EDITORIAL
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Is Gail Hutton the Huntington Beach version of Rip Van Winkle,
sleeping through a potential scandal as evidence piled up higher and
higher around her?
There are only two other possible scenarios, besides slumber, to
explain the city attorney’s behavior. Either Hutton just didn’t see the
potential conflicts of interest hanging on Mayor Dave Garofalo like a big
neon sign or she chose to ignore them.
We’re not sure which is worse.
Garofalo’s panache for mixing city and personal business has been
well-known around town since he was first elected in 1994. At one point,
he even had a double-sided business card: Councilman Garofalo on the
front, complete with city logo; business owner Garofalo on the back.
Garofalo said he often asked Hutton about potential conflicts of
interest, and that she always gave him the green light to vote.
The Independent has uncovered public documents that show Hutton sat by
while Garofalo blew through several red lights.
After he said he sold his business in 1997, Garofalo repeatedly voted
on advertisers, although state law prohibits him from voting on
advertisers for one year after the sale of his business.
In 1998, in a half-hearted attempt by Hutton, she sent some Garofalo
information to the Fair Political Practices Commission to get its advice
on the matter.
Hutton then advised Garofalo in writing to stop voting on advertisers
until the year anniversary of the sale of his publications. But Garofalo
continued to vote on advertisers and Hutton did ... nothing.
After receiving a letter on Oct. 20, 1998 from Steven Churchwell --
then the FPPC’s general counsel, now Garofalo’s attorney -- warning
against voting on business involving advertisers, Hutton still did
nothing while Garofalo voted at least three more times.
In response to the FPPC letter, Hutton promised to discuss the matter
with the state attorney general’s office. That never happened, according
to the attorney general’s office.
This lax behavior is all too typical of the city attorney’s office.
After the first round of articles in the Independent, a deputy city
attorney became angry when a reporter asked if he planned to send the
information -- which detailed how Garofalo was paid by a developer for a
$3,000 ad and then voted four months later in favor of the developer --
to the FPPC.
That’s not the city attorney’s job, he said. If you think it’s
important, send the information yourself.
It gets worse. More than six weeks ago, Hutton promised to forward the
mounting evidence of Garofalo’s potential conflicts of interest to the
FPPC. And she also vowed to have her office investigate a simple matter:
whether Garofalo -- whose company publishes the city-funded visitors
guide -- benefited from city business, a violation of state law.
Hutton never concluded her investigation into Garofalo.
Instead, last week she forwarded her information to the district
attorney’s office and the Fair Political Practices Commission, saying
those agencies were better equipped to handle the case. Too true.
Perhaps the saddest part of Hutton’s inaction is that Huntington Beach
residents carefully set up their local government with an independently
elected city attorney who could be free of political influence. Hutton
reports directly to the residents, the very people she has routinely
refused to serve during the Garofalo controversy.
Let’s hope that the district attorney and the grand jury investigating
possible inside dealings within City Hall is a wake-up call loud enough
for even Hutton to hear.
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