NEWS ANALYSIS -- Are Garofalo, Hutton playing the blame game?
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Theresa Moreau
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Is there a rift growing between City Atty. Gail
Hutton and Mayor Dave Garofalo? Since Hutton began her investigation of
the mayor’s possible conflicts of interests, they have been invoking each
other’s name quite frequently.
Garofalo has said he has always sought -- and followed -- the city
attorney’s advice on matters involving his publishing business, which
includes the Conference & Visitors Bureau’s visitors guide. Hutton has
said she counted on the mayor to give her the correct information so she
could form a valid opinion.
But both said things are still on business-friendly terms,
“Dave, I believe, is a well-meaning public official. I think he tries
hard to do the right thing,” Hutton said of the mayor.
And Garofalo said the same of Hutton.
“I think that she’s doing her job, and I have no qualms or quarrels
with her,” he said.
The two have been seen as political allies in the past. Hutton
contributed $275 to Garofalo’s 1998 council campaign, and Garofalo voted
several times in ways that favored Hutton, including a vote against an
audit of the city attorney’s office.
However, since the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission, the
Orange County district attorney’s office and the Orange County Grand Jury
have launched investigations into Garofalo’s alleged conflict-of-interest
violations, the mayor and the city attorney seemingly have been trying to
foist the blame on the other.
When in public, and especially in front of a camera, Garofalo tends to
clear his path of any possible wrongdoing by sweeping the dirt Hutton’s
way.
In a press conference, the mayor explained away his voting record on
the city’s Conference & Visitors Bureau budget and other matters before a
phalanx of reporters. He shielded himself from blame by turning the sword
on the city attorney.
“The record shows that each and every time I voted on the budget for a
nonprofit that I was either at one point on the board of directors of or
later on the advisory board of, I requested an opinion from the city
attorney’s office on whether or not I could vote,” he said.
“How many times did [the bureau budget] come up? Five times in five
years, or three times? I’m going to reasonably guess, since we’ve been in
a two-year budget for two times, that we voted on that allocation three
times. Once I abstained under the city attorney’s advice, and twice I did
not under the city attorney’s advice. That’s what I did.”
Then, during a recently televised interview on KOCE-TV’s “Real Orange”
program, Garofalo again invoked Hutton’s name.
“Every time the city attorney made a recommendation to me on what I
should vote on or not vote on or to transfer an asset or not transfer an
asset, I complied with all those requests,” Garofalo said. “So I know in
my heart there was no conflict of interest.”
Meanwhile, Hutton’s camp is putting forth its own effort to clear away
any notion that the city attorney’s office has been negligent in its
investigation into Garofalo’s alleged conflicts of interest.
Hutton’s office announced June 20 that it would be investigating the
contract between the Conference & Visitors Bureau and the Local News to
determine if the contract to publish the visitors guide violates the
state’s conflict-of-interest laws, which prohibit self-dealing.
But it wasn’t until Aug. 1, a week after Hutton handed over her
investigation to the district attorney’s office and the FPPC, that she
released a memo with her findings, ordering the visitors bureau to
immediately terminate its contract with the mayor’s company, David P.
Garofalo & Associates.
Hutton blamed the delay on the slow trickle of facts into her office.
The city attorney has also said she can only request an opinion from
the FPPC based on the information Garofalo has given her. Hutton does not
have the power to subpoena documents.
“You have to have the accurate facts,” she said. “Based on the facts
given to me, I’ve relied on the truthfulness of my council members.”
The city attorney maintains it is not her duty to prosecute a council
member who has previously, in confidence, sought her advice.
Hutton has cited a 1988 opinion from the state’s attorney general
explaining that if a city attorney and council member have an
attorney-client privilege, that cannot be breached.
“The attorney general said that there is an attorney-client privilege,
and it’s improper for a city attorney having dealt with the problem to
turn around and commence an enforcement action,” Hutton said Friday.
“There was some ethical consideration that would hamstring me, and the
attorney general would prohibit it.”
The opinion stipulates that any breach of the attorney-client
privilege would “violate constitutional due process.”
Hutton has been criticized for not maintaining a stronger role as a
legal watchdog during Garofalo’s terms on the dais.
In September 1998, Hutton advised Garofalo to abstain from voting on
advertisers with his publications. However, minutes from council meetings
show he continued to vote against Hutton’s warning.
Paul D’Alessandro, assistant city attorney, sent a memo to the
Independent after reports that Garofalo continued to vote even when
Hutton had advised him to abstain.
“Naturally, when we render advice, we expect that our recommendations
will be followed. However, we cannot guarantee that our advice will be
followed each time it is provided,” D’Alessandro wrote. “The
responsibility for following our advice is borne by each individual
official or employee in question, and they are encouraged to seek their
own legal counsel and/or written opinion of the FPPC, who have the
responsibility for advising and enforcing the Political Reform Act.”
Garofalo steadily maintains that his voting record is unblemished.
“What idiot would vote knowing that he’s potentially violating the
state law if he doesn’t have to vote? I know I’m not stupid,” Garofalo
said on KOCE. “I know in my heart I didn’t do anything wrong.”
City officials have mixed opinions on whether there is a fissure
between the two parties.
Councilman Ralph Bauer, who was elected in 1994, said he has noticed
the process for requests for advice has become more formal.
“I think at least, in part, Gail is now taking this far more seriously
than she did before. She’s an elected official. She has to take into
consideration that she is going to be judged when she runs again,” Bauer
said. “Friendship stops at City Hall steps. You’ve got to do the right
thing. Ultimately, there’s a higher authority: integrity.”
On the other hand, Councilwoman Pam Julien said she has seen no
change.
“I haven’t noticed any rift,” Julien said. “I think it’s business as
usual. Everyone’s just doing their job. I haven’t noticed anything out of
the ordinary.”
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