tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post2681663585057293447..comments2024-01-09T17:38:35.707-05:00Comments on This Old State: Resignation, after 22 monthsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-63430237305910908322009-03-05T20:54:00.000-05:002009-03-05T20:54:00.000-05:00It is the last chaos gold which make me very happy...It is the <A HREF="http://www.vir4u.com/product/Last_Chaos_gold.html" REL="nofollow">last chaos gold</A> which make me very happy these days, my brother says <A HREF="http://www.vir4u.com/product/Last_Chaos_gold.html" REL="nofollow">lastchaos gold</A> is his favorite games gold he likes, he usually buy some <A HREF="http://www.vir4u.com/product/Last_Chaos_gold.html" REL="nofollow">lastchaos money</A> to start his game and most of the time he will win the <A HREF="http://www.vir4u.com/product/Last_Chaos_gold.html" REL="nofollow">buy last chaos gold</A> back and give me some <A HREF="http://www.vir4u.com/product/Last_Chaos_gold.html" REL="nofollow">cheap lastchaos gold</A> to play the game.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-81917256106260229992007-02-19T15:08:00.000-05:002007-02-19T15:08:00.000-05:00Conspicuously absent from among those who can say ...Conspicuously absent from among those who can say "I warned you" is what is supposed to be the people's watchdog for this community: The Charlotte Observer.<BR/><BR/>It is inded a shame when the most accurate analysis of politics, local and statewide,is to be found not in the heavy hitting daily, but in the local alternative weekly newspaper. And it is THERE that those warning were found in the local press, rather than at the Observer.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-92046020214024552842007-02-17T13:45:00.000-05:002007-02-17T13:45:00.000-05:00I am wondering if Jim Black is risking hisplea agr...I am wondering if Jim Black is risking his<BR/>plea agreement by telling people he is not guilty but will plead guilty anyway. <BR/>The judge can't accept a plea if Black believes he is not guilty can he? Below<BR/>is the article from the Charlotte Observer on Saturday that has second hand quotes<BR/>from Black saying he is not really guilty.<BR/><BR/>Rep. Jim Crawford (D-OXFORD) said exactly the same thing on Leg Week in review ON<BR/>unc tv, that Black was going to take the deal EVEN THOUGH he was NOT GUILTY. <BR/>The judge could refuse to take the plea. Just wondering??<BR/><BR/><BR/>'MONEY DRIED UP'<BR/>>Friend: Black said legal tab forced plea<BR/>>Ex-House speaker has real estate valued at more than $3 million<BR/>>JIM MORRILL AND ERIC FRAZIER<BR/>><BR/>>Former House Speaker Jim Black, who faces federal prison for taking what prosecutors<BR/>claim was $29,000 in payoffs, told a friend he pleaded guilty because he could no<BR/>longer afford to defend himself.<BR/>><BR/>>Records show Black, an optometrist, owns more than $3 million in real estate,<BR/>including an office building in uptown Charlotte and three lakefront properties <BR/>along Lake Norman. He belongs to two country clubs.<BR/>><BR/>>But the Matthews Democrat spent nearly $1 million in campaign contributions <BR/>on legal fees last year. And, according to friend and former Mecklenburg Democratic<BR/>chairman Cameron Harris, contributions to Black's legal defense fund have all<BR/>but dried up.<BR/>><BR/>>Harris said Black called him Thursday on his way to federal court in Raleigh.<BR/>><BR/>>I'm going to have to plead to some things I'm not guilty of, Harris <BR/>recalled him saying. I don't want to, but ... I can't raise any more money<BR/>and I don't want to put my family through what I would put them through any <BR/>more.<BR/>><BR/>>Black, 71, pleaded guilty Thursday to taking money from chiropractors that prosecutors<BR/>said amounted to $29,000 over four years. Over the period, they say Black helped<BR/>pass legislation that benefited chiropractors.<BR/>><BR/>>Black's lawyer, Ken Bell, has said that while the Mecklenburg Democrat acknowledged<BR/>taking money, he contested the amount. Neither Bell nor Black could be reached Friday.<BR/>><BR/>>Black faces up to 10 years in prison. Sentencing is expected in May.<BR/>><BR/>>Since federal and state investigations began two years ago, several of Black's<BR/>allies and former associates have pleaded guilty to various charges. Black has dug<BR/>deep to pay his own legal fees.<BR/>><BR/>>Funding began to ebb<BR/>><BR/>>After the attorney general rejected his request for $200,000 in state money <BR/>last spring, Black's friends created a private legal defense fund. Organizers<BR/>refused to make its records public.But from his campaign fund, Black spent $915,000<BR/>on legal fees between July and November alone.<BR/>><BR/>>Once one of the legislature's top fundraisers, Black saw his own contributions<BR/>fall to $57,000 in the last quarter of 2006, most coming from fellow optometrists.<BR/>Contributions to his defense fund apparently dwindled, too.<BR/>><BR/>>"The money dried up," Harris said Friday. "All the guys who got<BR/>help from him stopped returning phone calls."<BR/>><BR/>>Addison Bell, a Matthews businessman who set up the fund, could not be reached<BR/>Friday.<BR/>><BR/>>"They're hopeful that there's more money coming," said Stan<BR/>Campbell, the fund's trustee. "But I don't know what plans they have<BR/>to make that happen."<BR/>><BR/>>Despite Black's rising legal costs, he has extensive personal real estate<BR/>holdings.<BR/>><BR/>>He owns more than a dozen properties in Mecklenburg and Iredell counties valued<BR/>at nearly $3.4 million. They range from his Matthews home, assessed at nearly a <BR/>half-million dollars, to an uptown office building valued at $1.1 million, to three<BR/>Lake Norman area properties with a combined appraised value of just over $1 million.<BR/>><BR/>>Black's generosity recalled<BR/>><BR/>>Black has practiced optometry since the 1960s. He sees patients at offices in<BR/>Matthews and Charlotte. Black made money, but didn't ask for any from people<BR/>who couldn't afford it.<BR/>><BR/>>Phyllis Lynch, a community leader in Charlotte's Cherry neighborhood, took<BR/>dozens of elderly neighbors in for eye exams. "He would render the services<BR/>free, glasses included," Lynch said Friday.<BR/>><BR/>>Black kept appointments Mondays and Fridays, days the legislature is out of <BR/>session. According to one friend, Black once said two decades of legislative work<BR/>cost him $2 million in lost revenue.<BR/>><BR/>>Harris said Black told him the prospect of continued legal costs helped prompt<BR/>his decision to plead guilty.<BR/>><BR/>>I can win this, Harris recalled he said. But it's going to cost another <BR/>million dollars to do it. <BR/>><BR/>>-- Researcher Marion Paynter and staff writer Carrie Levine contributed.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-75561933932758061002007-02-17T10:48:00.000-05:002007-02-17T10:48:00.000-05:00Why has the Charlotte Observer not asked Lenior-Rh...Why has the Charlotte Observer not asked Lenior-Rhyne College why Speaker Black is still listed on there Web Site as Board Member? I wonder how much money he got for them? Will anyone investgate if money was given to Lenoir-Rhyne as payment for "consideration" by the Former Speaker. Did the Lutheran Church get any money from Speaker Black?Butchhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05639478773413983489noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-55862179731872587902007-02-15T13:19:00.000-05:002007-02-15T13:19:00.000-05:00Jack --Rhodes was our very own Paul Revere who tri...Jack --<BR/><BR/>Rhodes was our very own Paul Revere who tried to warn us about what was coming. For his trouble he was called a "nut case" and "bomb-thrower" and run out of office by his own party.<BR/><BR/>There is a reason people say Jim Black is just the tip of the iceberg.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-22040291.post-40409734407408383592007-02-15T12:21:00.000-05:002007-02-15T12:21:00.000-05:00Why Should Black and Decker Continue to Costs Taxp...Why Should Black and Decker Continue to Costs Taxpayers?<BR/><BR/>AFP-NC Supports Effort to Cut off Taxpayer Funded Pensions to Lawmakers Turned Felons<BR/><BR/>In March of 2005, the grassroots membership of Americans for Prosperity-North Carolina was among the first to call for Speaker Black’s resignation. He refused. Now after millions of dollars in investigations expenses, significant harm to the electoral system and the corrupt creation of the state lottery, Jim Black is headed to federal prison again at the expense of taxpayers. Soon former state representative Michael Decker will be joining him.<BR/><BR/>Unlike many states North Carolina does not appear to have a law that will keep these convicted felons who took bribes and broke the law from collecting a taxpayer funded pension, this is wrong and should be changed immediately. <BR/><BR/>AFP-NC is calling on the legislature to immediately correct this statutory oversight and prohibit any individual from receiving any public pension if they are convicted of a crime that results from abusing their elected or appointed position in any level of state government.<BR/><BR/>“The legislature should immediately pass the ‘Black & Decker Pension’ bill to correct this oversight in law,” said Francis De Luca-State Director AFP-NC.<BR/> “The citizens of North Carolina do not expect their hard earned tax dollars to go to convicted criminals who abused the public trust.”<BR/><BR/>To see a list of states and the current status on policies governing termination or Confiscation of Public Pensions go to:<BR/>http://www.nasra.org/resources/Pension%20termination%20policies.pdfAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com