The Piercing Truth

This is right from the dictionary and seems to describe Albuquerque, Berry and Schultz. Fascism (f ash ,izem) noun An authoritarian right wing system of government and/or social organization. (in general use) extreme right wing, authoritarian, chauvinistic and/or intolerant views or practices. Fascism tends to include a belief in the supremacy of one group over another, national, ethnic, especially social strata or monetarily; a contempt for democracy, an insistence on obedience to a powerful leader, and a strong demagogic approach. Compliments of one of our Eyes

Jan 25, 2014

A Double Serving of Crow

YUM!!!


Since last year, we reported how prior to disgraced former APD chief Ray Schultz was shown his walking papers, he took care of a few good friends. You see he made sure those "special" friends of his who were also retiring were able to quickly find new jobs within APD as soon as they left. Well paying jobs at the expense of other people but also where they got to push their weight around a bit also.

We reported how Schultz had the department's IT person, Joanna Hamman placed right after retirement in May where she was before: making a digital mess of Copperfire, Tiburon and all the MDT issues. She continued on with her special skills there: trying to figure out if a floppy drive can handle a hard drive.

Then Schultz had his ongtime secretary, ooops we mean administrative aide, Diane Padilla  placed in APD's Internal Affairs Unit in July. She carried on with her specialized skill there also: filing paper and shredding evidence.

Then of course, Schultz gave the ARAPA queen Karen Fischer, um, special treatment to not only continue what she was doing to but to have her organization operate out of the APD's main police station.

Well on Friday KRQE-13s reporter Katie Kim (and what seems to be her new sidekick, former Albuquerque Journal reporter Jeff Proctor) exploded this story on the mainstream media.

(Here: http://krqe.com/2014/01/24/abq-finds-loophole-in-double-dipping-law/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+krqe-topstories+%28KRQE+News+13+-+Top+Stories%29/)

The facts showed that Padilla is/was working in IA and making $17.00/hr; Hamman $65.00/hr and Fischer $26,000/year.

These people were not just placed in these position though. As reported, none other than CAO Rob Perry approved of the assignments as shown in the memos posted here.

Of course, what did Perry say about this?

"The employees had very specialized, unique program knowledge of the projects they were working on”

But of course, now that the light is on these contracts have been suspended. We guess in daylight this "special unique program knowledge" is about as accurate has Perry's thinking after he catches himself being video'd.

When asked about this matter, disgraced former chief Schultz had no comment other than that he's "retired."

Hmmm, so lets get this right, over 93% of officers rightly reject an insulting contract "proposal" and now Berry/Perry are caught again with more of mess Schultz left. All in the same day?

Rob, we know you like to talk about your game, but c'mon friend, that double serving of crow is, well, foul. But hey, at least it's in synch with the theme for Friday's double-dipping of sulliedness!

P.S. By the way, we at the Eye find it interesting that Select Staffing hasn't had an account with the city before until 2013. Now all of the sudden there are these employees being hired through an independent franchise of a nationwide company? Also, if Hamman was getting $85/hour then we know Select Staffing was charging $170/hour. So the question is.....who here in Albuquerque owns Select Staffing. Because as we've seen with Schultz and his dealing with Nate Korn of Kaufman's West, what good business if you can't get kickbacks in return????

 P.S. We'd ask where's Berry, but he's in D.C. trying to be "all-that" with other mayors. Not that it matters, he'd be hiding anyway.


OUR EYES HAVE REPORTED THE STORY IS NOW ON A DEAD LINK ON THE KRQE.COM SITE. WE'VE PLAYED THIS GAME BEFORE. KUDOS TO GOOGLE CACHE. HERE IT IS IN PRINT:

Once you’re gone, you’re gone.

That was the message the New Mexico Legislature sent to government employees in 2010 when lawmakers banned the widely abused practice of “double dipping” — coming back to work on the taxpayers’ dime while collecting a pension.

But there’s a loophole in the city of Albuquerque through which at least two APD civilian employees have been, for all intents and purposes, pulling two paychecks.

City and state officials say the arrangements don’t specifically violate the prohibition on double dipping. They also don’t appear to uphold the spirit of the law.

In the months before he retired last August, then-Police Chief Ray Schultz drafted memos requesting new positions for two women with whom he had worked closely for years, and who were about to retire themselves.

Diana Padilla had been Schultz’s longtime administrative assistant. JoAnna Hamman was an information-technology specialist who was instrumental in a massive overhaul of the department’s computer systems during the former chief’s tenure
.
Hamman left first, retiring May 31 after 19 years with APD. Three days later, she was back at APD, essentially working in the same job she had just left. Her $5,300-a-month pension checks from the Public Employees Retirement Association began rolling in, and so did the $86 an hour she was earning in her new job. That’s a pay bump of more than $40 an hour over the amount Hamman was paid when she was a full-timer at APD.

Padilla retired the same month Schultz did and started collecting her $3,200 monthly checks from PERA. Before August was even over, she had a second income: $23 an hour from processing records requests in APD’s Internal Affairs unit.

How were Padilla and Hamman able to engage in a practice the Legislature had intended to do away with after a series of news stories by KRQE News 13 and other news organizations had exposed it?
Their new jobs were through a temp agency, which acted as a middle man between the city and the employees.

So, once Schultz had written the memos and city Chief Administrative Officer Rob Perry had signed them, Padilla and Hamman were clear to come back to work at APD.
Employing the two through the temp agency kept the city from running afoul of the law, said Wayne Propst, executive director of PERA. But the arrangement was exactly the sort of thing legislators had intended to halt.

“The Legislature was pretty clear where they didn’t want situations again there was a revolving door and people were able to draw both a salary and a pension,” Propst said in an interview. “We identified the potential for people to use third-party agents to get around the law. No law is perfect …

“It’s always difficult to see someone find their way around the law through a loophole, but it happens with almost every law. So I do think it may be something the Legislature needs to look at again.”
Schultz declined to sit down with KRQE for an interview, saying: “I’m retired now, and I’m just enjoying my retirement.”

He did, however, insist in a brief telephone conversation that neither Padilla nor Hamman had received special treatment.

Neither Padilla nor Hamman responded to requests for interviews.

In an interview, Perry cautiously defended the arrangements that brought Padilla and Hamman back to APD. “The employees had very specialized, unique program knowledge of the projects they were working on,” he said.

Perry also conceded that, in the context of the double-dipping law, Padilla and Hamman coming back to work at APD doesn’t look good.

“The city wants to look at both the letter — and that’s whether the law was complied with — and we think that it was in all of these cases — and the spirit of the law: what was intended to be avoided,” he said. “At the same time, we have to look at trying to complete our technology projects and computer projects in this particular example in the most cost effective means.”
Perry said that in Hamman’s case, Interim Police Chief Allen Banks determined that keeping her on to work on IT projects wasn’t the best use of taxpayer dollars. So last month, Banks “suspended” Hamman’s contract through Select Staff Inc., the temp agency the city uses to hire many of its contract employees.

‘People thought it wasn’t fair’

Propst said the 2010 ban on double dipping was meant, in part, to stop employees from retiring either exactly at the moment they were eligible or, in some cases, even before, then seek a second paycheck in government.

Double dipping, he said, strained the state’s pension fund. That’s because the longer an employee works, the more he or she contributes to the fund – and the less he or she takes out after retirement.
“People thought (double dipping) wasn’t fair,” Propst said. “It wasn’t fair for someone to have a salary from the state and also a pension check from the state …Just the perception that it’s wrong to allow people to receive both a pension and a check from the state of New Mexico.”
State Rep. Bill Rehm (R-Albuquerque) has been an outspoken critic of double dipping through the years.

“We should not allow the return to work for an area where there’s plenty of applicants to come in and fill those jobs,” he said in an interview. “When the individual decides to retire, he’s retired.”
KRQE News 13 explained to Rehm the circumstances of Hamman’s and Padilla’s temporary positions at APD.

“I do not support a person retiring on Friday and coming back to work on Monday morning,” he said.
Rehm is sponsoring a bill in the Legislature that would allow police officers to collect a pension and a paycheck. The proposed legislation is aimed at addressing a statewide officer shortage, which Albuquerque is feeling acutely. APD is down about 200 police officers from the 1,100 it had in 2010, the department’s strongest manpower days.

Rehm had a message for the city of Albuquerque: “When you have a sufficient number of qualified applicants for a non-law enforcement position, don’t come and ask me to support across the board return to work.”

“The public is offended when they find out you’re allowing people to retire on Friday afternoon and come back to work on Monday,” he said. “It’s wrong …By (the city’s) efforts what (it is) doing is adding to the opposition of a return to work in an area (the city) needs it, law enforcement public safety.”

Perry said he asked APD officials whether, in Padilla’s case, there may have been other qualified applicants for the job.

“Because of her knowledge of the Internal Affairs system itself, the filing, the sequestration of files, the utilization of certain provisions of the union contract and the like, her familiarity with that probably made a certain case of uniqueness to that,” he said. “But I think at the same time you could say those are mostly clerical administrative positions and it would be possible to skill someone up to do that and still meet the spirit and letter of the retirement law.”

Another loophole?

KRQE News 13 looked at a third former APD employee’s return to the department.
It wasn’t the same deal Padilla and Hamman had, but Karen Fischer found a way back in, too. She was a longtime civilian employee with the department’s strategic support division who, particularly in the past half-decade or so, worked closely with Schultz on APD’s property crimes initiatives.
Schultz and Fischer won national awards for their work, much of which was done in partnership with the Albuquerque Retail Assets Protection Association, known as ARAPA. The group is a nonprofit that essentially works as a bridge between law enforcement and the retail community to fight property crimes. Schultz and Fischer both were heavily involved with ARAPA, which Schultz often touted as a national model for public-private partnerships.

Fischer retired from APD on Jan. 1, 2013 and began retirement checks that would add up to $55,000 a year. The day before, Schultz signed a one-year contract for ARAPA worth $26,000. And Fischer went to work for ARAPA.

Fischer did not respond to interview requests. Schultz indicated that she didn’t get special treatment, either.

According to corporations records reviewed by KRQE News 13, Fischer is listed as a director for ARAPA – and she’s listed as the nonprofit’s registered agent.
And ARAPA’s physical address? That’s 400 Roma NW, the same address as APD headquarters.
Perry said he wasn’t aware of ARAPA’s address, and he didn’t know whether the group was paying the city rent for office space. He also didn’t know whether Fischer – or anyone else from ARAPA – had access to sensitive police information.

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23 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ask Schultz ex-wife how closely Schultz and Fischer worked together. Nature at play right Ray.

Anonymous said...

Buck Ferry! Puck Ferry! Suck F'chultz!!!

Anonymous said...

Schultz is nothing special so he couldn't treat any of those females as anything special. We all know they had things going on with him. Nature at play... They are all dawgs too..

Anonymous said...

The time has come for APD officers to start speaking out at the Friday Hero (take a picture with Berry) conference. Tell Berry to shove the coffee mug up his ass and give APD a decent pay raise and start holding the command staff accountable for this type of corruption.

APD officers you need to stand up and embarrass Berry at public functions. Refuse to attend. If you do attend demand a pay raise.

Demand that Banks speak publicly and take questions regarding Omaree Valera. Demand total transparency regarding Red Flex and this double dipping scandal. Don't let this go. Be loud and be public and demand Berry do something.

Anonymous said...

Rumor around the main is that tonight's little APD banquet has an "I love Schultz" theme made by ol TJ and Bill.

Anonymous said...

what about karen salizar gets away with everything. she says she is the equivalent of a commander.

Anonymous said...

Why is it that APD rank and file never, ever had a "no confidence" vote in Ray Schultz, but yet voted no confidence in Berry? Why is it that the rank and file vote down a contract, but have not had a "no confidence" vote on Banks? Vulgar talk on this blog from anonymous people, but absolutely nothing happens with nothing new being reported. You think DOJ going to change things, FAT CHANCE.

Anonymous said...

Karen Salazar gets away with everything because of who she is sleeping with.

Anonymous said...

Red Flex, double dipping, Omaree Varela, Nature at Play, $55,000,000 in lawsuits, evidence distroyed, innocent people arrested and kept locked up for years,,,,,,,, yes this is APD under Ray Schultz and Alan Banks. This is APD under Berry.

Any other town and there would be protests every day outside the police station. In Albuquerque no one cares.

We get what we deserve when we don't demand accountability and change.

Anonymous said...

@ 1/25 1731,

The only time Albuquerque cops will be loud and demanding public is when they're harassing citizens or trying to start fights in night clubs and gyms. I guess I can't blame them since by nature and training they're taught to be paranoid cowards.

However, when it comes to admin, they're tucked tails and puckered lips.

I'm sure some 34s here will disagree, but proof is in their public image and how their own system treats them. Men and women of honor and courage, who were good at their jobs would NOT be in the position your average APD officer is in.

Anyone reading this may think that the above is indication I dislike cops, but that's far from true. I have a lot of respect for LE. That's a tough job that I know I am not suited for. However, the paradigm shift from your local officer who knew the town well and was approachable has shifted to something terrible.

Now cops act like they're soldiers in an occupied country, and everyone else is a dangerous insurgent. And with APD and all its numerous problems, it's even worse here.

In the back of my mind, I'm hopeful that cops here can regain some pride in being a police officer, and not some paramilitary wannabe dickhead.

ABQ citizens would help you out if you stopped treating us all like shit. If cops had any sort of unity, and asked the public they serve for support, I guarantee that there's enough intelligent, honest people still left in the city that some decent changes can be made.

I don't know, though. A naive pipe dream? What say you all?

Anonymous said...

Well, I think the DOJ is going to fry every dirty malfeasant involved in this mess. I will have my order of fried police chiefs, deputy chiefs, city attorneys and lying assholes sullied side up please, with a side of green chili and a cup of coffee. Snap to it before I say something vulgar.

Anonymous said...

Karen Fischer is still getting paid by ARAPA. ARAPA used to bring in money for the City because we charged other cities for the site. Remember when the news followed her and the Chief to Hobbs and Santa Fe? Now we pay to use the website, along with all the other cities who signed contracts while she was on city time. That was her only duty for years.
That website is more packed full of Intel than NCIC ever was. Nothing ever gets deleted, regardless of age or if the case is dropped. Hell now even neighborhood watches are required to use it.
Shes even setting one up at UNM with all her former APD buddies. Tell me again why college kids need the same social network monitoring and posting of their "suspicious" behavior?
Dont believe me? IPRA her city email for 2013 and 2014 plus every email ending in @safecity.org
They are all coming from her website.

The Tremendous Regulator said...

Racketeering activity under federal law includes a number of criminal offenses, including: Bribery; sports bribery; counterfeiting; felony theft from interstate shipment; Embezzlement from Pension and Welfare funds; extortionate credit transactions; Fraud relating to identification documents; fraud relating to access devices; transmission of gambling information; Mail Fraud; wire fraud; financial institution fraud; citizenship or naturalization fraud; obscene matter; Obstruction of Justice; obstruction of criminal investigation; obstruction of state or local law enforcement; witness tampering; retaliation against witness; interference with commerce, bribery, or extortion; interstate transportation in aid of racketeering; interstate transportation of wagering paraphernalia; unlawful welfare fund payments; prohibition of illegal gambling business; Money Laundering; monetary transactions in property derived from unlawful activities; murder for hire; sexual exploitation of children; interstate transportation of stolen motor vehicles; interstate transportation of stolen property; sale of stolen goods; trafficking in motor vehicles and parts; trafficking in contraband cigarettes; white slave traffic; restrictions of payments and loans to labor organizations; embezzlement from union funds; Bankruptcy fraud; fraud in the sale of Securities; felonious manufacture, importation, receiving, concealment, buying, selling, or otherwise dealing in narcotic or other dangerous drugs; and any act that is indictable under the Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act.

Anonymous said...

Demand justice!
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/justice-for-mary-han-1

Anonymous said...

Remember when the APOA was told to move because the city felt it might be wrong for them to be there rent free

Anonymous said...

Remember when the APOA was told to move because the city felt it might be wrong for them to be there rent free

January 26, 2014 at 2:16:00 PM MST

And your point is?

Anonymous said...

Who is she sleeping with?? We need to know these things!!!!

Anonymous said...

Hey Banks and Berry,

Can I open my business, rent free, at the police station?

Small Business owner

Anonymous said...

Who are they sleeping with Fisher with Schultz and many APD before that, Karen Salazar with Eric Garcia for years. Hamman with several past DCs and Commanders. Dianna Padilla any APD that would have her all married (i.e. Commander McRae)

Anonymous said...

Give Banks credit for putting a halt to this, what does it really mean? HE IS NOT SLEEPING WITH ANY OF THEM!!

Anonymous said...

Now banks runs out the back door. Yea, give him credit for knowing when to walk before they (DOJ) make him run. And someone said the DOJ wasn't going to do anything. They have already started. If you think this wasn't a preemptive move by the administration at the suggestion of the Justice Department, you are foolish.
You are more foolish if you believe his departure was not planned. He already knew he wssn't the choice.

Now sit back and wait for the Mayor's dog and pony bullshit show where he wishes banks the best of luck and wishes he could have stayed. These people are a joke.

Anonymous said...

At the Anonymous who said...
Who is she sleeping with?? We need to know these things!!!!

January 26, 2014 at 7:37:00 PM MST


Why does anyone care who is sleeping with who? Why is that anyone's business? Why does this site keep talking about affairs? Who gives a flying fuck? If people want to sleep around and ruin their marriages or get STD's, let them, they are the ones that need to live with it, but it is still no ones business! Regardless of who it is, it's still no ones business. People are just plain nosy, and I find it rather disgusting that all people here care about is who is sleeping with who. There are many issues that need to be addressed within the department other than "oh my goodness, guess what I heard, so and so is sleeping with so and so". Do you people really care about that? If so, better get your priorities in check, it's really not breaking news, and in the end, it's still NO ONES BUSINESS!!

Anonymous said...

Whoa! Really sensitive there, aren't you? YOU must be sleeping with someone very special. I know - none of my business. Sometimes late at night I see someone pull up close to my fence and flash the headlights at my barn. When that happens I always hear the pitter-patter of little feet as they run to the fence crying "Baaaa! Baaaa! I miiisssed uuuuu!" I always wonder if that's you in the car.