Friday, March 10, 2006

PRESS SNUBS BRADLEY AWARDS, GREBE SAYS

By Michael Horne
Pity Michael W. Grebe, the head of Milwaukee-based Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. This year, for the third time, a panel will select four prominent conservatives who will be able to stuff an additional $250,000 each into his or her pockets. But the mainstream media just doesn't seem to care, Grebe told the Washington Times
"It has been frustrating, even remarkable, how the establishment media has chosen to comment on similar prizes given by Teresa Heinz Kerry, but not by the Bradley Foundation," Grebe told the newspaper.
Milwaukeeworld will gladly disassociate itself from the mainstream media by offering this comment on the Bradley Prizes: Even a conservative would acknowledge that a no-strings-attached $250,000 is a very liberal gift.
Previous winners of the ignored prize have included conservative columnists George F.Will and Charles Krauthammer, who was a winner of the Bradley Prize in its inaugural year of 2003. No awards were granted in 2004, which may explain why the media moguls of the world have not penciled the event into their calendars, but were resumed in 2005 with Krauthammer as a judge this time, along with Grebe, Pierre S. "Pete" Dupont and Jeane Kirkpatrick. It's a wonder anybody could stand up to the scrutiny of that team!
The awards will be handed out in a gala ceremony May 25th at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.
Grebe is quoted in the article as saying the event will be "our own Oscar night," and "over the top," which must be quite a heady thrill for the former Foley and Lardner partner who was paid over $529,333 for his work in 2003. [A more recent salary figure for Grebe is available in the foundation's 2004 IRS Form 990-PF, a 1000 page plus document that overwhelmed milwaukeeworld's computer when an attempt was made to open it this afternoon.]
The foundation has 2004 assets of $665,327,753.
Nominations for the prizes are made by a panel of 100 prominent conservatives. The judging panel has included such notable figures as Wm. F. Buckley, Jr. and Robert H. Bork. The winners will be announced in April, and you'll read the names here first. Grebe wasn't available Friday afternoon for comment.

WEEKEND ROUNDUP

Dear Reader:


Thanks for dropping in as the promise of spring begins to fill the air. The recent rains have washed away all but the most heavily-shaded piles of snow in our city which is now bathed in a muddy wash. That minor inconvenience was hardly enough to stop the world from spinning or to keep Milwaukeeans cooped up any longer, so off to the streets it has been for many of us. You are welcome to join us as we tour a new condominium project months before it is built, and then it is off on our rounds where we keep running into politicians at every turn. A bit further down, we tell you that the scary Marilyn Karos pleaded guilty to yet another federal crime, this time in St. Louis. Also, along the way, our Madison correspondent Paul Snyder of the Capital City branch of The Daily Reporter newspaper writes about a politician who issued a press release begging farmers to stop spreading manure. Ah, yes, if only farmers would issue a press release asking politicians to do the same!


Thanks for dropping by, and do stay in touch. There are many ways to do so, including by telephone, e-mail, or by posting a comment on the stories below utilizing the “leave a comment” button at the end of many items.


Also, if there is anything you would like me to do to make my postings more “bloggy” and less fact- and observationally-based, please tell me so that I may better emulate my peers.


Very truly yours,


Michael Horne


Editor / Publisher


www.milwaukeeworld.com


1414 978-8039


horne@milwaukeeworld.com


735 West Wisconsin Avenue


Suite 1200


Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233-2413


UNBUILT BUILDING HOLDS GRAND OPENING PARTY


Neither rain nor muck could deter hundreds of Milwaukeeans from attending a “Private Grand Opening Party” for the Edge Condominiums, an unbuilt housing development to be located at 1890 N. Commerce St., just north of the Holton Viaduct.


Valet parkers were available to ferry visitors’ vehicles from a muddy lot to paved spaces underneath the bridge, while revelers entertained themselves in a tent constructed on the site of the proposed development, enjoying the music of Berkeley Fudge and his combo.


Inside a mobile trailer adjoining the tent, scores of real estate agents showed scores of other real estate agents models of the project and samples of available finishes and upgrades. The Edge is a joint venture of Brewery Works and Tandem Development. The property had long been used as a storage yard for the nearby Schlitz Park.


Among the attendees were such real estate luminaries as Molly Abrohams, Lynn Buckley and Nancy Beutner Meeks, fresh from an appearance in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Gary Grunau, the head of Brewery Works, mingled with the crowd, which dined on a variety of hot and cold appetizers from the Waterfront Deli. Among the treats were mounds of fruit, marinated asparagus wrapped in prosciutto, cocktail sandwiches and meatballs.


The beverage service was catered by Party Wizards, a new business owned by Mary Bennett. She wisely stocked beer from Lakefront Brewery next door, where she once worked. Uniformed staff bore trays of wine glasses to those who chose not to belly up to the bar.


The housing units for the four story-plus-penthouse building range in size from just under 1,000 square feet to just under 2,000 square feet, and are priced from under $200,000, rather a bit less than might be expected. I asked Grunau if the low prices were a factor of his having owned the land there forever. He said, “well, the prices are going up tomorrow.” [A thousand bucks is all it takes to reserve a unit.] Departing guests were treated to a goodie bag containing a high quality coffee mug and a cute little pair of binoculars capable of rendering images a full five per cent larger than they would appear to the naked eye.


The project will commence construction later this spring, provided sufficient pre-sales are made. It is expected to be completed in the autumn of 2007. For more information visit www.edgecondos.com


--Michael Horne


OUT OF THE WOODWORK


Candidates Appear Everywhere


This is a political year, and the candidates are crawling out of the woodwork and into our pocketbooks as the political races heat up.


One newcomer is Jeffrey B. Norman, J.D., a Milwaukee detective with the Criminal Investigation Bureau, who has announced his candidacy to replace Judge Jim Gramling on the City of Milwaukee Municipal Court Branch 3, where he has served since 1986. Milwaukee police officers are permitted to practice law on the side, provided they have degrees, and Norman got his from Marquette University in 2002. He took a break from the department to work for the District Attorney’s office, but jumped ship from that job when it proved not as challenging or rewarding as his police service. Right now Norman is making the rounds, including paying an aldermanic visit Monday when milwaukeeworld encountered him at City Hall while we were busy chewing the fat with Judge John Siefert of Milwaukee County Circuit Court Branch 47, himself a former police officer who practiced law on the side (insurance stuff, he says) and later became a municipal judge. Small town!


If elected in next year’s spring elections, Norman would increase the African-American representation on the three-member court to 100 per cent. … John Budzinski, a national board member of the 300,000 member United Association of Plumbers, Pipefitters, Steamfitters, Refrigeratorfitters and Sprinklerfitters, hosted a fundraiser Thursday evening at Pitch’s Lounge and Restaurant, 1801 N. Humboldt Av. for Sheriff candidate Vince Bobot. Thrifty Bobot says he will wait a couple of months before opening a campaign headquarters. It won’t be at the location of his mayoral race headquarters at 620 W. Wisconsin Av. which he said was difficult to heat and prone to all sorts of crazies popping in at all hours. That space is being turned into a coin laundry to serve downtown residents. … The 7th district of the Wisconsin State Senate was redrawn following the decennial 2000 census to form a lakeside district that is two thirds south side and one third east side. The seat is held by Democrat Jeff Plale of South Milwaukee who faces a primary challenge by Donovan Riley, a former east sider who now resides in Bay View. Riley calls himself “a Democrat who will vote like one.” He held a fundraiser at the Cudahy Tower and Condominiums library, which was reserved for him by Barbara Stein, a politically-active resident of the building. Among the small band of supporters were Dennis Conta, Ald. Robert Bauman, County Supervisor Gerry Broderick, Kathleen Hart, Barbara Notestein, Sam Orlich, Geralyn Wendelberger, Leonard Zubrensky, Jack Murtaugh, Rep. Fred Kessler and his wife, Hon. Joan Kessler, of the Court of Appeals. The guests drank wine (red and white), water (bottled) and supped on appetizer trays provided by Beans and Barley. Commenting on Riley’s chances in the primary race, Bauman said, “I’d ask him how many doors he plans to knock on, because votes in this district come on a retail basis.”


Michael Horne




FROM BREW CITY TO CAPITAL CITY


“Of Liquid Manure Application, and Why it Doesn’t Make Me Want to Run Back East.”


By Paul Snyder


Well, it’s spring again (not technically, but it’s all I can tell myself to prevent total psychosomatic seasonal breakdown). You’d think this being my fifth consecutive winter in Wisconsin, I’d have gotten used to the cold days, winter drivers, and the 10 inches of snow that falls three weeks after it really should have.


But I haven’t.


Couple mounting tasks at the office with the fact that the (forever dragging) end of winter always puts me in a funk, and you’ll find explanation as to why word to Milwaukeeworld from Madison has been conspicuously absent as of late. But the good news that rain is on the way to wash this grey/brown snow away and the possibility that we just might crack the 50s on the thermometer by Friday has put me in rebirth mode.


And so, the habits of old are returning. I’m monitoring progress in Mesa for my beloved Cubs like a hawk and rediscovering discs I haven’t listened to in awhile – Jeff Buckley’s Grace being a particular constant in rotation lately. “Love, let me sleep tonight on your couch,” he sings in “So Real.” “And remember the smell of the fabric of your simple city dress.”


The smell of the fabric of your simple city dress… something I’ve since forgotten, no doubt. Born and raised a city boy – well, technically a suburban boy, but with no need at any point to thank God for being a country boy – there are certain agricultural processes, we’ll say, that remain strange and alien to me, even now being a resident of Dane County.


Don’t let the “second biggest city in the state” label misguide you – drive 10 minutes in any direction from Madison, and you’ll be on a farm. And as such, privy to breaking news in the morning like this:


Madison – Today, Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk advised farmers and manure haulers not to apply liquid manure on cropland for the next 10 days. The weather forecast is predicting higher temperatures and possible thunderstorms that could result in the manure spread on the snow covered and frozen fields to run off.


Now I could’ve gone the satirical route with such a thing – comedians could have a field day with such a bulletin item, and if not that, certainly the fact that Dane County actually does have a Manure Spreading Task Force – but I was bit too dismayed at the thought that the warm weather I’ve been pining for since November could mean a healthy dose of poop seeping into the lakes, rivers and streams in the area. Can’t wait to don those swimming trunks…


Granted, it’s all a part of the agricultural process, I know that. But if you’re in your mid-20s the first time you’re made aware of a manure spreading warning, certain mental checklists seem to pop up about the application of liquid manure, when and why there are dangers to it, and how sick it is that I’m pondering all this in the first place. We’re now a mere three months away from the culmination of my first year as a Madison resident, and this kind of alert does make me think back to the last four manure warning-free years I spent in Milwaukee.


Those years where sunny days beckoned you outside, but the air’s aroma sent you back in. You know what I’m talking about – the collective stench of brewery-meets-tannery-meets-brewery-meets-those-smokestacks-south-of-the-interchange-and-oh-yeah-the-interchange-construction-too-meets-brewery. The smell of industry! It is repugnant when the wind’s coming in strong off the lake, isn’t it?


Case in point, three quarters of a year in and what have I learned? We’re not that different, Brew City and Capital City. Sometimes we both just stink.

KAROS GUILTY AGAIN IN FEDERAL COURT

By Michael Horne
The last time we saw Marilyn Karos around these parts it was Halloween, and she was in U. S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin to face sentencing on charges of obstruction of justice in a failed attempt to spring her lover, Chicago antique dealer Richard O'Hara, from prison.
She got 20 months for that caper, with time off Wednesday for a field trip to St. Louis, Mo., where she appeared again in a familiar venue -- federal court -- to plead guilty to charges of attempting to sell a fake Rembrandt painting for $2.8 million on behalf of a phony Saudi sheik in 2004.
The hapless Karos and her princely pal had a willing buyer in an undercover federal agent, leading to her arrest.
She and her accomplice, Majed Ihmoud, also tried to sell a pair of bronze doors, valued at $10,000 for $130,000, falsely claiming they had once been the property of boxer Muhammad Ali. That sale, in July, 2004, likewise was to an FBI agent.
Karos pleaded guilty in 2001 to possession of stolen goods in the case of the missing items from the Rome Observatory, consisting of astrolabes and armillary spheres, which she had tried to market out of her Whitefish Bay home.
A very shady character named Zakria El-Shafei was lured to her home and beaten by O'Hara in that bizarre case. El-Shafei has disappeared. However, a recently-published book entitled Forbidden Prayers, includes a character who very likely is, or is based on, El-Shafei.
Karos' Milwaukee nemesis has been FBI Special Agent James Doyle who led the investigation into her recent activities here which brought to light the St. Louis connection. Karos is to be sentenced in St. Louis in May. According to the Bureau of Prisons website, she is now in transit, presumably to the detention facility in Chicago where she has been housed.
An article about Karos appeared in Wednesday's St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which is also accompanied by a lovely photograph of Karos. Use the Google search engine above to find the entire trove of milwaukeeworld.com stories about Marilyn Karos.

UPDATE-- Thursday, April 6th 2006 -- Majed A. Ihmoud was sentenced yesterday to five months in federal prison and and additional five months home confinement for the Rembrandt caper. Karos' sentencing is set for May 31st. -- Ed.]

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

BLIND JUSTICE: JENSEN CAN'T SEE ACCUSERS

By Michael Horne
The new $44 million Dane County Courthouse is taking its maiden voyage as the trial of Rep. Scott Jensen sails along. Wednesday, Jensen's lawyer, Stephen Meyer, asked for a mistrial since the courtroom's design does not permit Jensen to see his accusers eye-to-eye.
Judge Steven Ebert denied the motion, flatly saying that confrontation "is broader than the ability to look somebody in the eye." This puts the Dane County circuit court judge on a collision course with Justice Antonin Scalia of the United States Supreme Court, which has ruled quite differently.
How broad is the right to face-to-face confrontation with a hostile witness in a court trial? Well, it is embodied in the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which says that "in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him."
This is not possible in the Jensen case, due to design flaws in the courthouse, which place the defendant, Jensen, out of the sight of those testifying. Milwaukeeworld has verified this with individuals who have been observers of the trial proceedings.
Even Dane County District Attorney Brian Blanchard admitted in court that "witnesses may lean a little bit [to see Jensen], but when they lean a little bit they would see him."
However, acrobatics in the courtroom was probably not what the framers of the Bill of Rights had in mind, and for centuries courtrooms have been built to allow face-to-face confrontation.
This is not merely a matter of interior design, but an established principle of the constitution, as we have seen.
The right was most recently affirmed by the United States Supreme Court, with Justice Antonin Scalia writing the opinion of the court that face-to-face confrontation "is not a preference 'reflected' by the Confrontation Clause [but rather] a constitutional right unqualifiedly guaranteed."
The right derives from "the irreducible literal meaning of the clause," which traces "to the beginnings of Western legal culture," according to Scalia in Crawford v. Washington, 02-9410 US 2004
This small detail was overlooked somewhere along the line as the courthouse facility was designed and constructed..
What appeared at first to be a sightline problem similar to occupying an obstructed seat in a stadium or theater, may indeed portend a constitutional issue beyond the scope (and apparently, the understanding), of the Dane County judiciary.
The gravity of the design flaw was pointed out by Waukesha County Judge Mac Davis, who is aware of the right to face-to-face contact with one's accusers, and who brought the matter to the attention of Jensen's attorney. It occured to Davis that something was wrong, as he testified, and he brought it to the attention of the Jensen team.
Jensen's supporters spent the evening Tuesday calling attorneys familiar with the provisions of the sixth amendment. The attorneys, who are not involved in the case, immediately referred to Scalia's opinion on the literal interpretation of face-to-face contact. Scalia's ruling, for example, prohibits the practice of separating a juvenile sexual assault victim in court from the accused by a sheet or other screening device. It also has implications in closed-circuit trials in which the accuser would be physically separated from the accused while the proceedings were televised.
Most famously, the issue appeared in last year's sexual assault trial of Michael Jackson. His accuser was obliged to deliver his testimony in Jackson's line-of-sight, rather than remotely.
Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk, a former state intervenor who is running for Attorney General directed questions to Chief Judge Michael Nowakowski, who referred questions to court administrator Gail Richardson, who was not immediately available for comment. [We'll post her response when she returns the calls.]
The architect for the project is Parker Durrant International Architects, a firm currently engaged in designing the world's tallest building, they say, and which has several web pages devoted to its courthouse work across the country.
Milwaukeeworld sent an e-mail to Kathe Stanton, the director of Media Relations for the architecture firm for her comments.
We've also called Kelli Thompson of the state Public Defender's office to see if the unconstitutional courtroom has caused problems for indigent criminal defendants.

Monday, March 06, 2006

BRADY STREET BANDIT SOUGHT

The photo above was thought to be, but is not, the "Brady Street Bandit," who has held up four businesses on the street over the course of the past week or so. The picture had been posted in many places of business on the street. [See update below for further information.]
About the Brady Street Bandit:
He's a short crackhead, according to those who have seen him in the past. He seems familiar with the Brady Street neighborhood, particularly the eastern end where he has pulled most of his jobs.
He does not get much money from the stores he robs, and the cash almost certainly goes immediately to drugs. He claims to have a gun, and should be considered armed and dangerous, but there is a likelihood that if he had a gun, he would have sold it for drugs by now.
The photograph you see is of our robber at work at the M&I Marshall and Ilsley Bank on N. Water Street, which he held up Friday, thus ratcheting his offense level to a federal crime.
If this were London, the police probably would already have got their man, since the British capital makes extensive use of public cameras and facial recognition technology.
Police Chief Annette Hegerty is considering installing pole cameras in Milwaukee, using drug asset forfeiture funds.
The folks on Brady Street probably wouldn't mind having a camera or two.

[UPDATE: 10 March 2006 -- The fellow in the photograph has been identified as Emmett P. Bankhead, (what a great name for a drug addict bank robber!) He is shown on his way to pick up cash to buy some drugs. Police arrested him in connection with three bank robberies including the March 2 hold-up at the M&I Bank (pictured above). Bankhead also admitted to the robbery of the Wells Fargo Bank at 735 W. Wisconsin Ave. and the Associated Bank at 200 E. Wisconsin Ave. However, police do not now believe, as they did earlier in the week, that he was the Brady Street bandit. That suspect may be in custody at this time, according to Jim Searles of the Brady Street Pharmacy. We'll tell you more if the police ever call us back.]
--Michael Horne

NEW WARDEN FOR OXFORD


Attention all inmates at the Federal Correction Institution in Oxford, Wisconsin! Meet your new warden, Ricardo Martinez, a twenty-year veteran of the Bureau of Prisons who took over the medium security facility and its approximately 1336 inmates this week.
Martinez was previously the warden at the Federal Prison Camp in Yankton, South Dakota where his inmates included such celebrated Wisconsinites as former Ald. Paul Henningsen and Sen. Gary George.
-- Michael Horne