Thursday, May 28, 2020

Owner of flooded Michigan dam used it as tax shelter, ignored federal regulators, according to report



Lee Mueller — the owner of the Edenville Dam that flooded last week, causing massive destruction of property in Midland County — was heir to the fortune of the founder of the Boy Scouts of America and purchased the dam as a tax shelter.

That's according to an explosive report from Bridge magazine published Wednesday. According to the report, Mueller (a Las Vegas-based architect) and a cousin (the bagpipe-playing son of a French count... seriously) purchased four dams near Midland after selling a property in Illinois as a way to avoid paying $600,000 to the IRS.

Mueller and his cousin are trustees of William D. Boyce Trusts, which manages the fortune of a Chicago publishing magnate who founded the Boy Scouts and left behind the equivalent of a $300 million fortune. They purchased the dams for $4.8 million, but had to borrow money to do it.

By all accounts Mueller was a deadbeat owner who repeatedly clashed with federal and state regulators, as well as his neighbors, since purchasing the dams as Boyce Hydro Power LLC in 2006. According to one neighbor, Mueller "hates government, he hates paying taxes, and nothing makes him happier than when he can stick his finger in the eye of government." (So no, we are not surprised to see him sporting a Make America Great Again hat in the above Reuters photo.)

Federal regulators raised alarms about the dams' ability to withstand a heavy rain as early as 1993. After the Edenville dam changed hands to Boyce, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission told the company to build new spillways that could accommodate flooding. Boyce fought the regulators for more than a decade, saying it didn't have the money to do it. In 2018, FERC revoked Boyce's license to generate power, choking off its ability to generate money.

Mueller's disdain was not limited to regulators. The company also reportedly refused to fund a local recreation area, per its license agreement, and instead set up a barbed wire fence to prevent people from entering. Boyce would also lower the lake levels without warning, forcing homeowners to remove boats from the water, and even demanded homeowners fork over $80,000 so the company could refill the lake. Beyond that, Mueller was accused of ramming his car into a pick-up truck filled with people who had parked on his property to fish, and also smashing the car windows with a chain. The cases were reportedly negotiated down to misdemeanors.

Local residents had apparently become so fed up with Mueller that they formed a group called the Sanford Lake Preservation Association to buy the properties from Mueller, and were even willing to pay double the price Boyce originally paid in 2006.

In the end, Mueller's tax shelter scheme appears to have been not worth it. According to court records acquired by Bridge, Boyce Trust said the dams have lost money every year since at least 2016. The Edenville dam only generated about $1 million in annual revenue, while expenses were $1.2 million.

And now the whole scheme is likely to cost Mueller far more.
LINK












RSN: Norman Solomon | Amy Klobuchar, Minneapolis Police, and Her VP Quest






Reader Supported News
28 May 20



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RSN: Norman Solomon | Amy Klobuchar, Minneapolis Police, and Her VP Quest
Sen. Amy Klobuchar. (photo: Stephen Maturen/Getty)
Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News
Solomon writes: "Eighteen years before Minneapolis police killed an unarmed black man named George Floyd on Monday, Minneapolis police killed an unarmed black man named Christopher Burns. Today, U.S. senator Amy Klobuchar decries the killing of Floyd. Back then, Minneapolis chief prosecutor Amy Klobuchar refused to prosecute city police for killing Burns."

A year ago, The Washington Post published a thorough news article under a clear headline: “As a Prosecutor in Heavily White Minnesota, Amy Klobuchar Declined to Go After Police Involved in Fatal Encounters With Black Men.” Her refusal to seek justice after Burns died was part of a pattern.
With Klobuchar now on Joe Biden’s short list for vice president, the gruesome killing of Floyd has refocused attention on Klobuchar’s history of racial injustice. In sharp contrast to her prosecutorial approach two decades ago, she has issued a statement calling for “a complete and thorough outside investigation” into Floyd’s death and declaring that “those involved in this incident must be held accountable.”
During the first years of this century, with a bright political future ahead of her, Klobuchar refused to hold police officers accountable. And her failure to prosecute police who killed black men was matched by racially slanted eagerness to prosecute black men on the basis of highly dubious evidence.
While Klobuchar has occasionally been subjected to media scrutiny of her record as a prosecutor in Minnesota, she has routinely enjoyed favorable coverage often sliding into outright puffery. In short, much of the media establishment adores Klobuchar and her corporate centrist politics.
When Amy Klobuchar was running for president, corporate media served as her biggest political base. News coverage and punditry often supplied praise, while rarely bothering to delve into her 12-year record in the Senate. Klobuchar’s image as a “moderate” was endearing enough to many powerful media outlets.
When the time came for endorsements from newspapers early this year, Klobuchar scored with big publications like the San Francisco Chronicle, The Seattle Times, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Houston Chronicle. Notably, The New York Times co-endorsed her (along with Elizabeth Warren). In fact, no candidate did better than Klobuchar with daily paper endorsements during the presidential primary season.
Unfortunately for Klobuchar, media elites don’t cast many votes in Democratic primaries and caucuses. Her drumbeat about being a fellow Midwesterner fell flat in Iowa, where she finished fifth in the caucuses with 12 percent. Days later, corporate media went gaga over one-liners she delivered in a debate just before the primary in New Hampshire, where she came in third with almost 20 percent of the vote. But Klobuchar went on to receive only 4 percent in the Nevada caucuses and then 3 percent in the South Carolina primary. Two days later, she withdrew from the race.
Since then, Klobuchar has risen to the top tier of Biden’s possible VP picks. Her selection would likely be disastrous.
As I told The Hill newspaper recently, “Someone like Klobuchar is anathema to broadening the ticket. If Biden is serious about unity then he’s got to pitch a tent big enough to include progressives.”
Klobuchar’s political record, when it comes to light, simply can’t stand up to scrutiny. While mainstream media rarely seem interested in her Senate record, it has been no less contemptuous of equal protection under the law than her career as a prosecutor.
When the progressive advocacy group Demand Justice issued a “Report Card” about the confirmation votes of Senate Democrats on President Trump’s right-wing federal judge appointees, it explained that the report graded “willingness to fight Trump’s judges.” Elizabeth Warren received an “A,” Bernie Sanders an “A-” and Kamala Harris a “B+.”
Amy Klobuchar got an “F.”


Norman Solomon is co-founder and national director of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Solomon is the author of a dozen books, including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.
















RSN: FOCUS: Gabriel Sherman | "This Is So Unfair to Me": Trump Whines About His COVID-19 Victimhood as Campaign Flails






Reader Supported News
28 May 20



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FOCUS: Gabriel Sherman | "This Is So Unfair to Me": Trump Whines About His COVID-19 Victimhood as Campaign Flails
Donald Trump. (photo: Win McNamee/Getty)
Gabriel Sherman, Vanity Fair
Sherman writes: "Even as the death toll neared 100,000 and unemployment ranks swelled to over 38 million, Trump couldn't see the pandemic as anything other than something that had happened to him." 
  
s he headed into Memorial Day weekend, Donald Trump complained that he was COVID-19’s biggest victim. “He was just in a fucking rage,” said a person who spoke with Trump late last week. “He was saying, ‘This is so unfair to me! Everything was going great. We were cruising to reelection!” 
 “The problem is he has no empathy,” the adviser said. Trump complained that he should have been warned about the virus sooner. “The intelligence community let me down!” he said.
The White House declined to comment.
Trump’s outburst reflected his growing frustration that, at this stage of the race, he is losing to Joe Biden. According to a Republican briefed on the campaign’s internal polls, Trump is trailing Biden by double digits among women over 50 in six swing states. “Trump knows the numbers are bad. It’s why he’s thrashing about,” the Republican said.
Even those closest to Trump have been privately worried the election is slipping away. According to a source, Melania Trump warned the president during their trip to India in February to take the virus response seriously. “He totally blew her off,” the source said. Melania later told people that Trump “only hears what he wants to hear and surrounds himself with yes-people and family,” the source added.
The first lady’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
But with formerly solid-red Georgia in play, Trump has conceded to reality and is shaking up his campaign. This morning the campaign promoted former White House political director Bill Stepien to deputy campaign manager and named Stephanie Alexander, the Midwest political director, to the post of campaign chief of staff. The moves are being seen by many in Trumpworld as a demotion for Trump’s campaign manager, Brad Parscale, who has been at odds with Trump for weeks over his spending and the president’s deteriorating poll numbers. “Trump has been screaming at Brad, ‘How many fucking times do I have to tell you I don’t like this! Are you fucking stupid?’” said a Republican who’s overheard the conversations. (“Your source is wrong,” a campaign spokesperson said in an email. “The President never said that about Brad.”) “Once you get on the wrong side of the mountain with Trump, it’s hard to get back,” said a Trump friend.
About Stepien’s promotion, the campaign spokesperson said, “This is a solidification of Brad’s leadership.”
Stepien, a close ally of Jared Kushner, is viewed by Trump advisers as a competent tactician who can help the campaign appeal to alienated suburban voters. “This is a sign the campaign realized they needed to bring in the big boys,” said a former West Wing official.
The problem for Stepien, though, is that no amount of messaging or get-out-the-vote efforts can shade the reality that Trump’s mishandling of the pandemic has plunged the country into a once-in-a-century economic crisis. It’s a point Stepien tacitly made when I interviewed him before the 2018 midterms. “Bottom line is Americans want security. They want to feel safe in the realm of national security, and they want to feel economically secure,” Stepien said at the time.
But the biggest obstacle standing in the way of a Trump-campaign reset is the candidate. “Trump is doing it to himself by tweeting idiotic conspiracy theories about Joe Scarborough. Women are tired of this shit,” said another former West Wing official. An outside adviser agreed. “Trump can’t pivot to a different strategy,” the adviser told me. “He only knows one strategy—which is attack. It worked in 2016. But now it’s not what people are looking for.” The adviser told me that Trump’s New York friends are planning an intervention to get him to stop tweeting about the Morning Joe cohost.
And when he’s not feeling helpless or aggrieved, Trump continues to cling to magical thinking. “He lives in his own fucking world,” the outside adviser said. Trump recently told a friend that the Moderna vaccine is going to be ready in months.
At this point many Republicans I spoke to said the only hope for Trump is that Biden implodes. As one prominent Republican put it: “Right now the only person who can change the dynamic is Joe Biden.”

















The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...