Judges, empty seats and gumshoes
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Alicia Robinson
He dropped out of the media’s sights after losing a 2004 bid for
Barbara Boxer’s Senate seat, but Orange County Superior Court Judge
Jim Gray is back in print in the latest issue of Reason, a
libertarian-leaning magazine.
Gray, who lives in Newport Beach, was a lifelong Republican but
was also a critic of the federal government’s War on Drugs. He joined
the Libertarian Party shortly before announcing his Senate candidacy
in 2003.
In the Reason article, law professors, attorneys and other legal
experts were polled on who they’d like to see nominated for the
Supreme Court and their favorite Supreme Court justice, either
currently sitting or in the court’s entire history.
Answering the latter question, Gray named Louis D. Brandeis, who
served on the Supreme Court from 1916 to 1939. Gray said he admires
Brandeis’ dissent in favor of personal privacy in one of the
first-ever wiretap cases to face the court.
Council field
approaching end of road
With less than 48 hours left until the deadline, three people have
applied to fill Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg’s seat on the City
Council, which he will vacate June 17. Bromberg is set to be sworn in
June 24 as an Orange County Superior Court Judge.
So far, the applicants are real estate broker Lloyd Ikerd, who is
on the city’s economic development committee; retired engineer Robert
Schoonmaker, who lost council bids in 1996 and 2000; and businessman
Bernie Svalstad, who ran for council in 2002. Applications will be
accepted until 5 p.m. Friday, and the council will appoint a new
member June 21. The appointment of a new mayor will be a separate
action.
Pro-El Toro a no go?
It’s difficult to let a day go by without some speculation on who
is pursuing Rep. Chris Cox’s 48th District House seat, which won’t
open up until Cox’s as-yet-unscheduled Senate confirmation as head of
the Securities and Exchange Commission. No new names have popped up
lately, but one that’s been floated as a possibility was sunk earlier
this week: Laguna Niguel Councilwoman Cassie DeYoung on Monday said
talk of her running for Congress is “pure, rampant speculation.”
“The only seat I’m running for is the Orange County Board of
Supervisors Fifth District seat,” she said.
One issue likely to separate Newport Beach voters from Cox’s South
County constituents is the airport. Many Newporters supported an
airport at the closed El Toro Marine Air Corps Station, while South
County residents have vehemently opposed it. DeYoung said she thinks
politicians who favored an El Toro airport need not apply for Cox’s
seat.
“It would be a very hard road for someone to go down that has a
pro-airport background,” she said.
Off the record, on
the QT and very hush hush
Promising to reveal Sacramento’s shady propositions and smoky
backroom dealings, state Sen. John Campbell joined the blogosphere
Tuesday with the launch of CA Confidential. Setting the tone on the
front page is a black and white photo of Campbell peering
mysteriously over spectacles. Here’s a brief Q & A with the Senator
about his newest electronic venue:
Daily Pilot: So, did you feel goofy having those pictures taken?
Campbell: No, I pose for a lot of pictures. I’m beyond feeling
goofy posing for pictures.... I have been someone who tries to expose
things happening in California government and politics that aren’t
widely known. There’s a sleuth aspect to this that we thought the
pictures would expose.
DP: What was the “accounting discrepancy” (referred to in his bio)
that you uncovered?
Campbell: That was my first job in the car business when I was a
controller. I found, actually, by auditing in the middle of the night
... some of the management and the ownership was basically defrauding
some of the other ownership.
Campbell does all his own writing for the blog and has plans to
add to it in the coming weeks. He’s already gotten feedback and
thousands of hits, he said. Campbell’s blog can be found at
https://www.ca confidential.com.
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