City Government
Pamela Price and Cat Brooks Dominate as Schaaf Disappoints
Assistant Pastor Jaqueline Thompson provided opening remarks at the mayoral forum on Sept. 19. Photo by Sue Taylor.
Mayoral Candidate Saied Karamooz raised a point that stirred the waters of the Allen Temple Baptist Church candidate debate this week.
“We have a humanitarian crisis in our city. Eight-six percent of the homeless are formerly housed residents of Oakland,” he said.
Candidate Cedric Troupe echoed the need to help local residents, expressing the need for better education in Oakland’s “broken” schools.
About 300 people listened closely to nine of 10 mayoral candidates at a forum Wednesday night, hosted by the Public Ministry of Allen Temple Baptist Church in East Oakland.
Speaking were current Mayor Schaaf, Jesse Smith, Ken Houston, Cat Brooks, Pamela Price, Marchon Tatmon, Saied Karamooz, Cedric Troupe, and Nancy Sidebotham. Peter Liu was not present.
The 2018 campaign season is underway, and no assumption that the incumbent will prevail can be made. Disparity in environmental conditions, homelessness, failing infrastructure, and rampant development causing displacement, were some topics of the question/answer format.
In a year when women are a greater presence in public life, Assistant Pastor Jaqueline Thompson presided over the event, Public Ministry head Sheila Fuller welcomed everyone, and Rev. Charlotte Williams, director of communications, moderated the discussion.
Candidates were asked specific questions and questioned each other. The forum scheduled to end at 8:30 p.m., lasted until after 9 p.m., and most of the attendees stayed.
A number of candidates repeated, “This wouldn’t happen in Montclair,” and those attending agreed. Tent camps, trash, and transportation were part of this theme.
But housing and homelessness issues dominated the debate. Tuff Sheds are not a welcome “solution,” and Ken Houston stated that city-owned properties need to be used for housing.
A rousing cheer went up when Cat Brooks said, “Yes on Prop. 10,” to repeal the state Costa Hawkins law so rent control can be expanded.
While Mayor Schaaf claimed progress and success, Houston said, “the City has a 200 percent success rate with property development goals, but only a 4 percent success rate providing affordable housing.”
Several candidates responded to Mayor Schaaf citing reports – one a Rockefeller-funded equity study – saying, “Reports are not enough. We need action.”
Both Cat Brooks and Pamela Price said, “We know what needs to be done.”
“Transportation should work for everyone in Oakland, so they can go anywhere they need to at a reasonable cost. That’s not happening now,” said Marchon Tatmon.
The Oakland Police Department’s failure to complete court-ordered reforms was not specifically mentioned, but Cat Brooks reiterated a point she made at the August Democratic Party debate. “If we could police and incarcerate our way into safety, we’d be the safest city in the world,” she said.
Mayor Schaaf’s reply to the criticism was, “I won’t apologize for what I’ve done.” But folks were not satisfied with the Trumpian strategy of claiming success where there is little or none.
Schaaf was questioned after the forum about a news article in which she praised a new North Oakland development that will charge up to $8,000 a month rent, saying she is for “housing at any price.”
Asked for a comment by the Post, she said, “I do think it’s wrong to kill market rate development, as happening in some cities (like) Berkeley.”
Activism
Oakland Post: Week of October 30 – November 5, 2024
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of October 30 – November 5, 2024
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Bay Area
Evidence Appears to Show Cover-Up of Previous Charges of Discrimination Against Jewish and Black Jurors, D.A. Says
Today, District Attorney Pamela Price announced that attorneys assigned to review the office’s death penalty cases found evidence revealing that instead of investigating claims of prosecutorial misconduct—excluding Jewish and Black residents from juries — a former senior Alameda County District Attorney’s Office prosecutor who is now a sitting judge in Alameda County, Morris Jacobson, and a team of investigators appeared to have taken part in covering it up.
Special to The Post
Today, District Attorney Pamela Price announced that attorneys assigned to review the office’s death penalty cases found evidence revealing that instead of investigating claims of prosecutorial misconduct—excluding Jewish and Black residents from juries — a former senior Alameda County District Attorney’s Office prosecutor who is now a sitting judge in Alameda County, Morris Jacobson, and a team of investigators appeared to have taken part in covering it up.
During a press conference, Price presented a copy of a handwritten note by a former DA office employee who attended a meeting with employees from the office.
Jacobson, a deputy district attorney at the time, led the meeting in preparation for an evidentiary hearing ordered in the Fred Freeman case.
That hearing was ordered after former capital trial prosecutor Jack Quatman, the prosecutor in People v. Freeman, signed a declaration revealing that he and other capital case prosecutors routinely struck Black women and Jewish jurors in death penalty cases.
Jacobson was assigned by former district attorneys Tom Orloff and Nancy O’Malley to coordinate the ACDAO’s response during the evidentiary hearing.
In that capacity, he and others assigned to the capital case team went to great lengths to distract the courts from the substantive legal allegations by besmirching the whistleblower Quatman’s character and credibility—a strategy that succeeded.
Key sections of the note include, “left it w/ Morris saying he would give us direction. Wants to find dirt on Quatman,” and “How good are your memories? His point was he doesn’t want any documentation of what we do unless it is agreed upon???”
“This note provides the public some of the missing clues regarding who appeared to be involved during previous administrations in covering up prosecutorial misconduct at the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office,” said Price. “The note from this meeting in 2004 gives insight into why prosecutors’ notes containing evidence of discrimination against potential Jewish and Black jurors may not have been subjected to a comprehensive review and were not disclosed to the Court in most of the cases until my office was ordered by Honorable Judge Vince Chhabria to review death penalty cases.
“What the public should know is that prosecutors have special duties as ministers of justice to uphold the Constitution, which guarantees the right to a fair trial and to be judged by a jury of one’s peers, regardless of race, religion, or sexual orientation,” she said.
United States District Court Judge Chhabria determined earlier this year that there was “strong evidence that, in prior decades, prosecutors from the office were … excluding Jewish and African American jurors in death penalty cases.”
He subsequently issued an order directing ACDAO to disclose jury selection files in all Alameda County cases which resulted in a death sentence.
The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office is the source of this story.
Bay Area
In the City Attorney Race, Ryan Richardson Is Better for Oakland
It’s been two years since negotiations broke down between the City of Oakland and a developer who wants to build a coal terminal here, and the issue has reappeared, quietly, in the upcoming race for Oakland City attorney. Two candidates are running for the position of Oakland City Attorney in November: current Assistant Chief City Attorney Ryan Richardson and retired judge Brenda Harbin-Forte.
By Margaret Rossoff
Special to The Post
OPINION
It’s been two years since negotiations broke down between the City of Oakland and a developer who wants to build a coal terminal here, and the issue has reappeared, quietly, in the upcoming race for Oakland City attorney.
Two candidates are running for the position of Oakland City Attorney in November: current Assistant Chief City Attorney Ryan Richardson and retired judge Brenda Harbin-Forte.
Richardson has worked in the Office of the City Attorney since 2014 and is likely to continue current City Attorney Barbara Parker’s policies managing the department. He has committed not to accept campaign contributions from developers who want to store and handle coal at a proposed marine terminal in Oakland.
Retired Judge Harbin-Forte launched and has played a leading role in the campaign to recall Mayor Sheng Thao, which is also on the November ballot. She has stepped back from the recall campaign to focus on her candidacy. The East Bay Times noted, “Harbin-Forte’s decision to lead the recall campaign against a potential future client is … troubling — and is likely to undermine her ability, if she were to win, to work effectively.”
Harbin-Forte has refused to rule out accepting campaign support from coal terminal interests or their agents. Coal terminal lobbyist Greg McConnell’s Independent Expenditure Committee “SOS Oakland” is backing her campaign.
In the 2022 mayor’s race, parties hoping to build a coal terminal made $600,000 in contributions to another of McConnell’s Independent Expenditure Committees.
In a recent interview, Harbin-Forte said she is open to “listening to both sides” and will be “fair.” However, the City Attorney’s job is not to judge fairly between the City and its legal opponents – it is to represent the City against its opponents.
She thought that the 2022 settlement negotiations ended because the City “rejected a ‘no coal’ settlement.” This is lobbyist McConnell’s narrative, in contrast to the report by City Attorney Barbara Parker. Parker has explained that the City continued to negotiate in good faith for a settlement with no “loopholes” that could have allowed coal to ship through Oakland – until would-be coal developer Phil Tagami broke off negotiations.
One of Harbin-Forte’s main priorities, listed on her website, is “reducing reliance on outside law firms,” and instead use the lawyers working in the City Attorney’s office.
However, sometimes this office doesn’t have the extensive expertise available that outside firms can provide in major litigation. In the ongoing, high stakes coal litigation, the City has benefited from collaborating with experienced, specialized attorneys who could take on the nationally prominent firms representing the City’s opponents.
The City will continue to need this expertise as it pursues an appeal of the judge’s decision that restored the developer’s lease and defends against a billion-dollar lawsuit brought by the hedge fund operator who holds the sublease on the property.
Harbin-Forte’s unwillingness to refuse campaign contributions from coal terminal interests, her opposition to using outside resources when needed, as well as her uncritical repetition of coal lobbyist McConnell’s claim that the City sabotaged the settlement talks of 2022 all raise serious concerns about how well she would represent the best interests of Oakland and Oaklanders if she is elected City Attorney.
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