Contract up for review by bureau’s directors
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Theresa Moreau
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city attorney’s office has released the Local
News sales contract between Mayor Dave Garofalo and businessman Ed Laird,
answering some of the questions about the mayor’s dealings, but some say
not all.
The mayor is being investigated by the Orange County Grand Jury, the
Orange County district attorney’s office and the state’s Fair Political
Practices Commission for alleged conflicts of interest on votes he cast
for advertisers in the Local News and the Huntington Beach Conference &
Visitors Bureau visitors guide. The mayor’s company, David P. Garofalo &
Associates, has held the publishing contract for both.
Earlier this month, City Atty. Gail Hutton ordered the city-funded
bureau to immediately terminate its contract with the mayor. The bureau’s
board of directors will consider Hutton’s advice at its next meeting,
Sept. 5.
Among the people who may be involved in that discussion are bureau
board member John Given -- whose company, Commercial Investment
Management Group, purchased an ad from Garofalo four months before the
mayor voted on the firm’s Downtown development -- and ex-officio member
Steve Bone, president of the Robert Mayer Corp., which owns the
Waterfront Hilton, another advertiser.
Bone, who plans to attend the Sept. 5 meeting, said he believes more
must be learned about Garofalo’s business relationships before a decision
can be made about terminating the contract.
“I think there are more facts that need to be determined with regard
to ownership of the rights to publish, which have not yet been fully
determined,” Bone said. “For instance, if there is not a relationship
with David Garofalo, it probably would not be correct to terminate it.
And, if there is a relationship with David Garofalo, further facts need
to be determined beyond that.’
Given could not be reached for comment.
Garofalo, who was first elected to council in 1994, maintains that
there has not been a conflict since early 1998, when the sale of his
publishing rights to Laird was finalized. But questions had been raised
time and time again about the actual sale, details of which had been
sketchy until recently, when a copy of the sales document was provided to
Hutton.
The purchase agreement and a subsequent amendment to the agreement are
each two pages long and appear to have been drafted and printed on a
personal computer. Neither bears a legal stamp from a notary public,
which could pose problems if a disagreement on the purchase arises
between Garofalo and Laird.
Business attorney Steve Chonoles said as long as there is a contract
that both parties have signed, that’s all that’s needed. If the matter is
dragged into a court of law, however, proof of authenticity may be
brought into question.
“Essentially, in the law of evidence, there’s a law called
authentication,” Chonoles said. “If you’re in a trial and you have to
introduce a document, you have to prove that it is what it purports to
be. If another party gets up and denies it’s the contract, then you have
a conflict of evidence. Then the jury has to figure out who’s telling the
truth.”
Garofalo declined to comment on the documents.
However, Laird, after viewing the documents, said the agreement
supplied to Hutton was written by Garofalo and was the last of several
rough drafts that he and Garofalo signed in late 1997.
“They are the right documents. They are the right dates,” Laird said.
“They’re OK. I signed them.”
The original contract of sale stipulated that Laird, president and
chief executive of Coatings Resource Corp., would buy the publishing
rights of Garofalo’s twice-monthly community paper the Local News, as
well as the rights to publish the city’s Conference & Visitors Bureau
visitors guide and the Chamber of Commerce Business Directory.
The purchase price for the publishing rights was $220,000, with
$20,000 down and the balance due within a 36-month period from the sales
date, Jan. 14, 1998, with interest on the balance accruing at the annual
rate of 7%.
Garofalo has said that as part of the sales agreement, he would
receive $100,000 for three years. And on his statements of economic
interest filed with the city, Garofalo claims he earned more than
$100,000 as a consultant and publisher.
Hutton, in her Aug. 1 memo on the bureau’s contract with the mayor,
listed Garofalo’s consulting fee as $10,000.
The original promissory note also stated that Garofalo would act as
publisher during the 36-month final payment period and would act as an
advisor on general printing aspects, and the term, “A Coatings Resource
Company,” would appear on all products.
However, the Feb. 25, 1998, amendment stated that an unexpected
medical problem arose for Laird when his wife, Sandi, who was suffering
from cancer, took a turn for the worse, which required a revision of the
original agreement.
The amendment stipulates that Garofalo would become an independent
contractor hired by Coatings Resource.
The answer to the question of who owns the publishing rights to the
Local News also answers the question of who owns the publishing rights to
the visitors guide.
In a memo to the City Council dated June 19, Garofalo said he sold the
Local News in December 1997, with the transaction concluding Jan. 14,
1998.
Also, public records filed Dec. 28, show that another company, Air
Quality Consultants, took over on Jan. 1, 1999. That ownership switch was
followed four months later by a fictitious business statement filed by
Garofalo that says the Local News is owned by David P. Garofalo &
Associates and has been since 1993.
Councilman Dave Sullivan, who viewed the sales documents, said he
wondered why Garofalo didn’t produce the contracts months ago when he,
fellow Councilman Tom Harman and members of the public clamored for proof
of the sale.
In her Aug. 1 memo, Hutton called for the bureau to immediately
terminate its publishing contract with David P. Garofalo & Associates
because the arrangement might violate a state law that prohibits
double-dealing by city officials. Hutton recommended the city cut off the
bureau’s funding if the bureau does not cancel the contract.
“The city should place its relationship with the bureau on an
unassailable foundation,” the memo states.
The bureau receives all of its funding from the city. This year, the
City Council gave the agency $270,000 for its operating budget.
Bureau Executive Director Diane Baker said board members will discuss
Hutton’s Aug. 1 memo and Garofalo’s contract, which is up for renewal
Dec. 31, at its Sept. 5 meeting. The final decision to renew Garofalo’s
contract will be up to the board of directors.
“I feel we’re in the middle of this,”’ Baker said. “There’s no win-win
in this situation.”
Bone, who said he will participate in the discussion, said there
should not be a rush to judgment. He said Hutton’s memo underscored the
difficulty of understanding the law in Garofalo’s case. But before action
can be taken, Bone said, there must be a legal opinion from which to
respond.
“There is a presumption in the memorandum that the facts have been
determined, when in fact it appears to me that there are several
investigations going on to find out what the facts are,” Bone said. “So
let’s find out what the facts are, so that in time we can take action
based on the facts.”
Garofalo won the bid to publish the visitors guide in 1993 and
continued as publisher until June 19, when he publicly divested himself
of all publishing duties.
As part of the licensing agreement with Garofalo, the Visitors Bureau
receives free copies of the publication, and he receives the advertising
sales. Garofalo has estimated his annual gross revenue at $65,000.
Garofalo has said that since the sale of his business, he has received
no advertising revenue.
However, the mayor accepted a $2,995 check for a half-page ad in the
visitors guide purchased by Given, in his role as vice president of CIM
Group. Four months later, Garofalo voted to move forward with the
developer’s Downtown project.
Baker, in June, confirmed that Garofalo sells the ads for the guide.
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