Talk about an obsessive personality! Here's Ken's latest...
Real value of DA's suit vs. Palco yet to come?
Ken Miller Opinion in The Times-Standard
Your editorial of Jan. 25, “An end to the saga,” criticizes Mr. Gallegos instead of the court's decision, or Maxxam.
It is ironic that the Times-Standard blames Mr. Gallegos for an “ill-thought-out attack on Humboldt County's historical way of life, and on one of the county's main economic engines.” Isn't it Hurwitz who is attacking? After all, the Headwaters Deal secured for Hurwitz a billion-dollar refinance that our watersheds could not afford, with bankruptcy of that venerable “engine” -- and our watersheds -- as the predicted results.
Does anyone doubt Pacific Lumber committed fraud? How else do you so deplete such a rich resource so rapidly, and wreak so much social, economic and environmental havoc, and get away with it?
The court's decision in the Pacific Lumber case crystallizes a frightening expansion of the “right to lie,” so that the successful cheater (as opposed to one who is caught during the proceeding) is immune from any legal consequences for lying in most government proceedings. The rationale is that the protection of free speech, and finality in permitting processes, are worth the damages resulting from undetected deception.
Responsible government agency personnel, already stretched beyond their limits, rely upon compliance with laws that deter, not encourage fraud.
PL is now trying to use the court's decision to stop the Water Board from regulating them. The court concluded that if any part of the state government agreed to the deal, all parts are presumed to have agreed, and therefore must defend it -- including the Water Board, which disagreed, and has been trying unsuccessfully to make PL do something about the nuisance flooding in Freshwater and Elk River.
Analogously, the court determined that as part of the government, the DA -- who never participated in any part of the Headwaters proceedings -- was obligated to have discovered the alleged fraud and to have acted during the Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) or forever defend, not attack, the deal. The implications of this are alarming, especially if fraud is involved.
It is also disturbing that the court's determination -- that PL's lobbying efforts, not the alleged fraud, resulted in the company's success in obtaining a sustained yield plan (SYP) with harvest volumes that finally finished off the company and our watersheds -- was based on fundamental misunderstandings of fact by the judges that could have been avoided in a fair trial.
PL allegedly hid significant new information that proved that their proposed SYP harvest rates would violate water laws, in order to avoid having to recirculate the DEIR, thereby allegedly depriving the public of a legitimate process.
PL had the information over six weeks prior to submitting it, according to the consultant who analyzed the actual data. When PL did turn it in, to officials uninvolved in the process, it was too late to influence the DEIR, which was therefore based on incorrect landslide data. The court did not understand the significance of this.
Recirculation would have meant that all the scientists, agencies, affected residents and interested public weighing in on PL's harvests rates, methods, and proposed mitigations, would have had powerful, irrefutable evidence from PL's own surveys and consultants that PL's proposed logging plans in the SYP were unsustainable and unlawful.
The Mutual Defense Pact (MDP) of the Headwaters Agreement bound the resource agencies to defend the agreement instead of the people, so our government personnel collaborated with PL to avoid the time-consuming recirculation, and keep the March 1 deadline.
Although the political momentum for a Headwaters deal was enormous, PL's lobbying efforts allegedly would have been thwarted by a reanalyzed EIR containing the “corrected” landslide conclusions from Jordan Creek, according to then California Department of Forestry (CDF) chief Richard Wilson.
Soon after the deal was signed, Jim Branham, a key figure in the Headwaters Deal for the California Resources Agency, and Craig Anthony from CDF, joined the PL team, both from lead agencies for the state in the EIR process.
The Appellate Court misconstrued the agencies' roles as independent and unconflicted; but in compliance with the MDP, these agencies have defended PL from the opposition of their critics, including affected watershed residents and others, agency personnel and the DA.
The real value of the suit, and of Mr. Gallegos' foresight in clarifying the damaging consequences of this immunity to our watersheds and workforce, will be if the Legislature makes a “successful” cheater liable, not immune, allowing government to protect us effectively. The court's decision included that advice from the state Supreme Court.
Ken Miller lives in McKinleyville. Oh, let's toot your horn just a little bit more, Ken - Pot Doc Ken Miller writes alot of 215 presecriptions, and he helped write the DA's lawsuit and is very unhappy that it got thrown out of court three times. Ken Miller is a founding member of BACH (Bay Area Coalition for Headwaters), he has several Palco attack groups including "Salmon Forever" and "Humboldt Watershed Council" (note, you should read that Palco Watershed Council). He and his buddies have been suing Palco since the earth was born, and he can't just let this one go. But the worst thing now would be if he is successful in his now apparent bid to OWN the Palco lands. And that is his ultimate goal, recently revealed by his (Humboldt Watershed Council) employee, Mark Lovelace.
Ken Miller is an obsessed man. And he is pissed off that he didn't get what he wanted. And he just can't let it go. Sad? Or maybe pathetic?
ReplyDeleteDear Ken, get over it loser. Maybe you should write yourself a 215 script, buy some pot from one of your dope growing/dealing associates, get stoned, and go eat a couple tacos and some Oreos when you get the munchies. Maybe then you will start to face the facts that you struck out.
Other than that, enjoy the superbowl.
After digesting Mr. Miller's comments it makes sense. He's not really defending Gallegos, he's sticking up for himself! Afterall he, ken miller, is the one behind Gallegos' and Stoen's PL suit. Miller just used his paid for DA to do his bidding and he still can't except that he lost, again and again and again.
ReplyDeleteThis was started in 2003, it's now 2008. The case has been bounced out of what 3 courts? In the beginning Miller was using Gallegos and in the end it was Miller that got used. Maybe Moonbeam will look into the conspiracy between these two? Maybe Miller will finally just shut up and realize this is over.
to much spare time
ReplyDeleteHey Rose, sorry for the off topic post but I think it may have hidden ramifications for Humboldt County. San Jose Mercury news is reporting Josh Hedlund has pled guilty for his Berkely marijuana conspircy. Here is the kicker: he is forfeiting $1 million dollars and giving up his rights to the 7000 acres purchased from Eel River Saw Mills. I think Miller mentioned in an oblique way that he is acquainted with Hedlund in a newspaper article. Wonder how they met? What was the extent of their relationship? How did Hedlund meet Gags? What is their relationship? How much has Hedlund donated to Gags and other local politicians? Maybe you could dig up the court transcripts? I'd love to see the details. Maybe there is a blog story there? Look to see if Hedlund's future court dates are sealed and if there is any local "fallout."
ReplyDeleteWhy would they be sealed? This isn't a case involving kids...
ReplyDeleteMiller may not be done with HIS palco case, but the courts are done with it, with him and with Gags.
ReplyDelete