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Politics Politics Feature

Memorial Time

The past week, properly enough, has been one of official memorials for the military veterans who have made the supreme sacrifice for their country, and — in this corner, anyhow — has also been a time to remember others who have left us or suffered significant harm on some other kind of firing line.

It was, for example, inspiring to see former journalist and current FedEx customer service specialist Oran Quintrell out and in public and appearing to be of good spirit at the annual Bratfest sponsored by various of his fellow Democratic activists in southeast Memphis on Memorial Day. It was the first outing for Quintrell, a victim of diabetes, since the amputation of his lower legs and his fitting for prosthetic substitutes.

It would be overdoing it to say that Quintrell was jaunty, but both he and his wife, Joyce, were satisfyingly whole and back to normal in any number of impressive ways, and gave every indication that they will be on hand to add their good cheer and stimulating company in all kinds of social situations to come.

Quintrell’s disease and rehab regimen have served as a “wake-up call,” observed his longtime friend Steve Steffens, a co-host for the Bratfest affair.

Diabetes has been much in the news of late. It was given as the proximate cause of death for the legendary B.B. King, who has been the subject of several memorials since his death last week in Las Vegas and was to be honored with yet another on Beale Street on Wednesday of this week.

And it was the focus of attention at the recent fund-raising banquet of the West Tennessee chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF).

Held at the East Memphis Hilton on May 9th, the event was co-hosted by honorary Chairman David Pickler, the former longtime Shelby County Schools president, whose company, the Pickler Wealth Advisers, is an annual sponsor of the event and whose daughter, Katie Pickler, is chief development officer of the West Tennessee chapter. Emcee for the JDRF banquet was Darrell Greene, news anchor for WHBQ-TV, Fox 13.

Speaking of “satisfyingly whole” and “of good cheer,” it is hard to imagine anybody more suggestive of those phrases than Greene, a former star athlete during his student days in Arkansas and the very embodiment of public good health. Yet Darrell is one of the many victims of juvenile diabetes. After being diagnosed at the age of 24, he has had to submit to the same daily insulin regimen as other JD1 sufferers, a treatment routine that is necessary to sustain normal life, or, in some cases, life itself.

The JDRF banquet, which had a Roaring Twenties theme, attracted numerous luminaries, no few of them from the world of politics. The auction of items and services donated by various individuals and institutions raised more than $365,000 for research.

Juvenile diabetes (also known as Type 1) is so-called because it appears to be innate (i.e., likely present in some form from birth) and is not necessarily the result of specific life circumstances. Type 2, which accounts for most known cases, is more usually attributed to specific developmental circumstances, like obesity or overuse of sugar. Both kinds of diabetes involve impairment of the body’s metabolism and ability to process blood sugar and are threatening to life and limb.

• Last week also presented three occasions for friends to remember former state legislator and women’s rights activist Kathryn Bowers — memorial services at St. Paul Catholic Church on Friday (where video clips from her time in public life were shown), followed by a funeral mass there on Saturday and burial on Tuesday at Calvary Cemetery.

Bowers’ observances occurred on the same weekend as events in Memphis connected with the annual convention here of the Tennessee Federation of Democratic Women, an organization in which she had often figured large.

Bowers, a longtime member of the Democratic leadership in the House, was well-liked and respected across party lines despite the fact of her arrest in 2005 (almost 10 years ago, exactly), along with several other legislators, in the FBI’s Tennessee Waltz sting. Bowers’ arrest occurred only days after she was sworn in as a state senator after winning a special election to fill a vacancy.

After serving a brief prison term for bribery, Bowers devoted much of her time in recent years to charitable activity and to voter registration drives.

• As this is a column largely devoted to memory and memorials, I will take the opportunity to express some overdue condolences — to Adrienne Pakis-Gillon, a former candidate for the state Senate and a Democratic activist, for the death of her father, Jim Pakis, and to Susan and George Simmons, activists also, for the death of their son Forest, whose extraordinary good nature so clearly derived from that of his parents.

Even more overdue: condolences to the survivors of Shirley Boatright, a tireless campaign worker and strategist for all sorts of candidates and public figures, across all kinds of ideological lines, who died back in December 2013.

This list of overlooked remembrances is by no means complete and will be added to in the course of time.

• And, speaking of memorials, there was one clear message from the crowd of advocates and celebrants who showed up for an all-day “Roundhouse Revival” event on Saturday at the site of the long-dormant Mid-South Coliseum, now threatened with imminent extinction as a result of ongoing development plans.

And that message was: Rumors of the Coliseum’s uselessness have been greatly exaggerated. Discussed at the event, intermittently with music and even some ‘rassling featuring Jerry Lawler and Bill Dundee versus some certified bad guys, were a number of proposals, including one for a wrestling museum, which would allow the Coliseum to be rehabbed and retrofitted for new life.

Among the political figures observed there, either as spectators or as participants, were City Councilman (and mayoral candidate) Jim Strickland, City Council candidate Chooch Pickard, and County Commissioner Steve Basar. This, too, is an incomplete list.

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Politics Politics Feature

It’s a Go for Bowers!

“I’m ready to fight! I’m ready to roll my sleeves up!” Those words, delivered by a spunky Kathryn Bowers outside federal court on Tuesday, were, to say the least, a vivid contrast with her last several appearances before a group of assembled media.

The week before last, a glum-looking Bowers left a hearing before U.S. District judge John D. Breen, at which she asked for extra time to examine evidence and told reporters that her health was suffering because of stresses related to her situation as a Tennessee Waltz defendant.

The next week, a visibly drained Bowers announced her resignation from the state Senate on medical advice — an act that gave local Democrats a chance to nominate a successor for the November ballot. And only days after that she was pulled over and cited for DUI, after sideswiping a UPS truck on Interstate 240.

So who was this refreshed-looking woman in a spiffy white pantsuit smiling at ease Tuesday, with her equally relaxed attorney, Bill Massey, at her side?

Clearly, someone who, after reviewing the government’s video- and audiotapes and other evidence, decided she had a chance to beat the rap — unlike her predecessor in state Senate District 33, Roscoe Dixon, who was convicted earlier this summer of several counts of bribery and extortion similar to those confronting Bowers and now awaits sentencing.

“Not guilty,” Bowers said Tuesday morning, to the astonishment of almost everybody besides herself and Massey. Certainly, assistant U.S. attorney Tim DiScenza, chief prosecutor in the case, was buffaloed and confessed in court that he had been expecting an effort at plea bargaining and had been unprepared for what actually happened.

Tentatively, Bowers’ trial is set for April — though that could change as a result of a pre-trial hearing now set for January.

All of this had to have an impact on another Tennessee Waltz defendant, former state senator John Ford, Bowers’ colleague for the briefest of times in the General Assembly’s senior chamber.

A somewhat prescient Ford said last week, just before the news of Bowers’ DUI incident, that he harbored doubts that her resignation from the Senate necessarily meant she was determined on a change of plea to guilty. “She’s had real bad health,” Ford said then. “I’m privy to some stuff. I mean, long before all of this came up.”

Hobnobbing before last weekend’s Memphis-Ole Miss game at Oxford were former Mississippi governor Ronnie Musgrove (left) and Harold Ford Jr., the Democratic nominee for U.S. senator in Tennessee. Another local hopeful attending the game, won by the Rebels, was Steve Cohen, the Democrats’ nominee for Congress in the 9th District.

Ford, who resigned from the Senate more than a year ago, has from the beginning been considered the star player in the Tennessee Waltz saga. That’s largely because of his own longtime notoriety as a flamboyant and influential player on the state scene, but it owes something as well to the general fame of the Ford political family — particularly in a year when his nephew, 9th District congressman Harold Ford Jr., is a well-publicized candidate for the U.S. Senate.

John Ford’s trial for multiple counts of extortion and bribery was originally set for October, just before the fall election, but has been reset for early next year. The former senator said last week he wouldn’t disclose his legal strategy, but he promised “a correct presentation” and insisted, “I don’t have to prove anything. They have to prove something!”

One clue to what that correct presentation won’t include: any reference to the independent movie filmed by undercover informant Tim Willis in the same downtown office space where one of the government’s videotapes has shown then-Senator Ford pocketing FBI cash. That money, several thousand dollars worth, was handed over by a supposed representative of “E-Cycle,” a fictitious computer firm used as an FBI front.

“That’s news-media talk. That don’t mean nothing!” Ford scoffed about speculation that he might claim only to have been an actor in Willis’ fictional drama.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Jim Bryson‘s two-day visit to Memphis last week was characterized by an unusual form of ambivalence.

Bryson, a marketing specialist and freshman state senator from Franklin who has been regarded as a potential GOP star, is smart enough to know that incumbent Democratic governor Phil Bredesen is well ahead in all the categories that count — money, poll standing, and name recognition.

But Bryson also knows that Tennesseans as a whole may have become a bit uneasy about Bredesen’s health during the governor’s recent prolonged absence from the public eye — due to a mystery illness that was tentatively identified as caused by a tick bite.

Even key Republicans will say privately that the GOP nominee has little chance if the governor’s health holds up. But key Democrats will tell you privately that they are concerned about what could happen in the event of a further prolongation of Bredesen’s illness or a serious future relapse

Meanwhile, all the GOP challenger can do is keep his campaign going while the future sorts itself out.

Last Thursday night, Bryson’s statewide bus tour arrived in Shelby County — “county 94 in our 95-county tour,” as the candidate put it during a brief address at GOP headquarters in the Eastgate shopping center. (A Friday morning visit to the office of the Center for Independent Living would be the highlight of his second day in Memphis.)

At the Eastgate stop, Bryson revealed himself to be a ready man with a quip. He recalled that he had first run in 2002 for then state senator Marsha Blackburn’s seat, vacated that year by the soon-to-be-elected member of the U.S. House. “I ran for that seat to fill those pumps,” Bryson said.

Somewhat later, after alleging that Bredesen had referred to the issue of illegal immigration as “not my job,” Bryson paused for a couple of beats, then continued: “Pretty soon he’ll be right. It won’t be his job. It’ll be my job.”

As for serious content, Bryson rolled out a series of issues that seemed designed to out-do Bredesen on both his left and his right flanks. On the one hand, Bryson lamented the governor’s paring of some 200,000 Tennesseans from the TennCare rolls, maintaining that he himself had made a proposal that would have kept some 67,000 of that number — uninsurables, in the main — on the program’s rolls.

“He [Bredesen] said it was ‘reckless,'” Bryson said. ‘Well, it’s time we had a heart.”

As for the other flank, Bryson made a point of espousing the proposed amendment to the state constitution that would limit marriage to “one man and one woman” and that he, among other GOP legislators, had been instrumental in getting it on the November general election ballot.

Bryson said that he was “puzzled and disappointed” that the governor had not signed on to the amendment.

As eight new members of the Shelby County Commission were sworn in last Thursday, there was a mixture of the expected and the unexpected.

As many might have predicted, newly elected Henri Brooks conformed to what had become her habit as a state representative, rising for the Pledge of Allegiance but not reciting it.

Less predictable was the commission’s new seating arrangement. As devised by new chairman Joe Ford, the seats no longer begin with District 1, Position 1, and continue through District 5. They are arranged randomly. “I wanted to mix things up,” Ford explained. Visibly disappointed was new member Mike Ritz, who would have had first dibs under the old arrangement.

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Politics Politics Feature

Exit Bowers

Although many in the media made merry in the last week or so with a scenario in which former state senator John Ford might use as a defense in his forthcoming extortion trial a private film made by undercover informant Tim Willis, the prospects for any such miraculous rescue took another hit this week.

As of press time, state senator Kathryn Bowers, one of Ford’s fellow indictees in the FBI’s Tennessee Waltz sting that netted several state legislators last year, has not yet changed her plea from not guilty to guilty, which would follow the lead of several other indictees, including former Shelby County commissioner Michael Hooks Sr., who did so only last week.

But Bowers seemed to be preparing the way for such a plea change when she announced on Monday her decision to vacate her District 33 state Senate seat, effective September 1st.

Bowers’ decision, communicated first by letter to Lt. Governor John Wilder, the Senate’s presiding officer, and later to the media, followed a statement about health concerns she had made last week. On the day Hooks changed his plea before U.S. district judge John D. Breen, Bowers asked for additional time to consider her own plea.

The other shoe dropped with Bowers’ Monday statement that she was formally resigning her office on “medical advice.” Her resignation comes in time for the local Democratic Party to appoint a successor on the November ballot for her District 33 Senate post.

The party will have until September 28th to meet and do so, said Jim Kyle, the Democrats’ Senate leader. Kyle also noted that illness and a finding of legal ineligibility were the only two allowable reasons for a certified nominee to exit the ballot. The medical out also leaves intact Bowers’ pension arrangements.

The diminutive but influential legislator is scheduled to make a formal plea in her extortion case on September 5th, four days after her official resignation date.

In her letter to Wilder, Bowers repeated her declarations of last week that she had experienced “considerable stress … that has taken its toll on my health.”

The precipitating incident, she said, was a near-accident last week in which, in the course of returning from a Knoxville conference on minority health matters, she lost control of her Chevrolet Blazer when the tread separated from one of the vehicle’s tires.

Bowers said on Monday that she mulled things over after returning to Memphis and made her decision to resign over the weekend. She called party caucus chairman Joe Haynes of Goodlettsville, who tried to talk her out of resigning, she said. (Haynes issued a statement Monday expressing “regret” at Bowers’ decision.)

A factor that hastened her decision was her determination to “spare the people of Shelby County the expense of a special election,” Bowers said. She gave no indication of what her plea would be at her court date, saying that her legal status had not entered into her thinking.

The likelihood of a plea change to guilty was being taken as a given elsewhere, though — especially since her attorney, William Massey, had said after last week’s hearing, “We’re always reevaluating our position, in light of everyone else, in light of the discovery we’ve had,” and gone on to tell reporters that it was possible a trial would not be necessary.

In the meantime, a brief flurry of excitement had been created by WMC-TV reporter Darrell Phillips‘ disclosure that FBI informant and sting go-between Willis, who aspires to be a filmmaker, had actually made a movie in the same office space used for sting purposes by the phony FBI computer company E-Cycle.

The movie, which employed the services of Circuit Court Judge and sometime actor D’Army Bailey, featured a sting plot remarkably similar to the one employed, with Willis’ help, by the FBI. Unofficial word came from sources close to John Ford indicating that the former state senator might attempt to represent FBI videotapes of himself accepting cash in that light.

One problem: The money doled out by the FBI — some $50,000 in Ford’s case — was not play money but bona fide U.S. currency that went into the bank accounts of the defendants or presumably was spent. In any case, the recent actions taken by Hooks and Bowers would not seem to provide any aid or comfort to Ford or assistance to his defense strategy.

In the wake of Bowers’ departure, speculation immediately went to the question of who might be nominated by the Shelby County Democratic executive committee to succeed her. The committee’s next scheduled meeting is September 7th, but it would have three weeks after that date to formalize a decision.

One likely candidate would be realtor Steve Webster, who ran second to Bowers in the August statewide primary election. In his race, Webster, a former Bowers supporter, eschewed direct references to the incumbent’s pending legal problems. Which is to say, he has burned no bridges with Bowers’ support group.

The exit of Bowers from the District 33 seat underlined several ironies related to the Tennessee Waltz saga. Bowers’ unsuccessful opponent in the special 2005 Democratic primary to fill the seat was Michael Hooks Sr. And the seat had been made vacant in the first place by the resignation of longtime incumbent Roscoe Dixon, who earlier this summer was convicted in federal court on several counts relating to the Tennessee Waltz sting.

Dixon had vacated his Senate seat in order to accept a job as an aide to Shelby County mayor A C Wharton (who demanded and got Dixon’s resignation upon his indictment in May 2005). The former senator then lobbied for the Shelby County Commission to accept as his interim successor one Barry Myers, a longtime Dixon aide who himself was indicted on Tennessee Waltz charges, pleaded guilty, and became a witness for the government. (Sidney Chism, currently a Shelby County commissioner-elect, got the commission’s nod instead of Myers.)

Given that kind of history surrounding the seat, local Democrats will no doubt employ special care in selecting a Senate nominee to replace Bowers on the November ballot.

The name of Hooks, who had resigned his own commission seat just previous to his guilty plea, was omitted from the roster of commissioners that appeared on the agenda forms at Monday’s regular commission meeting. Nor was the former commissioner included among the exiting members — seven in all — who were cited for their service and given commemorative plaques.

But two of those departing members — Bruce Thompson and Chairman Tom Moss — made a point of acknowledging Hooks’ service prior to the start of regular business.

Joe Ford Jr., third-place finisher in last month’s Democratic primary for the District 9 congressional seat, made a point last week of reaffirming his endorsement of that primary’s winner, state senator Steve Cohen.

Ford also posted lengthy comments on the “Space Ninja” blog rebutting claims by the Tri-State Defender that his candidacy had not been serious and may even have been designed to detract from the primary efforts of another candidate, outgoing county commissioner Julian Bolton.

After debunking the newspaper’s claims and making the case that he and several other candidates had waged more viable campaigns than Bolton (whom the Tri-State Defender had endorsed), Ford concluded:

“The purpose of American representative government is to ensure that all people have a voice in the government. And when all people stated their choice, like it or not, more people wanted Senator Cohen than any other candidate. Cohen could not have won this election without receiving a good number of African-American votes.”

Although problems associated with the vote-reporting process (see Feature, page 19) made it difficult to say for sure, preliminary estimates suggest that Cohen may have received as much as 20 percent of the district’s African-American vote.