A year full of scandals
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October of 1992 was a pretty crazy time in the Daily Pilot
newsroom.
It’s not often that a newspaper can sink its teeth into one big
scandal, much less two.
But that is exactly what we had going 10 years ago, and I was
fortunate or unfortunate (depending on your point of view) to be a
part of it all. Ultimately, our coverage of those scandals became
part of a sample of work for which we won the coveted General
Excellence Award from the California Newspaper Publishers Assn.
For the city, however, there was no doubt this was unfortunate.
Kevin Murphy was barely on the job a year as city manager when a
new set of problems, merely a year after the revelations that
longtime city Utilities Director Bob Dixon had been embezzling close
to $2 million from public funds, surfaced.
Still licking their wounds from Dixon’s embezzlement, the
bombshell came that longtime Police Chief Arb Campbell and his
right-hand man Capt. Tony Villa were being sued for sexually
harassing four female employees of the department.
The list of women would grow to 10, the charges became wild and
outrageous, Campbell and Villa would eventually be placed on leave,
fired, rehired and then retire.
It was a massive amount of reporting that pretty much consumed
yours truly for the better part of a year.
It concluded for the most part with the arrival of Chief Bob
McDonell, who was brought in to heal the wounds and bring the
department back to its real purpose -- police work.
But back to the next bombshell.
As we were all trying to make sense of the Arb Campbell/Tony Villa
case, word came down that Stephen Wagner, a trusted and
well-respected member of the Newport-Mesa school staff, had been
arrested on suspicion of embezzling thousands, maybe millions, of
dollars.
When the tally was done, the total came to about $4 million, with
tales of Rolls Royces, fine art, extravagant jewelry, mink fur-lined
bathrobes and tuxedos, million-dollar homes and a 5,760-carat
emerald, all sold later at auction.
Wagner pleaded guilty and went to jail, where he ultimately died
from complications of AIDS.
Then Newport-Mesa Supt. John Nicoll, who once seemed a powerful,
imposing and unshakeable figure, saw his image mortally wounded by
the scandal, as parents and community leaders wanted to know how he
could have let this happen under his watch.
I’ll never forget one Speak Up Newport meeting at which former
Coast Magazine editor Jim Wood asked Nicoll how he did not become
suspicious when Wagner, basically a mid-level manager at he district,
was wearing mink tuxedos and driving in a Rolls Royce.
His response was that he tells reporters who ask him that question
-- and he emphasized reporters lived in places like Santa Ana and
Garden Grove -- that in Newport Beach it is not unusual to see
someone driving a Rolls Royce.
I remember looking at the women seated in front of me, who turned
to look at each other and mouthed the words “He’s got to go.”
Indeed, he did go, largely because of health reasons, and the
district went on to reform itself and rehabilitate its image. So much
so that it was able to pass a $110-million school bond just two years
ago.
Today, we revisit the scandal that rocked the district 10 years
ago. We’ll look at what the embezzlement did to the district, what
the district has done to prevent it from happening again, how Wagner
was able to pull it off and what the major players from that scandal
have to say about it today.
As for the Campbell and Villa saga, we’ll take that one up in the
early part of summer, as we look back at Chief McDonell’s 10-year
tenure as chief.
Stay tuned.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He can be reached via e-mail at
[email protected] or by phone at (949) 574-4258.
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