Former New Orleans Mayor, Marc Morial, does not live in New Orleans. That is what makes the following a questionable activity by the former mayor:
Though he has been hard to find in the Crescent City, Morial continued to file for, and receive, a local homestead exemption every year. In doing so, he certified that the Bienville Street home was his primary residence -- even though in 2005, he and his wife, television reporter Michelle Miller, bought a $1.1 million home in Maplewood, N.J. New Jersey has no homestead exemption law.
Is this illegal? What if others tried to pull the same stunt. This is a perfect example of the "content of his character". Stay tune...there may be more to come.
Monday, January 28, 2008
Marc Morial's Questionable Homestead Exemption
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Friday, January 18, 2008
Morial Pal Guilty Of Tax Evasion
It seems that the federal probe, into the dealings of lawyer Roy Rodney, has come to an end. The result--a single misdemeanor charge of tax evasion. It also appears that the former Mayor's confidant could not provide any goods on Mark.
Does that mean Marc Morial is innocent of any wrongdoing or is he just a slick con man who may go down in history as the "Teflon Don Juan"? Well, Stan "Pampy" Barre is still cooperating with the feds, but he has only produced information against imprisoned former council president, Oliver Thomas and an unsubstantiated bribery claim against Una Anderson and two trash haulers, Jimmie Woods of Metro Disposal Inc. and Alvin Richard of Richard's Disposal Inc.
For this info, Mr. Barre's sentencing date has been postponed six times. Is he pulling the wool over the feds eyes or will he break from his well known tradition of lying and finally tell the truth? Only time will tell.
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Labels: marc morial, Roy Rodney, Stan "Pampy" Barre
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Former New Orleans' Mayor Uncle released from prison early
Glenn Haydel, uncle of former New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial has been released from a federal prison camp in Pensacola, Fla., to a halfway house in Lafayette.
Haydel, 62, who pleaded guilty to bilking the Regional Transit Authority of $550,000, is scheduled to be discharged for good March 25, according to the federal Bureau of Prisons. Once moved to halfway houses, inmates are often released well ahead of their scheduled release dates, meaning Haydel could be free by the end of the year.
Ironically, Haydel's wife, Lillian Smith Haydel, could be headed to prison just as her husband is released. Smith Haydel, who pleaded guilty more than two years ago to bribing a New Orleans public schools official in exchange for insurance contracts, is set to be sentenced for that crime Oct. 31.
However, she is likely to receive lenient treatment because she agreed to testify against other insurance brokers who made similar payments.
Glenn Haydel had a lucrative consulting contract with the RTA during Morial's eight-year tenure as mayor. He pleaded guilty to transferring $350,000 of the agency's money into a personal bank account. Another $200,000 was paid in six checks to unnamed individuals and businesses "to facilitate the illusion of legitimacy," according to his indictment.
Haydel paid the stolen money back shortly before turning himself in to federal prison officials in November.
Haydel's release date was moved up mainly because he completed a drug treatment program at the Pensacola camp that allows inmates to shave up to 12 months off their sentences, according to Felicia Ponce, a Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman.
Haydel also received credit for "good time," which can reduce a well-behaved inmate's sentence by about two months per year, Ponce said.
The federal records show that Haydel is in the custody of the community corrections management office of New Orleans. He is staying at the City of Faith facility in Lafayette, according to an employee who answered the phone there.
The essence of Marc Morial: He has relatives either being released from prison or going to prison. He has friends and associates going to prison. His administration was filled with corrupt individuals. Does former Mayor Marc Morial deal with anyone who is a law abiding citizen?
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Labels: associates, crooks, family violence, liars, marc morial
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Jena 6 Case is Not Over
Black leaders plead to Justice
By GERARD SHIELDS
Advocate Washington bureau
Published: Sep 29, 2007 - Page: 1A
WASHINGTON — National civil-rights leaders said Friday that they will seek a meeting with President Bush if the U.S. Justice Department fails to enforce what they consider federal hate crimes in the Jena 6 case in Louisiana.
A contingent of leaders from four civil-rights groups said that they were “extremely disappointed” after a Friday meeting with the Justice Department, whom they said made no commitments to prosecute the hanging of nooses on a tree at Jena High School in LaSalle Parish and the posting of addresses of Jena 6 family members on Web sites.
“There is a very violent atmosphere and those people’s lives are in jeopardy,” said the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
A Justice Department spokesman said after the meeting that the agency, along with the FBI, is investigating the Jena incidents and are taking the allegations seriously.
In addition to prosecuting the incidents, Jackson called for the department to force the district attorney and judge in the Jena 6 case to recuse themselves from further proceedings.
Jackson, president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, was joined by Marc Morial, president of The National Urban League and a former New Orleans mayor. Julian Bond, chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Dennis Courtland Hayes, interim NAACP president and CEO, and Barbara Arnwine, executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, also participated in the two-hour meeting.
As a result of Friday’s meeting, Jackson said the group has asked for a meeting with the interim U.S. attorney general and will call for a meeting with Bush if the group’s requests aren’t satisfied. Jackson also suggested that a march on the Justice Department offices could occur.
Justice Department officials told the civil-rights contingent on Friday that the cases involving hanging nooses were closed, Jackson said. “We see this as a real retreat for civil-rights enforcement,” he said.
The case of the Jena 6 rocketed to the public eye over the past several months, drawing national and international media attention.
Up to 20,000 people poured into Jena on Sept. 20 from across the country in a peaceful demonstration to support Mychal Bell and the five other black defendants — Bryant Purvus, Carwin Jones, Jesse Ray Beard, Theo Shaw and Robert Bailey Jr. — accused of beating white Jena High School student Justin Barker Dec. 4. The defendants have been released on bail.
The Rev. Al Sharpton has led a public charge since last spring and maintained that racial tensions started at the high school in August 2006 when a black student asked school officials at a student assembly whether he could sit under a tree traditionally used as a gathering place by white students. The next day nooses were hung in the tree. The three white students who hung the nooses were suspended.
The Jena 6 were first charged with attempted second-degree murder. That later was lowered to aggravated second-degree battery and conspiracy. Until his conviction, Bell was held on $90,000 bond. Once convicted, his bond request was denied because he has a juvenile record, including adjudications for battery.
Bell, who was 16 at the time of his arrest in Barker’s beating, was convicted in adult court by an all-white jury in June on the battery charge and was to have been sentenced Sept. 20. But the conviction was overturned Sept. 14 by the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeal, ruling the case should have filed in juvenile court.
LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters announced that same day he planned to appeal the court’s decision. But Walters said Thursday that he had since decided to let Bell’s case stay in juvenile court.
Meanwhile, families of the Jena 6 have been threatened on Web sites and radio shows, Morial said. “We believe they are actions that should be prosecuted by this nation’s civil-rights laws and this nation’s hate crimes laws,” he said.
Said Hayes: “Jena is not over with. We have much work to do.”
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