Published on March 6, 2003
Breaking Stories
Virtual fundraising Ex-San Diego city councilman
Byron Wear, at least temporarily sidelined from
electioneering after copping a plea to ethics charges over his
campaign-funding practices, is keeping his hand in local
school-board politics. He and wife Bridget were listed
among sponsors of a recent get-together at the Savoy Circle
house in Point Loma of Kim Jessop and her jeweler
husband Jim for San Diego Unified School District board
member Katherine Nakamura. "I would like to invite you
to visit with one of our new School Board Members, Katherine
Nakamura," wrote Bridget in a recent e-mail. "This is a great
opportunity to meet with Katherine and speak to her about
important issues we would like addressed in the Point Loma
Cluster Community." Themes to be discussed, according to an
online invitation, included "Are Our Schools Worthy of Our
Children? Has the Golden State Missed the Golden Opportunity?
Where Is the Common Ground on the School Board?" Other listed
sponsors of the event included lawyer Tyler Cramer, a
member of the city's housing commission and the Chamber of
Commerce's "Education Roundtable" and his wife Susan;
Ted Cramer, his wife Julie; and real estate man
Matt Spathas of Sentre Partners, along with wife
Kris. One attendee reports that fundraising envelopes were
discretely passed around after Nakamura spoke. According to a
February 3 filing, Nakamura's campaign had an outstanding debt
of $41,365 as of December 31 of last year. Unpaid bills
included $33,865 owed to consultant Bobby Glaser's La
Jolla Group and $1500 to Classic Yacht Charters. Nakamura lent
her campaign $7607, according to the filing. Wear was forced
to forgo a $139,500-a-year job as airport commissioner after
agreeing to pay a $2000 fine to the city's ethics commission
to settle a seven-count allegation that he had failed to pay a
campaign vendor within the required 90 days and had accepted
contributions over the maximum limits.
Irish family boozing This year, San Diego's "Saint
Patrick's Day Parade and Irish Family Festival," set to
"celebrate Irish culture and tradition," is being sponsored by
Guinness and Miller Lite beer. So who is getting the event's
"Special Award"? Pat Connors, an executive with Mesa
Distributing, the county's second-largest booze distributor,
which handles Guinness and Miller. University of San Diego
president Alice Burke Hayes is the parade's "Irishwoman
of the Year." ... Retired San Diego
police captain Phil Jarvis, who in 2000 was elected sheriff of
Bonner County, Idaho, by a landslide, has been charged with
the misdemeanor crime of disturbing the peace in the small
town of Sandpoint after a party at Eichardt's Pub involving
his new girlfriend. According to reports in the Spokane
Spokesman-Review, Jarvis has been separated from his wife,
who lives in San Diego, for about a year. He reportedly met
Stephanie Flannery while she was volunteering with the
sheriff's office. On the evening of January 14, the paper
says, Flannery promised to call Jarvis after she got home from
work. When the sheriff didn't hear from her by 9:30, he called
and left a message: "So you're off with somebody and I suspect
it's a guy... You told me you were going to get home tonight
early. Did you think I would not worry?" Then he headed over
to Flannery's house, where, according to a police report, he
said he saw her embracing another man on the sidewalk. Jarvis
allegedly swung at the man, and the man swung back. Flannery
allegedly punched Jarvis, breaking her little finger. A week
later, charges were filed against Jarvis in the adjacent
county after Bonner's district attorney recused himself from
the case.
Countdown How does a convicted stock manipulator
spend his last hours before going to the slammer? In the case
of Al Palagonia, a former D.H. Blair brokerage
executive who copped a plea two years ago in New York to
pumping and dumping penny stocks, he heads for the Super Bowl
in sunny San Diego for an orgy of pre-confinement partying.
Ordered to pay several million dollars in fines, Palagonia,
35, is also reported by Institutional Investor to have
recently played a small role in the new Spike Lee film,
25th Hour, as -- what else? -- a crooked stockbroker ...
San Diego political consultants are salivating over the
prospect: as many as five or six propositions crowding next
year's March ballot. Pro-business lobbyists are proposing a
so-called "paycheck protection" measure, to limit the
expenditure of union dues in local campaigns. There also might
be up to three propositions about raising the tax on hotel
stays. One sponsored by labor would earmark the money for
salaries; another, favored by Mayor Dick Murphy, would
leave spending the funds in control of the city council; and a
third, authored by hotel interests, would set the money aside
for tourist promotion. A possible utility-tax measure is also
making the rounds