Poor Detroit

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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby chiggerbit » Fri May 14, 2010 2:11 pm

Mitt Romney's boyhood home to be razed.

Image

http://tinyurl.com/29mky6k

"....The demolition of the Romney family home is the first of its kind in Palmer Woods, a high-end enclave in northwest Detroit that was developed at the dawn of the U.S. auto industry and housed many of its pioneers. Palmer Woods has just a handful of vacant properties among its 292 homes, according to residents. It's one of the anchor neighborhoods that is critical to the success of Mayor Bing's right-sizing effort.

The house was owned by Mr. Romney's parents, George and Lenore Romney, from 1941 until 1953, when the family moved to the northern suburbs. The elder Mr. Romney would go on to become head of American Motors Corp., then governor of Michigan and U.S. secretary of Housing and Urban Development.

As recently as 2002, the house sold for $645,000. But it has had a troubled history since then, lapsing into foreclosure more than once, bouncing between lenders and falling into disrepair. Last year, following years of complaints from neighbors, Wayne County declared it "a public nuisance and blight" and ordered it demolished.

The younger Mr. Romney, who is considered a leading GOP presidential candidate for 2012, said "it's sad" that his childhood home is being razed, "but sadder still to consider what has happened to the city of Detroit, which has been left hollow by fleeing jobs and liberal social policies."

Residents of Palmer Woods take pride in their tradition of historic preservation. But they're happy to see this house go. "This is an eyesore, and it makes no economic sense to fix it," said Joel Pitcoff, a retiree who lives around the block. "Who wants to spend $1 million on a house so it will be worth $400,000?"'
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Re:

Postby MinM » Sun May 16, 2010 11:23 pm

MinM wrote:
chiggerbit wrote:Heh, I noticed that. And I immediately jumped to the conclusion that the enemy is going to be someone of Middle Eastern descent, of which there is a rather large population in the Detroit area.

University of Michigan professor's new book explores stigma and acceptance in the Detroit Arab-American community - AnnArbor.com
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Even the most patriotic, politically-involved and community-oriented Arab Americans struggle to be accepted by as full-fledged members of American society, says University of Michigan professor Wayne Baker.

Why?

For the new book "Citizenship and Crisis: Arab Detroit After 9/11," Baker and a team of U-M researchers conducted more than 1,500 face-to-face interviews in Oakland, Macomb and Wayne counties - areas that contains one of the largest and most diverse populations of Arab Americans in the U.S.

Their aim: To get to the heart of why Arab Americans struggle to be accepted in American society and explore the concept of citizenship.

"There's always this tension over whether or not Arab Americans belong or don't belong," Baker says. "Many people in the general population prefer to keep their distance." ...
http://www.annarbor.com/news/even-the-m ... litically/

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Miss Michigan, of Dearborn, wins 2010 Miss USA crown

OSKAR GARCIA
Associated Press

Las Vegas -- Miss Michigan USA Rima Fakih of Dearborn won the Miss USA title Sunday, selected from a group of 51 beauty queens from across the country.

The first cuts came after the contestants danced onstage to "TiK ToK" by Ke$ha at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. The final five faced interviews and questions. In the interview, Fakih was asked whether she thought birth control should be paid for by health insurance, and she said she believed it should.

The 5 finalists in addition to Fakih were: Miss Colorado USA Jessica Hartman, Miss Oklahoma USA Morgan Elizabeth Woolard, Miss Virginia USA Samantha Evelyn Casey and Miss Maine USA Katherine Ashley Whittier. Woolard was first runner-up after handling a question about Arizona's new immigration law. She said she supports it.

Fakih, 24, nearly stumbled as she ended her walk in a white strapless gown, but she recovered without falling. She said the gown that looked like a wedding dress made her look like a mermaid...
http://detnews.com/article/20100516/MET ... -USA-crown

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Arab American, Rima Fakih has won the Miss USA pageant. This is historical as she is the first Arab American to win the Miss USA title.

Miss USA 2009, Kristen Dalton, crowned her successor at the conclusion of the live broadcast.

The two-hour television event was comprised of 51 contestants (representing each state and the District of Columbia) who competed in three categories: swimsuit, evening gown and interview.

The award is given to the contestant who best exemplifies beauty through the lens of a camera. The winner of the online vote will be revealed during the live telecast.

Rima Fakih was born in New York to Lebanese American parents, and raised in Dearborn with her parents and her younger brother, Rami.

A graduate of St. John's Preparatory Catholic High School, she attended the University of Michigan-Dearborn where she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics with a minor in Business Administration.

Active in the campus community, she served her fellow students as class senator, in addition to acting as the president of the students in the school’s Free Enterprise Group.

Always reserving time for community service, Fakih spent much of her college years volunteering as a social worker through various community organizations.

Arab Detroit congratulates Rima and the Arab American community in Michigan and throughout the U.S.

Mabrouk!


http://arabdetroit.com/news.php?id=1651
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Perelandra » Fri Jun 04, 2010 2:13 am

Things I Remember About Detroit
Five Years of Abandoned Factories, Talking Cats, and Cars on Fire
by Kelly O

The "Safety Zone"

First day of college. A tour of campus, then a tour of the three-block radius separating us from the wilds of inner-city Detroit. Instructor tells students NOT to leave three-block "safety zone"—and if we DO, always "look people in the eye." Don't look like a "victim." Walk tall and confident, and if someone demands money or a wallet, just give it to 'em.

My Plymouth Horizon

I had no idea every other city wasn't like this one. I had never seen a city before. I loved it—tall buildings, libraries, black people, freedom. On April 1, Mom calls to check in on me. My dorm roommate has a new Macintosh II, and we play gunshot sound effects as I tell her that my car has been stolen. It works too well. Then: "April Fool's!!!" Mom doesn't laugh. Next morning, my Plymouth Horizon is still where I left it, but every tire except one is flat and the passenger-side window is busted. The replacement window costs $200. Weirdly, nothing is stolen.

Farmer Crack

I get lost driving in Southwest Detroit, trying to find food. Factories, abandoned houses, dirt roads. Finally see a Farmer Jack, and while exiting the freeway, a big-ass hooptie—a great big green Lincoln Continental—hits the back of my Horizon so hard I fly into a 180-degree spin and lose my back bumper. I get out and ask the guy if I can get his insurance number. He pulls a 9 mm from his crotch and asks me why I hit him. I say sorry, get back in my car, and wait for him to drive away. Then I get out and throw my bumper in the trunk. When I finally pull into Farmer Jack, it's closed. A guy with a shopping cart rolls up and asks me if I "want some rocks." I say no. Farmer Jack—the biggest grocery-store chain in downtown Detroit in the 1990s—from that day forward becomes Farmer Crack.

Crackers

Being a 'billy from Up North, growing up on a farm in Northern Michigan, I'd never seen a prostitute. One sunny summer day, while riding my ten-speed through the Cass Corridor trying to find something called a "falafel" sandwich, I ride past a bunch of hookers. "Whatchoo doin' cracka-biiiiiiiiiitch?" Big awesome curvy black ladies, wearing nothing but silk camisoles and ho-heels, laughing. Getting catcalled, getting things thrown at you by the Cass Avenue hookers, becomes an official sport that summer. We keep a tally sheet on the fridge. Being called "bitch" gets 5 points. "Cracker" gets you 10.
Interesting article, more at the Link.
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby 82_28 » Fri Jun 04, 2010 2:52 am

Don't know if or where this fits in. Just saw this though:

Murdered Littleton man was victim of Detroit hit
A man gunned down in the doorway of his Littleton apartment early Tuesday morning was the apparent target of a hit dispatched by a reputed drug dealer in Pontiac, Mich., an arrest affidavit filed Wednesday indicates.

The motive, however, isn't clearly spelled out by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, which traced the alleged hitman, Franco Gonzalo Sierra-Rodriguez, and two female drivers from Michigan to Colorado.

The victim, publicly named for the first time in the document as Joaquin Lucero-Carillo, might have been part of the alleged drug-trafficking operations of Enrique Amaya, but Littleton police told an investigating DEA agent Lucero-Carillo "might have been involved with a married woman."

The wire-tapped conversations are referred to as "drug-related communications."

Witnesses in the courtyard at the Parkland Square Apartments on Belleview Avenue near Federal Boulevard told local investigators a man carrying a pistol calmly walked past them about 1 a.m.

He went up a flight of stairs and banged on an apartment door until the resident answered. They spoke briefly and the gunman shot the other man multiple times at close range.

He then returned to an idling car in the parking lot and left.

The car was described as dark Pontiac Grand Am or a Honda Prelude.

DEA agents in Pontiac who were monitoring cryptic cell phone conversations said Sierra-Rodriguez and the two women -- who were not told of hit and were paid $1,000 plus expenses for the trip -- traveled in a burgundy 2002 Pontiac Grand Prix, which for a time was parked in a church lot across the street from Amaya's Michigan home.

The DEA believes the trio stayed at a hotel near West Hampden Avenue and South Wadsworth Boulevard before the alleged assault.

Wednesday night, police located Sierra-Rodriguez through his cell-phone signal at a hotel in Houston, where he and the women were arrested.

On Tuesday, Lt. Sean Dugan of the Littleton Police Department called the shooting "a very cold-blooded, very calculated act."


http://www.denverpost.com/ci_15220931
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby 82_28 » Wed Sep 08, 2010 3:37 pm

Winds push fires through dozens of Detroit homes

DETROIT — Wind-whipped flames swept through at least three Detroit neighborhoods, destroying dozens of homes, including many that were vacant, officials said.

A thick odor of smoke filled the air Wednesday morning after the roaring fires, fanned by winds of up to 50 mph, jumped from house to house Tuesday night. No injuries have been reported.

"Between roughly 4 o'clock and about 8:30 we responded to about 85 fires," and about 140 downed power lines, fire commissioner James Mack told WXYZ-TV Tuesday night.

Detroit fire Capt. Steve Varnas told the Free Press that some fires may have been caused by dead tree limbs being blown onto power lines.

At least one electric company launched an investigation into possible ties between the blazes and its lines.

"It was like blankets of smoke everywhere and the next thing I know everybody's house was in fire," Louvenia Wallace, 31, a hair stylist and mother of three, told the Detroit Free Press Wednesday outside the duplex she rents.

The exterior of the second story of Wallace's home was damaged, but fire officials told her the first-floor unit, which she rents, was safe. Her block was all but wiped out by flames, but Wallace said she would probably stay.

"I don't have the money to just move," she told the Free Press.

Another resident, Estralita Jamal, said the fire destroyed her neighborhood.

"It looks like a war zone. The whole block is just gone. It's just gone," she told WXYZ.

Varnas said many of the homes caught in the fires were vacant.

Detroit Fire Department spokeswoman Katrina Butler said firefighters had to douse several house fires that rekindled early Wednesday. She said fire authorities were investigating the cause of the blazes.

DTE Energy Co. spokesman John Austerberry said Wednesday the utility was "looking into" possible links between its lines and the fires.

Austerberry said about 15,000 DTE customers remained without power, mostly in Detroit. Some 50,000 lost power a day earlier.

CMS Energy Corp. spokeswoman Debra Dodd said about 9,800 remained blacked out after 74,000 customers lost power Tuesday.

"Throughout the whole city, the same thing is happening: Wires down everywhere," Varnas said.

Firefighters from neighboring Dearborn, Warren, Harper Woods and Grosse Pointe assisted the Detroit fire department, which has been hit by cutbacks in recent months, WXYZ-TV reported.

Detroit Mayor Dave Bing said he was awaiting a report about the severity of the fires, WWJ radio reported. He told Detroit City Council members that many of the burned homes were "livable."

"You've now got families that have been displaced and so I think it's incumbent upon us to make sure we give those families the kind of support they need at this time, whether it's Red Cross or other community based organizations," Bing said, according to WWJ.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art ... QD9I3RE0G0
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby 82_28 » Wed Sep 08, 2010 3:42 pm

Goddamn. Just scrolling down this page I re-read the crowning of Miss Michigan and her Arab/Muslim roots and name.

Could the Great Qu'ran Burning Day and these Detroit fires be somehow memetically connected?
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby crikkett » Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:06 pm

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/sep20 ... -s09.shtml

Fires burn throughout Detroit
Residents hold energy giant responsible
By Andre Damon and Larry Porter
9 September 2010

Dozens of houses burned down in Detroit Tuesday as fires blazed through all parts of the city, overwhelming the local fire department.

Firefighters were brought in from the surrounding cities of Harper Woods, Warren, Dearborn, Grosse Pointe and Highland Park, the first time the city called in outside firefighters since the 1967 riots.

Residents and firemen said that the majority of the fires were caused by downed electrical wiring. According to residents, DTE, the city’s main electrical company, failed to respond in a timely manner to complaints about the failure of the electrical infrastructure.

A total of 85 structures caught fire after heavy winds downed over 700 power lines, according to statements by Detroit Fire Commissioner James Mack and DTE officials.

The largest fire, which destroyed at least a dozen houses, took place on Robinwood Street on the city’s East Side. The blaze was apparently set off when a power line or transformer, which had been shooting sparks for days, ignited and set fire to a garage.

Shirley and J.T. Hargrave, who owned the home where the transformer was located, had been calling DTE since Friday. The company refused to send a technician, they said, telling the family to “call 911” if there was a fire.

“This is all a direct result of the lack of response from DTE,” said Mary Hargrave, Shirly and J.T. Hargrave’s daughter. “We’ve been calling every day for the past five days; we called four times on Tuesday,” said Mary, pointing to the ruins of her family’s garage and the smoldering roof of her parents’ house. “It almost makes me ashamed to say I live in Detroit,” she said.

Residents noted that while DTE ignored their pleas to fix malfunctioning equipment and downed lines, the company spared no expense and never delayed responding if a worker failed to pay the energy giant’s exorbitant bills. “They’ll come out here the next day if you can’t pay,” one resident said.

The Detroit Fire Department had been responding to calls since 3 pm. By the time the fire on Robinwood started, they were so understaffed that they could not dispatch fire trucks to the area. “At first the firemen told me that they would have to let our house burn down, because we didn’t have a working hydrant in the area,” said Mary Hargrave.

Ms. Hargrave lost many of her possessions when the second story of her parents’ house was badly damaged by the fire. “My kids computer and a lot of their stuff just burned away.”
Robinwood StreetFirefighters respond to the blaze on Robinwood Street

In a press conference on Wednesday, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing characterized the fire as a “natural disaster”—caused by winds up to 50mph—which could not be predicted. “The naysayers say there is not enough equipment and manpower. But there is no way you can appropriately plan for a natural disaster,” he said.

This claim is aimed at exonerating the role of DTE and the mayor’s administration, which has conducted a non-stop campaign of budget reductions and wage-cutting against city workers, including firefighters, since taking office.

Responding to the mayor’s claims, Daniel McNamara, president of the Detroit Fire Fighters Association, told the WSWS, “That’s simply not the case. This is a four-season state; we’ve had natural disasters for centuries; hail storms, wind storms, lightning and snow storms. But this is the first time that we haven’t been able to respond to an incident.”

“We simply don’t have the people,” McNamara said, adding that the ranks of firefighters were 200-300 short to adequately protect the population. “They’ve run our fire companies down to a level that’s abysmal,” he said. “We’ve been warning them about this for decades. We’ve told the city that this day was going to come, and here we are.”

Over the last three decades an average of one company per year has been eliminated. In 2004, there were about 1,300 firefighters in the city, the union spokesman said. Now there are 500 positions, with 20 unfilled, according to Fire Commissioner James Mack. There has not been a full new class of firefighters for six years.

“Detroit homes are very close together, and fires spread quickly,” McNamara added. “They double in size every three to four minutes. But because of the layoffs and brown-outs, we simply can’t get to them fast enough, and they get out of control.”

The city of Detroit regularly “browns out” or temporarily shuts down, up to twelve of its fire stations every day due to budget cuts. Of the 65 fire companies in the city, 7 were “browned out” on Tuesday, leaving 58 in service. Among the browned out fire stations was the one closest to the fire on the northeast side.

At the scene of the Robinwood fire Tuesday, firefighters looked exhausted after over three hours battling the flames.

For its part, DTE quickly sought to blame Detroit residents for the fires, citing “energy theft”—in which desperate residents cut off from utilities attempt to restore heat and electricity through unauthorized hookups. “We know that there have been … instances of energy theft in the area, and there always is the potential for falling power lines and other dangerous situations as people tap into the electrical system,” the company said in a statement. After a spate of deaths caused by fires in homes that had had their utilities shut off this winter, DTE similarly sought to blame “energy theft.”

At Wednesday’s press conference, WSWS reporters asked Bing whether he was qualified to investigate the role of DTE, given the fact that he had been a member of DTE’s board of directors for 20 years. “Don’t ask me about qualifications, OK; don’t ask me about qualifications right now,” Bing shouted. “We’re dealing with something with folks’ lives. Let me deal with that; let me deal with that.”

Maurice, a Detroit firefighter, said, “If DTE had sent technicians out, this wouldn’t have occurred. They do not service their wires; there were wires sparking and they did nothing. If DTE feels there is no immediate danger they won’t address the problem.” Other residents complained that DTE had cut back on tree trimming and other maintenance.

“The firefighters are stretched thin,” Maurice added. “We had six off-duty firefighters helping out. It was unbelievable how many structures were on fire.

“They couldn’t respond to fires in some neighborhoods because there were no trucks left. The budget cuts have led to the decommissioning of nine fire stations; every day nine houses are basically closed and a tenth station is shut down on rotation.”

Ben Hardaway, a local business owner and former auto worker, said the fire spread because there were so many vacant buildings in the area. “There are only 6 occupied properties out of 30 in the two-block area,” he said. “All of them have overgrowth with bushes and weeds.

“This is like an urban wildfire,” continued Hardaway pointing to the overgrown trees over power lines that contributed to the fires.

The neighborhood on Robinwood Street, once filled with auto workers and their families, has been ravaged by unemployment, home foreclosures and utility shutoffs. “In a neighborhood like this, more than half of the people are living without utilities,” said a DTE worker as he disconnected a gas line from a vacant house on Robinwood Street.
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Project Willow » Mon Oct 04, 2010 3:17 am

Three part series on artists and Detroit:

http://www.vbs.tv/newsroom/detroit-lives-vbs-part-1-of-3--3
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby vanlose kid » Tue Nov 16, 2010 8:31 pm

It Begins: Detroit Neighboring City Of Hamtramck Asks For Permission To File For Bankruptcy

From Detroit News:

The city of Hamtramck, desperate for cash, has asked the state for permission to take an unprecedented step: filing for bankruptcy. City Manager Bill Cooper said the city of roughly 20,000 people is staring at a $3 million deficit, fueled by a dispute with Detroit. Unless Hamtramck files for bankruptcy, it won't be able to pay its nearly 100 employees or 153 retirees, he said.

The city sent a letter to the state Department of Treasury last week asking for approval to seek bankruptcy protection. It has not received a reply, Cooper said.

"I'm going to run out of money Jan. 31," Cooper said. Bankruptcy would allow the city wants to stave off creditors and force its unions to consider concessions.

Many Michigan municipalities are under severe financial pressure following a crippling recession that has seen tax revenues plummet. The Detroit Public Schools considered bankruptcy last year but opted against it.

"I'd much rather find another way," Cooper said. "It's not Option 1."

A spokesman for the Department of Treasury said, under state law, a municipality can't file for bankruptcy without first having an emergency financial manager appointed.

Caleb Buhs, a Department of Treasury spokesman, said the department received the letter Monday and officials are studying it. Under a 1990 law, only an emergency financial manager appointed by the state can take a city into bankruptcy, he said. No Michigan municipality has declared bankruptcy before or since the law was passed, he said.

The city of Hamtramck has an annual budget of just under $18 million. A substantial portion of its revenues come from a tax-sharing agreement with Detroit that centers on General Motors' Poletown plant. Detroit has withheld payment for a number of months, arguing that it had overpaid previously. Hamtramck has sued its bigger neighbor, but a court resolution could take months or even longer — not soon enough, Cooper said.


Well, post its IPO, GM should at least make the IPO flippers a little richer. Too bad the city below is not one of them.

Image

[ http://www.zerohedge.com/article/it-beg ... bankruptcy ]

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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Montag » Sat Nov 20, 2010 10:01 pm

Reimagining Detroit as Grow Town
by John Collins Rudolf

November 18, 2010
http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/ ... grow-town/

Over the last six decades, the city of Detroit has lost half its population, shrinking from more than 1.85 million people in 1950 to just 912,000 in 2008.

The population plunge has left vacant vast tracts of land that some people in the city want to see used for growing food. Hundreds of community gardens have sprung up throughout the urban core, and several large-scale farms have been proposed within the city limits.

The potential of the vacant land for food production is significant, according to a new study by Michigan State University researchers. They found that turning vacant publicly owned parcels into farms and community gardens could provide a big portion of residents’ fruit and vegetable needs.

Using intensive cultivation techniques and greenhouses to extend the growing season, this land could produce more than 75 percent of Detroit residents’ fresh vegetables and 40 percent of their nontropical fresh fruits, researchers found. The fruit and vegetable consumption rates were based on national averages.

The study identified 44,000 parcels totaling nearly 5,000 acres, with no existing structures, that were owned by the city, surrounding Wayne County or the state of Michigan. Land in and around parks, golf courses, cemeteries, schools, churches, hospitals, jails, utilities, right-of-ways and privately owned property was not included.

“Our totals are conservative,” said Mike Hamm, a professor of sustainable agriculture at Michigan State University. “But it may be closer to representing the quantity of land more readily available for urban farms and gardens because these parcels are publicly owned and clear of any buildings.”

Whether city leaders would support large-scale agricultural development is unclear. According to an article in The Detroit Free Press, proposals for larger urban farms continue to languish on the drawing boards.

The long wait for city approval has been frustrating for developers like Gary Wozniak, director of the RecoveryPark project, which proposes to farm 20 acres of eastern Detroit.

“I think the problem is the city doesn’t want to make a decision, quite honestly,” Mr. Wozniak told The Free Press last week. “Every time we think we’ve reached a certain plateau, we get another excuse…. We should be taking risks. We should be looking at this as opportunities.”
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Pele'sDaughter » Wed Dec 15, 2010 8:52 pm

http://www.freep.com/article/20101215/N ... z18DL3H9gI

Kwame Kilpatrick, dad and aides extorted, bribed, took kickbacks, feds charge

A federal grand jury today indicted former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, his father and three former top aides on racketeering charges, accusing them of turning the mayor's office into a criminal enterprise to enrich themselves, families and friends.

Besides the now-jailed former mayor, the 38-count indictment names his father, Bernard Kilpatrick, city contractor Bobby Ferguson, former top Kilpatrick aide Derrick Miller and former water department chief Victor Mercado in one of the largest public corruption investigations ever in the City of Detroit.

Contacted today, attorneys for the two Kilpatricks and Miller said they would energetically battle the charges. Mercado's attorney could not be reached, and Ferguson's attorney had no immediate comment.

The 89-page indictment outlined four general areas of misconduct.

It said the defendants extorted money from municipal contractors, state and non-profit donors and engaged in bribery and extortion involving other public contracts and investments.

The indictment said that Ferguson kicked back at least $424,000 in cash and other items of value to the mayor and that Kilpatrick used more than $590,000 in cash derived from the conspiracy to pay his credit card bills, purchase cashier's checks and clothing and repay loans.

Bernard Kilpatrick, the indictment said, deposited more than $600,000 in cash into his personal bank accounts. He was charged with three counts of filing false tax returns for calendar years 2004, 2005 and 2007.

The penalties for the charges laid out in the indictment range from three to 30 year in prison.

The investigation was conducted by the FBI, EPA Criminal Investigation Division and IRS Criminal Investigation Division.

In a news conference, U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade said: “People often ask me, ‘What took so long?’…As you see from the indictment, this case involves very complex schemes.”

She said investigators reviewed hundreds of thousands of records and interviewed hundreds of witnesses

.....more at the link.
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Jeff » Wed Jan 05, 2011 11:27 am

slideshow at link

Detroit Disassembled by Andrew Moore: The devastation of a major American city
By Tim Tower
5 January 2011

For almost a century, Detroit was synonymous with automobile manufacturing, mass production and the dominance of American industry. In the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, for example, one out of every two automobiles produced anywhere was assembled in the Detroit area. It was a bustling metropolis at the manufacturing center of the world’s most powerful nation. By contrast, today’s cityscape is rife with images of decay.

Andrew Moore’s photographs in his Detroit Disassembled give expression to that historical contradiction and tragedy; and they do so with a seductive beauty that is hard to resist. In a recent conversation, Moore called Detroit a metaphor for America. Once the fastest-growing city in the world, it has unraveled at a virtually unprecedented pace.

Moore’s series of 75 prints reveals an almost indiscriminate destruction, beginning with the city’s industrial mainspring and running through every aspect of life in what was the nation’s fourth-largest urban center. Theaters, libraries, dance halls, neighborhoods and schools have been reduced to crumbling ruins, overtaken by wildflowers, vines and burgeoning forest. His images are candid, direct, searching.

...

The return of wild plants and animals in place of factories, schools and neighborhoods in modern America is significant. The word “culture” takes its meaning from that which has been cultivated, as distinct from “virgin forest and virgin soil,” and worked up by humanity—ultimately, class-divided humanity—for the satisfaction of its needs.

From sticks and stone implements through electronically-integrated, global processes, the tools of production have been expanded to increase the productivity of labor. These tools form the material foundations of human culture as a whole. Hence, the implications of the sudden loss of such massive instruments as Detroit’s factories make the current study all the more riveting.

...
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby elephant » Wed Jan 05, 2011 12:08 pm

The most compelling chronicler of Detroit is probably Charlie LeDuff.

Check out his recent story in Mother Jones "Who Killed Aiyana Stanley Jones?"

http://motherjones.com/politics/2010/11/aiyana-stanley-jones-detroit
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Re: Poor Detroit

Postby Nordic » Wed Jan 05, 2011 1:34 pm

The weird thing about Detroit (well one of them) is that it's now a booming film production location. All those empty buildings, with nobody in them, cheap cheap cheap! Plus the State tax rebates for film and TV projects!

Ghosts towns make great backlots.
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