Cunningham Flies Con-Air

Randy “Duke” Cunningham began his new life last week.  According to the San Diego Union Tribune, Cunningham is on a cross country journey that will eventually return him to a minimum security prison in California.

In the Vietnam war, Randy “Duke” Cunningham piloted Navy F-4 Phantom jet fighters to fight the enemy.

While a congressman, he lounged aboard private jets hired by contractors who bribed him for government contracts.

On Thursday, he flew in shackles alongside other criminals on “Con Air,” the nickname for the government airline used to transport prisoners around the country.

The flight from San Diego to Oklahoma City was his first – but surely not his last – aboard an airplane operated by the U.S. Marshals Service.

After a layover of a week or less, the former congressman will board another plane bound for North Carolina, where doctors at a federal prison hospital will evaluate his physical and mental health.

Cunningham, 64, was sentenced March 3 to a prison term of eight years, four months after pleading guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion. He admitted taking $2.4 million in bribes from contractors and another businessman.

U.S. District Judge Larry Burns suggested that prison officials place Cunningham in a privately run prison in Taft, an hour southwest of Bakersfield, so he could be close to his family.

However, the decision is up to the Bureau of Prisons, which will consider Cunningham’s crimes, his health and psychological issues as well as staffing levels and other issues in deciding where he will serve his time.

Cunningham is considered a good candidate for a minimum-security prison, but the one in Taft, run by a private company, doesn’t have the same medical facilities as some other prisons.

That could be a major factor because Cunningham’s defense lawyers raised his health in pleading for leniency. They noted that he has had prostate cancer and knee surgery and suffers from depression.

Cunningham just finished the first week of his 420 week sentence.

CA-50 Kaloogian News – Or Maybe Not

I came across an article regarding congressional candidate, Howard Kaloogian this morning.  Kaloogian, who is running for Randy “Duke” Cunningham’s old seat in the CA-50 has been running a pretty stealthy campaign and hasn’t been able to separate himself from the crowd of 14 Republican hopefuls vying for votes in the April 11 Special Election.

Considering that there isn’t much news about Kaloogian to be found, when this piece from the Agape Press popped up, I figured that Kaloogian’s campaign had finally been picked up on the voter radar.

According to reporter James Lambert, Kaloogian proposed a new get tough measure to address illegal immigration at a border press conference early last week.

Kaloogian’s proposal, if adopted by Congress, would require those wiring money to Mexico to provide identification to financial institutions or wire transfer operators to prove their citizenship. Currently, it is estimated that private-party wire transfers from the United States to Mexico range from $15 to $20 billion annually. “It’s absurd,” he says, “that we continue to allow those who have broken the law by entering this nation illegally to then enjoy the benefit of collecting wages illegally and then sending those funds to a foreign nation.”

More Kaloogian “News” Follows

Oddly, I could find no mention of Kaloogian’s proposal in the local San Diego and North County press.  So, I did what bloggers always do, and I Googled for some additional links.  Turns out there was only one additional information source regarding Kaloogian’s proposal, the always reliable, World Net Daily. 

However, when I pulled up the World Net Daily story it turned out to be the same story, by the same author, James Lambert, as the story posted by Agape.  No other media souce exists for this illusive press conference.  There is no mention of Kaloogian’s proposal, the news conference or his border visit on Kaloogian’s campaign website.  Did it happen?

The Lambert story reads more like a Kaloogian press release than an actual news story.  It contains some glaring inaccuracies not the lest of which is to identify Kaloogian’s Democratic rival as “Carolyn” Busby.  An easy error, if fact checking is not involved and if the story is being written directly from information being fed the author.

Believe it or not, I get press releases here at Words Have Power.  Sometime I read them, sometimes I just delete them.  Occasionally, I even refer to them, but I don’t pretend that they are news.  I don’t know if that is what reporter James Lambert did or if he was at the border press conference.  You can’t tell much about the event from his article.

What led Mr. Lambert to pen the article and ship it off to Agape and the World Net?  Was he on assignment?  Is he an independent?  A stringer?

Fortunately, the Agape Press provides a link directly to James Lambert’s website.  Mr. Lambert, it turns out is in the real estate loan business and his website proclaims both his solid right wing credentials and his clear understanding of the “importance of delivering the fairest RE loan pricing to his customers.”

It is a testament to momentum of Kaloogian’s campaign that the only way it can get its message out is by planting articles in electronic publications that apparently have no editorial standards what-so-ever.  And, apparently, the only author they can find to get the articles into even those shaky publications, will only do it if he can shill his real estate loan business at the end of his “reporting.”

It’s Official – Bibray Is Not A Lobbyist

50th District Republican candidate, Brian Bilbray can list his occupation as an “immigration reform consultant” on the April 11 Special Election ballot.

Millionaire Republican candidate Eric Roach’s lawsuit that would have required Bilbray to list his actual occupation – “registered lobbyist” – was rejected by a judge last week.

Will Roach’s efforts shine additional light on Bilbray’s less than ethical approach to his campaign and the voters of the 50th District?

Bond Deal Apparently Dead

( – promoted by SFBrianCL)

It looks like the bond package will not be on the June ballot after the Senate rejected the Democratic plan on party lines.  Apparently Arnold Schwarzenegger was not capable of herding his GOP cats into voting for this compromise plan.

Hopes dimmed for putting a massive infrastructure bond plan on the June ballot when the state Senate failed early today to muster a two-thirds vote on a $47.3 billion package authored by Democratic leaders that Republicans denounced as a “sham.”

The 24-12 Senate floor vote at 12:30 a.m., which did not include any Republican support, fell three votes short of the 27 votes necessary to keep the plan moving toward the Assembly and possibly derailed efforts to put it on the June primary ballot.(Sac Bee 3/11/06)

It’s really too bad that the GOP has to play these games with the people of California.  It’s also too bad that a 24-12 vote was insufficient to pass the measure.  I must again reitirate my anger over the extreme supermajority rule for taxes and bond packages.  A small minority,  in this case the GOP, should not be able to stall the will of a large majority.  It is an atrocious debasement of democracy and the represenative form of government that we hold so dear in this state and the nation. 

That being said, I think this was a good plan.  Again from the Sacramento Bee:

The Democratic plan included nearly $19 billion for transportation, more than $13.4 billion for K-12 schools and $4.15 billion for flood protection and levee repair, among other items.

Arnold is still optimistic, but we’ll have to see if anything can happen this weekend.