[blind-democracy] Re: our tax dollars at work here

  • From: "joe harcz Comcast" <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 3 Jul 2017 09:19:20 -0400

And so is our corrupted state government here. They are sure spending a lot of money to fight my lawsuit.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl Jarvis" <carjar82@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, July 02, 2017 6:08 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: our tax dollars at work here


And still the water is unsafe.

Carl Jarvis


On 7/1/17, joe harcz Comcast <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Wish we had state funds to defend us.
State of Michigan outside legal fees for Flint water crisis projected to hit
$21M Paul Egan , Detroit Free Press LANSING -- The Flint drinking water
crisis

has become an ever-increasing fee bonanza for Michigan attorneys, as the
state's outside criminal and civil defense fees are now expected to hit $21
million,

with more than $13.3 million spent to date. Both those numbers are expected
to increase further before legal controversies related to the April 2014
lead

contamination of Flint's drinking water supply, which occurred while the
city was under the control of a state-appointed emergency manager, are
resolved.

Attorney General Bill Schuette, who has $5.2 million in outside legal
contracts'related to his criminal investigation of the Flint crisis, said at
a recent

news conference he will need unspecified'additional funds to cover the
prosecution phase of his'investigation, which has spent more than $4.2
million to

date. More: Flint water probe charges reach highest levels Family of Flint
water victim distressed about charges The numbers also don't include
expected

state reimbursements to the City of Flint for the costs of the city's
outside civil defense fees and criminal defense fees for current and former
city

employees charged in the case. On Tuesday, the State Administrative Board
approved a $4 million increase for outside Flint legal contracts for the
Department

of Environmental Quality, bringing the cap for that department's outside
criminal and civil legal defense fees to $8.5 million. Some of the Flint
outside

legal costs are being charged to a litigation fund that contains proceeds
from lawsuits the state has won. Other costs are coming out of the
departments'

regular operating budgets. State officials have not specified what, if any,
programs have been cut to cover the Flint legal costs. Gov. Rick Snyder has

spent $3.1 million so far on outside criminal defense fees and $1.1 million
on outside civil defense fees, spokeswoman Anna Heaton said Thursday. Those

two contracts have a combined cap of $4.9 million. At the Department of
Health and Human Services, where Director Nick Lyon was charged with
involuntary

manslaughter on June 14 in connection with what Schuette alleges is a death
from Legionnaires' disease related to the water crisis, outside legal
spending

has hit $1.1 million against a $2.3 million cap, spokeswoman Jennifer Eisner
said Thursday. And at the state Treasury Department, outside legal spending

has topped $43,000 against a $75,000 cap, spokesman Ron Leix said. Schuette
has brought criminal charges against 15 defendants, of whom 10 are current

or former state employees, two are former state-appointed emergency
managers, and three are current or former City of Flint employees. Just as
the state

taxpayers are spending millions on criminal defense services for Snyder, who
has not been charged in the crisis, the state is paying for criminal
defense

attorneys for several current or former state officials who have not been
charged, records show. The DEQ has spent about $260,000 for criminal
defense

attorneys to advise former DEQ director Dan Wyant and about $203,000 for
criminal attorneys for former public information officer Brad Wurfel,
records

show. At DHHS, the department has spent about $300,000 for criminal defense
lawyers for former chief deputy director Tim Becker and 12 lower-ranking
department

officials who have not been charged, records show. Those employees are Kurt
Krause; Susan Bohm; Shannon Johnson; Sarah Lyon Callo; Cristin Larder; Jay

Fiedler; Patricia McKane; Jim Collins; Sue Moran; Joe Collins; Tim Bolen;
and Linda Dykema, the records show. Contact Paul Egan: 517-372-8660 or
pegan@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.

Follow him on Twitter @paulegan4.






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