Santa Ana Political Chismes: Pulido regains control

Can’t let a rainy day go by without a new edition of Santa Ana Political Chismes, can we?  Church doesn’t start for another hour, so here goes…

  • The Voice of OC recently reported that “As the Santa Ana City Council goes about choosing a new city manager and city attorney — two decisions that will affect the city for years to come — it has become increasingly clear that Mayor Miguel Pulido is not controlling the process.”  Santa Ana Mayor Miguel Pulido has lost control of the Santa Ana City Council, however as it turns out he has actually regained control – in his usual fashion.  He has a solid troika, with Councilmen David Benavides and Carlos Bustamante – and now he can add a fourth vote pretty easily.  What changed?  Well, Sarmiento is getting cold feet about running for the Assembly.  One of the other Council Members is going to run for Solorio’s seat – who exactly is not yet known.  What we do know however is that they will have to play ball with Pulido in order to get the support they will need to proceed to Sacramento.
  • Pulido showed who was in control when he was able to stall the City’s search for a new City Manager.  The other Council Members didn’t like it but his argument made some sense – the city is broke, why not roll with Walters for now?  Pulido got his four votes from what I hear.
  • I am also hearing that the Santa Ana City Council is in the final stages of negotiations with the Latina who is a public school district General Counsel, who has applied to be the next City Attorney.  I hear that she absolutely kicked the tail of the Filipino lawyer from Los Angeles, who in his interviews came off as just another politician.  The Latina knows her stuff and showed it in her interviews.  The other guy was nowhere near as good.
  • The O.C. Register’s watchdog ripped Pulido for missing a few meetings of the OC Great Park, but I liked that Irvine Councilwoman Beth Krom, who chairs the board of the Great Park, supported him, noting that he works very hard behind the scenes to support the Great Park.  That is true.  He can pick up the phone and call U.S. Senators, California Governor Jerry Brown, etc. and get through every time.  I have no doubt that he has been instrumental in getting funding for the Great Park.
  • Well, Santa Ana’s NIMBY’s cost ua a Buffalo Wild Wings, but the O.C. Register is reporting that a Wingstop is opening in Santa Ana next week.  They already have a website up at this link.  They are opening up at 2801 W. MacArthur Blvd., Suite C, at the corner of MacArthur and Fairview in The South Coast Marketplace.  Wingstop offers premium wings in nine flavors.  Can’t wait!
  • The next Santa Ana City Council meeting is this Monday, at 6pm.  I hear it is going to be a doozy. Click here to read the agenda, which notes that the PBID realignment is up for a vote (they pulled in its boundaries); a CUP for Karmina Restaurant; and a CUP for the gay bar, Velvet Lounge.
  • In the agenda for Monday’s meeting note that Mayor Pro Tem Claudia Alvarez is really going after the PBID and Downtown Inc.  The rest of the Council though appears to be in support of the PBID modifications.

 

Art Pedroza Editor
Our Editor, Art Pedroza, worked at the O.C. Register and the OC Weekly and studied journalism at CSUF and UCI. He has lived in Santa Ana for over 30 years and has served on several city and county commissions. When he is not writing or editing Pedroza specializes in risk control and occupational safety. He also teaches part time at Cerritos College and CSUF. Pedroza has an MBA from Keller University.
Art Pedroza

Our Editor, Art Pedroza, worked at the O.C. Register and the OC Weekly and studied journalism at CSUF and UCI. He has lived in Santa Ana for over 30 years and has served on several city and county commissions. When he is not writing or editing Pedroza specializes in risk control and occupational safety. He also teaches part time at Cerritos College and CSUF. Pedroza has an MBA from Keller University.

View Comments

  • Any explanation why Pulido or Walter will not take action on the problems Commander Ken Gominsky and Detective Michael Gibbon addressed?

  • check your email for original

    Chief Paul M. Walters
    Santa Ana Police Make Crack to Use in Busts
    November 1994

    The Santa Ana, California Police Department is defending its practice of manufacturing crack cocaine in police labs for use in drug sting operations, a practice that until recently has been kept a secret (Lee Romney and Kevin Johnson, "Police Crime Lab Making Cocaine for Drug Busts," Los Angeles Times, Oct. 21, 1994, p. 1).

    Defense attorneys in Orange County are attempting to stop these operations, which they and other law enforcement experts say are dangerous. Police are using the manufactured crack in "reverse sting" operations in which officers pose as drug dealers and arrest those that purchase drugs from them. The display of drugs by undercover police officers is a common tactic in reverse stings. However, departments rarely manufacture the drugs and introduce them into communities. Reverse stings typically use drugs seized in raids.

    A similar operation was halted in Broward County, Florida after the state Supreme Court upheld a ruling that found the reverse stings there illegal. Hundreds of cases were reversed. "It is incredible that law enforcement's manufacture of an inherently dangerous controlled substance, like crack cocaine, can ever be for the public's safety," the court said.

    Santa Ana police take cocaine that has been seized in busts and cook it into crack cocaine. Lab technicians add a coating that rubs off on the skin of any person who touches the drug. That coating shows up only under a black light and helps police nab suspects who drop or swallow the drug.

    Over the course of the operation, police have arrested about 350 people, a large portion of those within a few blocks of Willard Intermediate School in Santa Ana. "We're not playing games here," Police Chief Paul M. Walters said. "We're trying to give the streets back to the residents and we're making progress."

    Public Defender Dean Allen said that he knows of two juveniles who were arrested in the stings. "If they want to keep kinds away from drugs, I think there are probably a lot of better ways to do it than just to sell them the drugs," he said.

    Some police officials agree, and warn that the practice can be dangerous. "I'd hate to be the department that permits this to happen, and it turns out that somebody overdoses or has a heart attack," said Gerald Arenberg, executive director of the National Association of Chiefs of Police in Washington, DC.

    According to Santa Ana police officials, no one has been injured in the sting operations, but some buyers have taken the drugs before they were arrested.

    NDSN's newsletter NewsBriefs is no longer in print. However, hard copies of past issues of NewsBriefs are available by contacting the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, which oversees NDSN.

    Also, please contact the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation for information about drug control policies.

    Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
    1225 Eye Street NW, Suite 500
    Washington, DC 20005-3914

    ndsn@ndsn.org

    Tel: (202) 312-2015
    Fax: (202) 842-2620

  • Good Cook,

    Apparently your tricycle concussion was not too serious and you are back to normal.

    Even able to recover your long term memory.

    On the other hand Zorro is in deep comatose state.

    Coma can be comfortable.

  • Jerry Brown and Miguel Pulido are no longer friends. The governor had distanced himself from Pulido when he was given a three inch binder filled with Pulido alleged wrongdoings.

    I'm afraid our Mayor has become a joke.

  • I am glad to hear the Latina Lawyer is still being considered for the City Attorney job.

    If Claudia Alvarez goes to the Mainplace/Westfields Mall she can kill two birds with one stone. Get a makeover at the MAC counter and shop for shoes at Nordstroms.

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