.

Granted, Cesar has already held a fundraiser at $40 a pop for his reelection for the BISD, but it appears the heat in that kitchen is getting a mite warm for his comfort. What with all that hullabaloo over the spoiled barbacoa contracts, the continuing debacle over the 11-cent tax increase without going to the voters, with his buddy Joe Rodriguez hogging all the money for his sports palaces to relive his glory days, and the low morale of the teachers ans support staff there, we can hardly blame him.

So the fact that the port raised taxes for the first time in decades might probably not be a good issue for him, to raise against Wood.

But we digress.
There are already about four other candidates for the seat held by Carlos Masso, whose term also expires in May. The names of Esteban Guerra, Ernesto de Leon, Ernie Hernandez, and a woman named Priscilla Roca have been thrown around going for that spot.

So Lopez thinks that Wood may be vulnerable in some way.
From what we heard, Cesar was probing to see whether Wood had committed to run and told him that he was considering leaving the BISD to run for the port. When Wood gave some indication that he was, Lopez told him that he hoped it would be a a clean race.

Now Wood, who has been around the block once or twice in his political career as city and county  commissioner (and even ran for county judge) before he ran for the port could not promise that.

"You know politics," he told Lopez. "If you have any skeletons in your closet, they will be brought out. And even if you don't, they'll make something up."

Lopez was appointed to fill the spot left vacant by Christina Saavedra in 2013 by the late Enrique Escobedo. Before that, he was a purchasing agent for the Mercedes ISD, having gone there after working in a similar position at the BISD. He the ran for office in 2014 against three candidates and – since it's a non-partisan, majority vote – won with 40 percent of the vote.

Now what is Lopez going to tell those supporters who gave him money at his fundraiser for reelection as a BISD trustee? And what would he bring to the table? He is also a representative of the TASBE Buy Board. Since his coming to the BISD, the district has leaned toward that more of procurement for its services, preferring to go without the benefit of bidding.

Valco, the company who sold $100,000s of barbacoa meat and Paragon, the company that has installed artificial turf in district schools to the tune of nearly $6 million were both members of the By Board, also called a cooperative purchasing pool. Is he eyeing the port's purchases as well?

MARY HELEN BERLANGA ENDORSES CORTEZ'S OPPONENT

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

With the endorsement of his Democratic Party opponent Michelle Arevalo Davila by Mary Helen Berlanga, a lawyer and youngest of the Bonilla family in Corpus Christi for the Texas School Board of Education, Brownsville resident Ruben Cortez can't afford to look past the March 6 primary to his eventual Republican opponent.

Both are running for the TSBOE District 2 in the Democratic party primary March 6.

Berlanga announced her endorsement of Davila, a school teacher from Mathis. The State Board of Education District 2 covers Aransas, Calhoun, Cameron, Colorado, DeWitt, Goliad, Jackson, Kenedy, Kleberg, Matagorda, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, Victoria, Wharton, Willacy and parts of Hidalgo.

In the last race, the mail-in vote from Hidalgo and Cameron counties carried Cortez over San Benito ISD administrator Celeste Zepeda Sanchez. 

At that time Sanchez was also endorsed by Berlanga, the member of the heavyweight Bonilla family. Berlanga was the outgoing TSBOE meber for District 2. Cortez is a former Brownsville Independent School District board member. Sanchez since went on to win the election for mayor of San Benito.

Much has been made of the fact that Cortez has a GED compared to his opponent who carries a portfolio chockfull of education related accomplishments.

Davila holds a Bachelor of Arts in History, Spanish and a French minor from Texas A&M University Kingsville. She also holds a Master of Science degree in Secondary Education from Texas A&M University Corpus Christi and a Doctor of Education degree in Bilingual Education from Texas A&M Kingsville.

She holds several SBOE Teacher Certifications in various teaching areas including Generalist K-8; Social Studies; Speech; Bilingual Education; Special Education; Principal and Superintendent.

She currently serves as a Member of the Mathis ISD Board of Trustees in addition to her duties as a classroom teacher in a neighboring district.

Berlanga was appointed to the State Board of Education by Governor Mark White in 1984.

After her appointment, she was elected to the Board in 1988 and served continually until 2012 completing nearly 30 years of service to the state education board. From 1988 to 1998 she served as the Secretary to the board. 

Due to her dedication to the education of the children of Texas, the Corpus Christi Independent School District named one of their newest schools Mary Helen Berlanga Elementary School at the intersection of Carroll Lane and McArdle Rd. In 1999, the State Board of Education presented her with the Distinguished Service Award. 

On the Republican side, City of Brownsville IT specialist Tad Hasse faces Eric Garza, a partner in an ad agency. Ether Davila or Cortez will face one of the Republican candidates in the general election in November.

EVEN TRAIL USERS MARVEL AT THE EXCESSES AND DISPARITY

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

After reading about the lack of bus shelters and sidewalks in the city on this blog, I notice that there are 3 benches within 100 yard radius on the running/bike trail. 

I have been  running on the trail for eight years and have never witnessed anyone sitting down.

Why don't they place these benches at a bus stop so people can sit down while waiting for the bus?
We who use the trail generate zero money. The bus passengers pay a fee for the service. 

Recently they replaced a perfectly good portion of the trail behind the Brownsville event center using cement/concrete instead of asphalt. What a waste. 

Why does the trail need pergola? People are on the trail to exercise not to people watch.

OLIVEIRA'S DISTRICT 37 JOINS THE "ME TOO" MOVEMENT

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By Juan Montoya
Acting through an attorney as a "body corporate," Texas State Legislature District 37 encompassing most of Brownsville and South Padre Island claims it has been subjected to continued abused by its current representative since he has held the seat for the past 34 years.

District 37 – through its spokesperson – charged the abuse has been continuous and that at times Rene Oliveira – the alleged abuser, was joined in the gang rape by the state senator Eddie Lucio Jr. and his son, Eddie Da Third.

Image result for rene oliveira, tsc"District 37 says that it's time it came out and told the world about the ongoing abuse because it wants to encourage others in a similar situation to come out of the shadows and speak out," the statement reads. "I was handed over to Rene many years ago by his influential family, but everybody kept the dark secret hushed up. Enough is enough."

*For example, even though he claims he champions education, Oliveira would have to admit that the number of people with less than high school education is 40,134, or about 41.7 percent compared to the statewide 18.4 percent.

*Persons in poverty numbered 65,090, or 39.1 percent compared to the statewide 7.7 percent. Likewise, per capita income was $13,416  compared to the statewide average of $26,513.

The term barefoot and pregnant comes to mind. At the same time, Oliveira announced in his campaign finance report for the filing period from June 1 through December 31, 2017 that he has collected $126,107.70 in contributions to continue the orgy and seek reelection.

Some people have short memories. In 1991, Lucio and Oliveira bought into the disastrous "partnership" between TSC and the UT System (Rene's alma mater) that required the college district to foot the bill for UT to "partner" with TSC.

The taxpayers of the poorest community in the state and nation would pay for the oil-and-gas wealthy UT System to be here. Over the next 21 years, the community college district – under the "leadership" of President Julieta Garcia – "transferred" more than $1 billion to the UT System, indebted its taxpayers with $120 million construction bonds, and produced dismal graduation and retention rates in return. Tuition was charged at university level even for vocational classes and the community college mission abandoned.

It has only been since 2011 that an independent TSC board of trustees opted to separate itself from the UT System and gain operational independence two years alter in 2013.

But before that happened, the trustees went to Lucio and Oliveira and asked them to support the separation and allow the college to return to its original mission of providing affordable, accessible opportunity to local students.

Oliveira had submitted a bill ( HB 3689) backed by then-UTB-TSC president Julieta Garcia to turn over all the assets of the community college to the UT System diametrically opposed to the wishes of college trustees and residents. It took the testimony before the committee of TSC trustee Adela Garza and even gadfly Erasmo Castro to try to convince Oliveira to amend the bill to make TSC an independent institution. Even the chairman of the committee disapproved of the original Oliveira bill. A substitute bill had to be filed by State Rep. Dennis Bonnen, a Republican to boot.

If not for the resistance to the bill by the TSC trustees and district residents, Oliveira and Lucio were content to have TSC and all the assets nurtured by the district's taxpayers since 1926 gobbled up by the UT System, except for the $128 million in bond debt. As it was, Oliveira submitted a bill that in effect erased the $10 million in rent owed TSC by the UT System.

Now the worse fears of those back in 1988 that the new entity – in this case the UT Rio Grande Valley – would relegate Brownsville to a satellite campus without say so in its operations or academic decisions, have come full circle and a self-fulfilling prophesy.

These turns of events for the worse in the educational opportunities for students in the Matamoros-Brownsville are were made possible by our state legislators despite the fact that Oliveira's uncle – the late Arnulfo "Nuco" Oliveira – served as president of TSC and Pan Am Brownsville before his death.
Additionally, trustee David Oliveira – Nuco's son and Rene's cousin, both Texas Exes – showed his loyalty was to the UT System and not to the people of the district by voting for Garcia's plan to turn over TSC's assets to UTB and to continue to let the community taxpayers subsidize it.

But even worse than that, both Oliveiras and Lucio were willing to turn their backs on the 224 years of the labor of love of Matamoros and Brownsville residents to provide an education to their children.

At least three women say they had "creepy" experiences with the Lothario of Browntown but can't get themselves to complain about them. publicly. If and when they do, they might provide some specifics about his behavior.

And poor District 37, didn't even get a kiss out of it.

WHAT MAKES A COUNTY DEMOCRATIC CHAIR'S HAIR GRAY

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"There's so much confusion, I can't get no relief..." Bob Dylan, All Along the Watchtower


Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Well, now we guess the wild rumors that we heard have turned out to be true.

Someone we thought was lying told us excitedly that there had been a campaign rally for Democratic Party candidates Lali Betancourt who's running against Sylvia Garza-Perez for Cameron County Clerk and Rigo Bocanegra running for County Commissioner for Precinct 2 in the March 6 primary.

Apparently the event took place in Santa Rosa this Saturday and was plastered all over the Internet by numerous people.

The delicious rumor was that the two candidates and their supporters (which by the way includes Mario Saenz, the brother of Luis V. Saenz, Cameron County District Attorney) have pledged their support for former county judge Carlos Cascos, who is a Republican running unopposed in his party's primary.

(D.A. Saenz, by the way, supported his former Public Integrity Unit supervisor Victor Cortez for sheriff against Democrat Omar Lucio. He got trounced, of course, but this goes a bit deeper than it appears.)

Confused? So were we.
Now, we know that Mario has evolved into a politiquero par excellence and has had a hand in shaping several local elections. And the Betancourts have been yellow-dog Democrats since the late Adolfo Betancourt ran for office way back when. In fact, Mario s running for precinct chairman where he votes. What gives here?

David, for example, is the Cameron County Treasurer and ran as a Democrat. Laura, his sister, is also a candidate in this year's election, and is also running in the Democratic Party primary.

Are we to assume that "Team Saenz" has parted ways with the party at least on the general election, if not the primary? After all, there is only one other Republican race on the ballot with local candidates, and that is the Texas School Board Of Education race between Tad Hasse and Eric Garza.

It appears that blood is thicker than mud, as Sly Stone used to sing. But it makes us wonder, as Costello used to ask: Who's on first?

Then someone reminded us that it was Saenz who swore in Cascos the last time he won the race for county judge before accepting Gov. Greg Abbott's appointment as Texas Secretary of State?

Democratic County Chair Amber Medina tell your secretary to comb through your files to see if the two candidates and the DA signed the loyalty pledge to support Democrat candidates. On the other hand, that shade of gray might make you look attractively mature.

And to think that this is the home county of the Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa, a Cascos nemesis. We'd ask to see if his hair turned gray but it might be hard to get a sufficient sample to tell.

WATER TOWER – AND S-MOST LANDMARK – TO BE DEMOLISHED

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By Juan Montoya

If you climb to the top story of the Brownsville Housing Authority's High Rise on St. Charles Street, the only way you can know where the Southmost area is located by looking east and seeing the Public Utility Board's #4 Water Storage Tower off in the distance.

There are literally no other high buildings or landmarks to determine the location of the area.

In fact, many residents give directions based on "la tinaja de agua"to guide people to the barrio. The  1.0MG multi-column elevated storage tank was constructed in 1969 and was judged to be in "poor" condition by Brad McCrea–Dunham Engineering on March 2016.

At that time, the engineering firm recommended that "the tank should be rehabilitated, repaired or demolished within the next 12 months."

Well, more than 12 months have passed, of course, but since that time, the PUB has issued Requests For Qualifications (RFQs) to demolition firms and have settled on Hunter Demolition & Wrecking (from Poteet, south of  San Antonio) and the amount of the award was $109,000.

The tower was erected in 1969 on land belonging to the Brownsville Independent School District on the Cromack Elementary School campus. Since then, it has fallen on hard times and has not been in use for more than a year now.

During the inspection, engineers noted that there was "widespread corrosion damage. Water compartment ladder and roof ladder is unsafe. Roof hatch is not locked. Holes in roof. Overflow flap valve does not function properly."

Additional problems existed of  "overflow flap valve does not function properly, there are holes in roof, pinhole leaks due to corrosion damage, and the top hatch is not locked."

The streets (Southmost and Lima) will not be closed and the demolition will be contained in the fend off area where the tank is currently located. The demolition company will be allowed to keep all the scrap metal to dispose of as it sees fit (scrap, salvage?). The only think the PUB will keep will be the antennas at the top of the structure.

The company feels it can accomplish the demolition within 120 days weather permitting.

RENE OLIVEIRA RELEGATED TO THE DUST BIN OF HISTORY?


AFTER $335K PAYOUT, CABLER'S $318K SLUSH FUND LEFT

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By Juan Montoya

Whatever Charlie wanted, Charlie got.

At the last meeting of the City of Brownsville Commission, members were asked to approve several budget amendments to the general fund, most notably the $335,000 "payout" to former city manager Charlie Cabler.

Cabler was cut a $219,000 golden parachute final check by the city when he resigned early October 2017 amid scandals and terminations that included former Brownsville Fire Dept. Chief Carlos Elizondo, Asst. Fire Chief Ernie Estrada, and City Attorney Mark Sossi.

The difference between $219,000 and the $335,000 transferred covered other costs including retirement, FICA, health insurance, etc.

Eizondo was indicted by a grand jury for theft and Sossi violated his promise to the commissioners when he was caught moonlighting with the City of Mission after he had promised the commissioners he would work exclusively for the city if he was employed as a full-time employee and not on a contractual basis. That would make his child eligible for the city's health insurance and comply with a court order, he said.

Now we find out that aside from the authority of the former city manager to spend up to $35,000 at his discretion without going to the city commission for approval, he also had personal control of another fund, the so-called Benefit Youth Recreational Program funded through donations to his annual City Manager's Golf Classic.

People would often see Cabler eating breakfast at downtown restaurant  or being wined at downtown drinking establishments surrounded by contractors who gladly picked up the tab for him and his municipal workers entourage.

Today, we have found out after making an information request, that the fundraiser fund total stands at $318,160 sitting there in Acct. # 01-9115848. The future of that sum, now that Cabler is gone, is in limbo.

The list of contributors to that fund reads like a virtual list of vendors for the city. Whether Cabler solicited the money from the vendors or had someone in the city visit and strong-arm them to giving "voluntarily" is anyone's guess.

Brownsville's GMS Waste Disposal , which has handled the city's commercial and industrial waste work worth some $60 million over a five-year contract, was notable as one of the main contributors multiple times over the 2015-2017 period as were Spawglass Contractors, Estrada Hinojosa & Co., the city's financial consultants, Linebarger Goggan Blair & Simpson, the city's delinquent tax collectors, Terracon, Republic Services, the Public Utility Board, and SCS Engineers, the firm charged with keeping the city landfill in compliance with state regulatory agencies, EPA and others.

SCS, of Houston, since it was first hired by the city in 2011, has continued to do expensive engineering work (in the millions of $$$) to keep the city's landfill – a moneymaker for Brownsville – in compliance with the EPA and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Their latest work is addressing the use of resaca contaminated silt to be used as a cap daily on the city's landfill.

Cabler went to the well multiple times to GMS for contributions, each time at $750 a pop (23 times multiplied by $750= $17,250). The company has been trying to hold on to its $60 million contract over the objections of some city commissioners who have kept it operating on a month-to-month basis despite recommendations of  Purchasing director Robert Luna who was often supported by Cabler.

Republic Services' contributions were of $10,000 each time (2) as were PUB's.

Firms like Denton Navarro Roccha Bernal Hyde & Zech, P.C., which handle labor mediation cases, the Consolidated Electrical District, Gulf Coast Waste Paper, AGH Engineering & Surveying, Inc. Charlie Clark Nissan, etc., were among the most prominent donors.

The recipients of Cabler's largess could be said to be charitable and noteworthy. Prominent among them were donations to individuals in sports like boxing, soccer, baseball and golf. But there were other more selective gifts such as those to the Guadalupe Regional Middle School ($5,000), Brownsville Police Dept. Christmas Party and the annual Toy Drive, city parks, Hooked for Life, Police Explorers, and some high schools and elementary campuses.

There were donations to the Rio Grande Valley Coaches to assist with their tournaments, East Brownsville Little Miss Kickball, Harlingen Bronco League, and even the Cameron County Bar Association. The Brownsville Historical Association was a recipient as was the Brownsville Falcon Team.

The Texas Exes got a good chunk of cash (thee donations of $5,000 in 2016 alone), and even the UTRGV  for after-school programs.

Notably, there were no donations to Texas Southmost College in the list of recipients.

There was no board to vet and approve the collections or donations. Cabler decided who and when to give the money to exclusively.

Now that Cabler is gone, some commissioners think that the city manager should not have total control of money generated from city vendors who might think that giving to his fund will give them an edge over their competitors for city work. Already, there is talk of having the commission's Audit and Oversight Committee study the issue and make recommendations on whether to continue the fund, or to do away with it.

What to do with the $$318,160 sitting in the account? Tad Hasse, a candidate for the Republican primary nomination for the Texas School Board of Education District 2 seat wants it donated to the Southmost College Endowment Foundation to assist students in the community college.

"That way the fund can be controlled and managed by a neutral foundation which will help local students with their tuition and it can grow to help even more," he said. "It should not be left up to one person's predilection of recipients. I didn't see any barrio recipients or Jewish schools on the list. Help out all the students."   

SANCHEZ WALKS, MURRAY NIXES DEFERRED, SETS PROBATION

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(Ed.'s Note: Initial indications are that visiting judge Menton Murray has placed Robert "Capt. Bob" on regular probation and that he won't require the Democratic Party primary candidate for Cameron County Judge to cool his heels in the hoosegow. Sanchez had received deferred probation that would have erased his conviction if he went through a year without any offenses.

However, Sanchez isn't out of the rough seas yet. By imposing regular probation, Sanchez will have to live with a conviction, although it is just a misdemeanor. This will not make him ineligible to continue running for office. The hearing was carried on in normal tones and was uneventful despite reports that it resembled a morgue.

Apparently, someone assumed that a post by Sanchez saying that "prayer does help" indicated contriteness – and therefore a silent demeanor – on his part. He denied it and said someone who had not been there misinterpreted his post and fabricated the notion that  that he had not participated in the hearing. No credible "source" depicting the hearing in that manner could have been there or reported it to anyone, he said

Sanchez is still under stringent conditions that were set by the court before , we were told. The hearing to adjudicate was held at 1:30 today in the County Court-at-Law 3 courtroom usually presided over by Judge David Gonzalez.)

SALAZAR WEDDING PARTY "UNCEREMONIOUSLY" TURNED AWAY

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By Juan Montoya
Now that the tax office, county clerk, the constable/bailiffs' office, the IT guys, and the three Brownsville justices of the peace have moved to the new county building on Levee Street, ID cards and passes allowing them to enter their old offices on Harrison Street have been lifted to prevent access to the old building.

Bailiffs and attorneys still have access to the buildings as do personnel of the courts and jurists who preside over their courts. But no one is allowed to enter the building or access its courtrooms on weekends or after hours.

So it came as a cruel surprise when JP 2-1 Linda Salazar – Da Wedding Judge averaging 600 weddings a year at $250+ a pop – showed up last Thursday evening after the doors had closed at the Harrison Street building with a large wedding party and wanted to use the jury selection room on the first floor to perform the ceremony. Apparently, she had been doing this unbeknownst to anyone.

When courthouse security found out that she had been using her old pass to access the building after hours to perform weddings, her pass was "unceremoniously" lifted to prevent her from accessing the building without authority. She and her party were then politely turned away and shown the door.

The continued soliciting of weddings by this JP is beginning to get county elected officials to seek some sort of remedy to stop her apparent (and continued) efforts to have county staff steer weddings her way. It wasn't long ago that she was caught on tape going up one floor on the Levee building from her office on the second floor and soliciting couples to allow her to perform their wedding (for a slight fee, of course).
Image result for linda salazar, jp
Before that, she had taken to placing a large sign directing people getting off the elevator there to her office.

That solicitation event took place Dec. 27 at about 11: 45 and was taped without sound because the county is prevented from recording conversations to protect people's privacy.

Is she recorded on the surveillance tape appearing at the old county building on Harrison Street after hours with her wedding party? We'll see.

BISD'S FNS SCANDAL NOT OVER? LOPEZ, ET AL, INVOLVED?

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By Juan Montoya
As can be clearly seen in the above comment, a relative of the late Brownsville Independent School District Food and Nutrition Service Director Silverio Capistran seems sure that more heads will roll in the rotten babracoa case, including that of current president Cesar Lopez.

In the missive above, the anonymous writer says that Lopez was "involved" in the purchase of the spoiled babrabcoa that was processed in Mexico and sold through the Region One Buy Board cooperative purchasing pool by the BISD and La Joya ISD. 

If you'll remember, a justice of the peace ruled Capistran's death a suicide, although the writer above seems to know something about the "so-called" suicide.

Up to now all we know about the bad meat was that the United States Department of Agriculture agents were called to investigate the use of federal funds to buy the Mexico-processed meat. And even thought Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas denied it was Mexican meat, others have asserted that it was and that the district asserted it was not to divert attention from the purchase.

Now we know that right after the bad meat was discovered, Capistran had a large amount sent to La Joya ISD without explanation. A few weeks later, his body was discovered in his pickup truck that was backed up into his parking space at his apartment.

That triggered red flags among his family members who said he never backed up into the space and that the front looked as if it had been pushed there. Among the items recovered by law enforcement (and later given to the FBI) was a phone where relatives say he kept a ledger of his business dealings with the names of his fellow "investors," their return on the investment, and what he was owed for his "cut."

They Buy Board reference is of special interest because not only was the barbacoa company (Valco) a member, but the Brownsville ad and digital graphics company Grafik Spot was a Buy Board member as well. Both of these companies did extensive business with BISD through the FNS department headed by Capistran.
The link to Lopez is that he is the Buy Board representative for the South Texas area that includes Region One, even though he abstains from voting on any Buy Board purchase as a board member.                                                                                                                                   After Capistran's demise, some BISD administrators were astounded to find massive amounts of purchases from Grafik Spot stored in the district's warehouses, including crates full of cafeteria liners purchased in container-sized lots. There were also boxes of Chinese food containers for use in the cafeterias and backpacks that the district gave out to students included among the services provided, we have been told.                                                                              An information request to the district for all payments made to Grafik Spot for the past five years and the items purchased has resulted in the district objecting to the request and submitting their objections to the Texas Attorney General. In its letter to the AG's Office, the district's attorney Miguel Salinas listed exceptions to the Texas Public Information Act of the Texas Government Code Section 551.001 which defines Open and Closed meetings(?).

He also listed Section 552.154, which states that "the name of an applicant for the position of executive director, chief investment officer, or chief audit executive of the Teacher Retirement System of Texas is excepted from the requirements..."(?)

We – not being lawyers – are mystified with all that as a justification to exempt the information from the TPIA, but we'll know soon enough.

Whatever the outcome of the request, we will await the BISD's letter to the AG's Office explaining their justifications not to release the information to the public. It is, after all, the public's money and they deserve to know whether there was any hanky panky is its use. 

We'll keep you posted.

AND G.M.S. WANTS CITY TO INK ITS $60 MILLION CONTRACT?

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(Ed.'s Note: Now operating on a month-to-month basis, GMS Waste Disposal has been after the city commission to grant it its usual five-year, $60 million sweetheart deal that was in the past supported by former city manager Charlie Cabler and recommended by Purchasing Dept. Director Robert Luna.

But with scenes like the one above all too common and business customers downtown complaining about the service, it is doubtful that the commissioners will succumb to its entreaties. The revelations that Cabler had gone to the GMS well repeatedly (23 times in two years) for contributions to his City Manager's Golf  Tournament and Youth Sports Assistance Fund indicated a relationship that smelled of a quid-pro-quo for the company t keep its lock on the business and industrial waste management contract with the city.

Usually, after one of these scenes made the social media cyberpages, the company will scurry to replace the containers. It happened downtown before and it will probably happen again. Until there is a solution found for this, expect it to happen again.)

WE HAVE A SLIGHT SUSPICION BENAVIDES IS FOR RENE...

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(Ed.'s note: Something tells us that perhaps Cameron County Pct. 2 Commissioner Sofia Benavides is throwing her considerable political weight behind District 37 Texas State Rep. Rene Oliveira. Now, this is just a hunch, mind you, but the proliferation of signs is either a strong affirmative assertion of her support or the Oliveira campaign workers wanted to get rid of as many as they could and finish as fast as they could.

We suspect it was the latter since Benavides has to serve on the Cameron County Commissioners Court with Oliveira's opponent Alex Dominguez, her colleague on the court until January 2019. Does she really want an adversary on the court when she might need a vote for some issue for her precinct?)

BLAST FROM THE PAST: CHARRO DAYS GALS 72 YEARS AGO

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(Ed.'s Note: Traces of Texas Brownsville reader Sylvia Escamilla sent in this snapshot taken in 1946  of her mom, Raquel Trevino (Later Raquel Escamilla), and friend Ofelia de los Santos dressed up for Charro Days. We were sent it by one of our readers upstate who used to live in Brownsville. It's hard to imagine that the photo was taken 72 years ago with Charro Days just around the bend. What a wonderful shot. Thank you!)

THE SAME MOLD: SEN. LUCIO JR., LUCIO III, RENE OLIVEIRA

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 By Juan Montoya
One thing you can count on when it comes to our representatives at the state level: If there is a dollar to be made from their positions of public trust, they will grab it.

We saw it in our esteemed state senator Eddie Lucio Jr., and we have seen it in his son Eddie Lucio III. Rene Oliveira is cut from the same cloth.



In Sen. Lucio's case, it was he who convinced the commissioners of the Brownsville Navigation District that they should change engineers for the Bridge to Nowhere from Brown & Root to Dannenbaum Engineering.

The result? The disappearance of $21 million from the port taxpayers, $100,000s in Lucio's pocket as a consultant, and no bridge.

 He did the same thing in Willacy County with the construction of private prisons. He convinced the county commissioners to go with the companies for which he was consulting and three commissioners ended up going to jail for taking bribes. Lucio ended up with, you guessed it, mucho money in his pocket as their "consultant."

Lucio III just happens to be on the The State Water Implementation Fund for Texas (SWIFT) Advisory Committee that advises the Texas Water Development Board on the administration of SWIFT funds.

The committee reviews the overall operation, function, and structure of the fund at least semi-annually and advises the board on any water related matter. That committee has not met since March 2017.

Yet, because of his membership on that committee, Lucio III has managed to snag on as a "consultant" with Beatty Bangle Starma who does work for various water and drainage districts for a pretty fee.

TEDSI, another consultant firm for which Lucio works, regularly bills the Hidalgo Drainage District # 1 for their work and include compensation for Lucio III as a partner in Beatty Bangle in the $10,000s. In inner circles of South Texas water and drainage personnel he is known as a "Water Rata."

He was also chosen as the city attorney for the City of Rio Hondo.

Oliveira is not much different. he is on the "consultant" list for  Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson, the largest delinquent-tax collection firm in the state. In his role as their "consultant," Oliveira passed through a bill in the house that allwed the company to increase their take on the collection of delinquent taxes by 2.5 percent, making them millions at one bold stroke.

His firm is not much different. Take, for example, the recent settlement of the settlement stemming from San Benito's lawsuit against companies involved in the construction of the $17 million water plant.

The media reported that a total of $2.8 million in attorneys’ fees and another $1.06 million in expenses bit into what was a total $9.02 million settlement in favor of the Resaca City. Of that San Bene was paid $4 million and a defendant agreed to perform $3.1 million in services aimed at putting the water plant back into operation.

The settlement stems from the lawsuit filed in 2014, in which the city argued the water plant did not properly operate. City commissioners met in closed session with City Attorney Ricardo Morado to discuss the settlement’s disbursements.

Attorneys’ fees and expenses took about $3.8 million of the total settlement amount. And do you know who Morado works with and how much they were paid? The settlement paid $1.29 million to Morado’s firm, Roerig, Oliveira & Fisher of Brownsville; $1.29 million to Arnold & Itkin of Houston; and $188,219 to Beck Redden & Secrest of Houston.

City Commissioner Esteban Rodriguez said he had questioned the Roerig, Oliveira & Fisher firm’s involvement in the lawsuit because Morado serves as city attorney. “It concerned me at the time,” Rodriguez said. “Now, it’s already settled.”

And so the likes of Oliveira and Lucio 1 and Lucio 3 continue to gorge themselves on the misfortunes of their constituents with not one bit of remorse. Lucio III and Oliveira are up for reelection this year. Will they continue using their public trust to feast on the rotting carcass of the Valley's economy like so many maggots?

GORGEOUS GEORGE GAVITO FEATURED IN KILROY REVISIT

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From: Laura Teten <laurat@sharpentertainment.com>
Date: January 25, 2018 at 10:33:16 AM CST
To: "geogavito@gmail.com"<geogavito@gmail.com>
Subject: Pandora's Box - Kilroy Air Date

Hi George,

I hope this finds you well. I wanted to let you know that the Mark Kilroy episode of Pandora’s Box,
Season Two has been given an official air date! The episode, which will be titled, “The Devil’s Ranch,”
will air on (03/01/18) March 1, 2018 on Investigation Discovery. For the specific time, please check
your local listing.

Thank you again for all your assistance on the project, and we hope you enjoy it.


Sincerely,
Laura Teten

VALCO INVESTIGATION WAS ONLY THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG

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By Juan Montoya
What started off as a United States Department of Agriculture investigation into the purchase of Mexican-processed barbacoa meat from a Region One Buy Board vendor blossomed into a full-fledged probe into the machinations inside the Brownsville Independent School District's Food and Nutrition Service department.

Sources close to the investigation said the ensuing probe started off on the sales of barbacoa by Valco – a company that has since gone out of business – and branched off into other directions, including the purchases of cafeteria items like tray liners, produce, and even backpacks. The probe quickly led to a local digital ads company in Brownsville called Grafik Spot.

Grafik Spot is also a Buy Board registered vendor. The BISD administration has progressively moved toward using the Buy Board vendors to purchase items ranging the gamut from artificial turf, championship rings for winning teams, and just about everything else. Purchasing from vendors enrolled with the Buy Board precludes having to comply with competitive bidding requirements.

For example, in the case of artificial turf installer Paragon, Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas could simply decide which vendor to choose instead of letting out for bids or Requests For Qualifications (RFQs) or Requests For Proposals (RFPs).

When the former director of purchasing Rosie Peña objected and said the company had not been vetted and warned BISD trustee Cesar Lopez against participating in discussions in the facilities committee citing a possible conflict of interest, she was unceremoniously transferred to Food and Nutrition Service for her troubles.

Peña warned Lopez and the administration that since he was a regional representative of TASBE Buy Board for Region One, it might constitute a conflict of interest for him to participate in discussions and possible votes dealing with Paragon, also a Buy Board vendor.

In the case of the USDA investigation into Valco, department director – the late Silverio Capsitran – was scheduled to meet with federal agents the morning after he was found with a bullet in his head sitting in his pickup truck in the parking lot of his apartment.

"(We were) scheduled to meet with Mr. Capistran the morning after," said one. "It was the school district who called (us) at 6:30 a.m. to let (us) know what happened."

"The FBI and Texas Rangers eventually took over the whole investigation," they confirmed. "(We) would assume one of them probably has (Capistran's) phone."

Relatives say that the phone contained detailed specifics about the dealings Capistran had within the department and that he kept a ledger of the outside business he was conducting in association with  "investors" into the barbacoa meat and the cafeteria-oriented purchases with vendors.

That apparently included other cases of fraud such as shorting cases of produce like tomatoes by having the district pay for crates labeled as containing 25 pounds when they weighed 15 pounds instead. The "profits" on the extra non-existing 10 pounds were then split among the "investors."

The same happened when the "investors" purchased containers full of backpacks to be handed out to students, cafeteria tray liners, cardboard containers for chinese food, etc.

"(Our) role in the investigation (the USDA's) was solely on the meat product from Valco," said the source. "As the investigation went on (we) quickly realized there was a lot more going on than just meat from Mexico. The meat product was the least of their worries. The evidence was turned over to the FBI."

The BISD administration and its legal counsel have resisted El Rrun-Rrun's request for information on the payments made to vendor Grafik Sport and made their objections known by appealing to the Texas Attorney General for an opinion on whether the information is exempt under the Texas Public Information Act.

The BISD also said that it had handed over its own probe into the rotten barbacoa meat to its legal counsel Baltazar Salazar. So far, it has not released any of the "findings" Salazar might have made, if any.

WE BEG TO DIFFER WITH ATKINSON ON THE OTHER "CHARLIE"

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By Juan Montoya
At the risk of getting into a wrestling match with a tar baby, we want to answer former city commissioner Charley Atkinson's objections to our post on a fundraising account under former city manager Charlie Cabler.

Cabler was exclusively in control of the City Manager's Fund which was funded by twisting the arms of vendors with the city and other local groups and institutions including banks, attorneys, and the PUB and the port of Brownsville.

To date, that fund has more than $318,000. Since Cabler was in exclusive control of the fund, it awaits the hiring of the next city manager. Artkinson, said he "started this fund as a city commissioner so the city could subsidize youth activities like football, soccer, volleyball and baseball. We raised lots of money from vendors, families, local companies and individuals who supported youth sports."

Apparently, Atkinson has been out of the loop for a spell because the fund did not just fund youth sports, but it also funneled money to golf coaches in the Rio Grande Valley, semi-pro sports teams in Harlingen, and generous gifts to Texas Exes so they could distribute to their alma mater graduates, etc.

And the frequency of "voluntary" contributions to the fund by the likes of G.M.S. which had the five-year, $60 million contract for industrial and commercial waste pickup, give it a "quid pro quo" character that gives it a an unmistakable smell of "you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours."

Ditto got engineering and architectural companies who do business with the city.

When we made our information request we were not goaded – as Atkinson claims – by "City Commissioner Ben Neece and Texas Board of Education candidate Tad Hasse" (who he believes) to be "two clowns (who) should be lucky not to be sitting in jail, let alone having a seat on the city council or competing as a candidate for state office.

"The more these clowns piss people off, the faster they will be out of office," he rants. "It's just the nature of the beast. I would rather raise the money for youth sports than do what City Commissioner Rose Gowen did and make taxpayers fund her food market, which she was financially involved with when she ran for city commissioner. All this shit needs to stop. The Mayor has lost his way. I supported him in the past, but things have gotten bad. He has let the St. Joe Mafia milk this city long enough."

"Montoya is a good man," Atkinson generously states. "But he needs to fact check before he thrashes a good man like Cabler...Transparency is key to rebuilding a city that desperately needs fixing."

We agree with Charlie on that. In fact, we can point to a number of things that might have been fixed along time ago if the other Charlie had been "transparent."

1. He should have stopped former Fire Dept. Chief Carlos Eizondo from continuing to steer patient transfers away from the city's EMS to a private company in which he has a personal interest. Even after the police chief and its investigators wrote him with their concerns, "Charlie" let it continue until the city commissioners – through an audit – uncovered the scam

2. He should have called attention to the fact that former city attorney Mark Sossi was moonlighting with the City of Mission after he had promised the city commission – and the city administration – that as a full-time employee he would work exclusively for the city. Instead, it took the city commissioners calling attention to this fact and terminating Sossi by a majority vote. Where was "Charlie"?

3. He should have put a stop to Mayor Tony Martinez from participating in discussions in executive session over a piece of property he needed to make his property more marketable and sell it at a hefty profit to the RGV Rural Legal Aid. Not only did Martinez participate in the discussion over the property, but he actually signed it over to himself. Where was the good man "Charlie?"

4. Need we go on?

Having what amounts to a "slush" fund at any one person's control is basically not a good municipal government practice, whatever Atkinson says. We stand by our story. 

WERE WE BEING UNFAIR TO BISD BOARD PRESIDENT LOPEZ?

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By Juan Montoya
We ran into a good friend the other day watching a college basketball game over some suds at a local watering hole. Actually, he was having some other libation and we were savoring a few glasses of fermented hops.

But whatever poison it may have been, we listened as he told us that we have been consistent in repeating a factual mistake in our coverage of the continuing saga enveloping the Brownsville Independent School District in the scandal surrounding the scams in the operations of the Food and Nutrition Service Department.

As we know, the day before the late Silverio Capistran – the former director – was to meet with federal gents of the United States Department of Education probing the purchase of barbacoa purchased with federal funds from a vendor who acquired the meat from Mexico, he was found dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot to his head.

Whether you believe it was suicide – as a justice of the peace ruled – or not, the question is really academic. The factual mistake, our friend said, was that the company which sold the bad meat, Valco, was not a Texas Association of School Boards (TASBE) Buy Board vendor as is, say, Paragon, the artificial turf installer.

Instead, Valco, which went out of business after spoiled barbacoa was detected in the BISD's cafeterias, was a member of the Region One purchasing cooperative, not the TASBE Buy Board. BISD is a member of that cooperative as well as a member of the Buy Board. School districts do not have to comply with bidding requirements if the vendor is a member of these cooperatives or buy boards because it is thought that these bodies have already fulfilled those requirement when they vet these firms and place them on its list of acceptable vendors as members.

Why is this distinction important? Because BISD board president Lopez is a representative of the TASBE Buy Board, not the Region One cooperative. We listened to our friend – whose informed opinion we do respect – and agree we were wrong.

So Mr. Lopez, our apologies for  saying Valco was a  member of the TASBE Buy Board for whom you work. It is not. It's may seem like a fine distinction, but it is an important one.

Be that as it may, the public stills needs to be informed of how their money was spent and if any crime occurred in the operations of the district by the BISD administration, its staff, or its board, including board president Lopez.

Those questions have not been answered in the FNS case and neither has the the real story surrounding the untimely death of its director been told. Our inquiries into vendors associated with the department have been resisted by the district and its legal counsel now claims that information is exempted from the public eye by protections in the Texas Public Information Act.

They have resorted to appeal the release of that information with the Texas Attorney General's Office and asked for the AG's opinion, a move which will buy them a couple of months. But what we didn't know was that the BISD had hired a local legal firm to conduct an investigation into the Valco matter and produced a report. Is the report public?

And is there any reference in it to who was behind the company and whether Capistran had other "investors" with him to profit from the transactions by Valco and/or other vendors who did business with the district?

We are already in the process of making yet another information request to get a copy of that report. Will the BISD recur to the AG's Office again to withhold it and keep the public from knowing what happened? We'll soon see.
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