Wilson case jumps to higher authority
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- A Newport Beach attorney has bypassed the usual legal
routes and is taking his case against a South County supervisor to the
state attorney general.
With the request, employment attorney and El Toro airport booster
Richard Taylor bypassed the Orange County Grand Jury, county counsel and
district attorney as he pursues conflict-of-interest charges against
Supervisor Tom Wilson.
“They’re just going to stonewall,” Taylor said. “You can’t get a fair
hearing.”
Taylor, the vice president of the pro-El Toro Airport Working Group,
has accused Wilson of sharing sensitive information obtained as a
supervisor with his South County colleagues on the board of the El Toro
Reuse Planning Authority.
Wilson also holds a seat as a nonvoting “ex-officio” member of the
authority, a coalition of cities fighting the county’s plans for an
airport at the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
In a Nov. 5 letter to Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer, Taylor demanded that
“the citizens and taxpayers of the county of Orange deserve no lesser
than a full review of this conflict.”
Wilson, who represents Newport Coast and much of South County, said
the accusations are evidence of a “personal vendetta” and said he is
unruffled by Taylor’s campaign to bring him under investigation.
“It’s a wild, unsubstantiated charge,” Wilson said Wednesday. “It’s
another desperate measure by an individual who is not getting his way.”
Lockyer, since his election in November 1998, has developed a
reputation as an active investigator. But Lockyer spokesman Nathan
Barankin, who said the office had not yet received Taylor’s letter, said
his boss wouldn’t rush to lower the sights on Wilson.
“As a general matter, the attorney general’s office doesn’t get
involved unless there is a conflict with the local prosecutor’s office,”
Barankin said.
Along with his letter, Taylor sent 66 pages of letters and documents
he said support his claim.
The planning authority invited Wilson to join its board in April 1997
to provide “additional insights from a countywide perspective,” according
to a letter sent to Wilson by then-authority Chairman Richard Dixon.
In an April 29 response, Wilson agreed to join the board and
“participate in a manner which is both appropriate and productive.”
Wilson and other members of the planning authority have said the
supervisor has never shared closed-session information with them. Wilson
reiterated that stance Wednesday.
“There is nothing being discussed in closed session that I can share
that will help anyone,” Wilson said. “The anti-airport group has its own
strategies. They don’t need me.”
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