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  • Ivey calls for resignation of Alabama Veterans Affairs commissioner

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    Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey is calling for the resignation of Alabama Department of Veterans Affairs Commissioner Kent Davis after she alleged that the agency “mishandled” a grant program through the American Rescue Plan Act.

    Ivey’s request that Davis resign was provided in a one-page letter the governor’s office sent out to the media on Thursday. The letter also states that she removed John Kilpatrick from his position as a member on the State Board of Veterans’ Affairs.

    Ivey called for Davis to resign by 5 p.m. on Thursday. That did not happen, prompting the governor to release the following statement, “I am disappointed Commissioner Davis did not have the decency to respond and therefore, did not choose to do the right thing for the future of the Alabama Department of Veterans Affairs and veterans statewide. I am prepared to take further action.”

    In her letter to Davis, Ivey said there was “ample cause” for his removal.”

    “For example, your agency mishandled an ARPA grant program by, among other things, proposing -- on a substantially delayed basis -- uses of grant funds that would be ineligible under U.S. Treasury rules and regulations and/or state law or policy,” Ivey wrote to Davis.

    Ivey said the handling of the grant money “put in jeopardy” Alabama’s ability to “fulfill its obligations under ARPA and your agency’s ability to most effectively serve veterans. It thus seriously calls into question your ability to secure ‘additional services’ for Alabama veterans and to ‘cooperate with all other heads of the state departments’ as are your duties under state law.”

    The governor’s office did not provide specific examples to the grant programs.

    Ivey also accuses Davis of failing to consult with the Office of Governor as required by Executive Order No. 726.

    If Davis agreed to resign by 5 p.m. on Thursday, the resignation would have been effective by Sept. 30.

    The Alabama Department of Veterans Affairs did not provide a statement on Thursday.

    The governor’s request for the resignation of Davis was not discussed during the Joint ARPA Oversight committee meeting Thursday in Montgomery.

    State Sen. Greg Albritton, R-Atmore, chair of the Senate General Fund committee and a member of the ARPA oversight committee, said had heard there were plans to spend ARPA funds for purposes not allowed by the ARPA regulations and that those plans were stopped before the money was spent.

    “What I’m aware of is that there were concerns about how are the means and the methodologies that the ARPA monies were not being distributed or being granted according to the federal regulations,” Albritton said. “Those were seen, as I understand it, by the finance director and those given the oversight authority. And those questions were raised and that’s the result of where we went.”

    Albritton said he did not think any money was spent improperly because the problems were caught by the Finance Department. He said he thought Examiners of Public Accounts was also involved.

    “No monies went out the door,” Albritton said. “No monies were mishandled in that regard. It’s my understanding that if the Finance Department had not caught it and had not taken the appropriate steps, money would have gone out the door, and then it would have been a significant problem. So, I think the system worked in this regard.”

    Davis became the commissioner of the agency on Feb. 19, 2019, upon selectin by the State Board of Veterans Affairs. The commissioner is charged with managing the agency’s operations and coordinating the work of approximately 1,200 state and contractor employees in 70 facilities throughout Alabama. The agency’s budget is around $190 million.

    Davis, an attorney, is a retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral and is the seventh commissioner to head up the Department of Veterans Affairs. Before heading up the agency, he spent 14 years with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and served as a staff attorney for former Secretary Tom Ridge.

    Davis retired from military service in 2016. He served for two years as the Director of Economic Development and as City Manager in Anniston. In late 2017, he served as the civilian director of communication and outreach at Air University at Maxwell Air Force Base, moving back to his hometown of Montgomery.


     See more here: Ivey calls for resignation of Alabama Veterans Affairs commissioner - al.com

  • Plant Barry coal ash pond continues leaching toxins

    Significant levels of toxins including arsenic and cobalt continue to be detected in groundwater at Alabama Power’s James M. Barry plant coal ash pond in north Mobile County, according to the utility’s latest monitoring report. 


    Read the rest of the story here: Plant Barry coal ash pond continues leaching toxins | News | lagniappemobile.com

  • Hunter Biden Makes Surprise Guilty Plea in Tax Case

    LOS ANGELES—Hunter Biden pleaded guilty to federal tax charges Thursday, heading off a trial that was expected to further shine an unflattering light on his past business dealings and freewheeling lifestyle.

    Biden’s surprise plea capped a whirlwind morning in Los Angeles federal court, where jury selection was set to begin for Biden’s tax trial. 

    At the outset of Thursday’s court proceedings, Biden’s lawyer proposed an unusual deal where President Biden’s son would maintain his innocence while conceding that the evidence was sufficient for a guilty verdict.

    Prosecutors said they were shocked by the proposal of a so-called Alford deal and wouldn’t support any plea without an admission of guilt. “Hunter Biden is not innocent. Hunter Biden is guilty,” prosecutor Leo Wise told U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi, a Trump appointee presiding over the case.

    Later Thursday, a lawyer for Biden came back from a break and told Scarsi his client would abandon the Alford plea and plead guilty without any negotiated deal with prosecutors working under special counsel David Weiss.

    “Let’s move on,” Abbe Lowell, Biden’s lawyer, said in court. Lowell said the criminal case has marked a difficult time for the Biden family and that further strain would come from a Los Angeles trial that was set to include Biden family members as witnesses. 

    Scarsi told Biden the charges come with a maximum sentence of 17 years in prison and a maximum fine of more than $1 million. The judge scheduled sentencing for Dec. 16, about a month before the younger Biden’s father leaves office.

    Prosecutors have said that Biden, a Yale Law School graduate, spent lavishly on drugs, escorts and luxury hotels, all while neglecting his tax obligations. 

    The president’s son previously pleaded not guilty in January to charges he failed to pay at least $1.4 million in taxes he owed for the years 2016 through 2019. The nine charges included three felonies and six misdemeanors that allege he failed to file returns or pay taxes during a drug-fueled spending frenzy. 

    The three felony charges involved allegations that the younger Biden evaded taxes on millions of dollars in income from foreign businesses. 

    A federal judge in Delaware is set to sentence Hunter Biden in a separate case on Nov. 13 for falsely claiming that he wasn’t using drugs when he purchased a handgun in 2018. He faces a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison. But, as a first-time offender, he is likely to receive a fraction of that penalty, if any prison time at all.

    President Biden has said he wouldn’t use his clemency powers to pardon his son or commute any potential sentences. On Thursday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre repeated that pledge when talking to reporters aboard Air Force One. 


    READ MORE: Hunter Biden Makes Surprise Guilty Plea in Tax Case - WSJ

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