Anonymous ID: bee43f Sept. 24, 2020, 4:44 p.m. No.10775876   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5897 >>5991 >>6008 >>6252 >>6357

Dianne Feinstein’s husband identified as UC regent who recommended less qualified student

 

Richard Blum, a wealthy investment banker and Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s husband, was revealed Thursday as the mystery University of California regent in a state audit earlier this week who inappropriately penned a letter that likely helped a borderline student gain admission to UC Berkeley.

 

The explosive audit released Tuesday found that dozens of students were admitted to the most selective UC campuses over more qualified applicants because of exaggerated athletic abilities, connections and wealth.

 

The audit did not name the individuals involved, instead using generic terms like “coach” and “donor.” The auditor’s office said the lack of identification was meant to protect student privacy. But in response to a specific question from the Bay Area News Group about the identity of the regent, spokeswoman Margarita Fernandez said the report refers to Richard Blum.

 

In a phone interview Thursday, Blum was unapologetic, saying he did not recall the specific incident mentioned in the audit but that he has written letters on behalf of students to chancellors at various UC campuses for years.

 

“This is the first time I’ve heard that maybe I did something that wasn’t right,” Blum said. “I think it’s a bunch of nonsense.”

 

The regents oversee and make decisions about how the state’s most competitive public higher education system should run. Blum, a Cal alumnus, was appointed as a regent in 2002 by then-Gov. Gray Davis and reappointed in 2014 by then-Gov. Jerry Brown. His 12-year term is set to expire in 2026.

 

According to the audit, Blum sent a letter in support of a still-unidentified student to the chancellor after the student was placed on UC Berkeley’s waitlist. The chancellor’s office sent the letter to Cal’s development office, which forwarded it to the admissions office. And despite the fact that the applicant had around a 26% chance of being admitted based on the ratings assigned to their application, they were accepted.

 

The admissions office consulted with the development office about who to admit and prioritized applicants recommended by the staff and those on a list created by the former admissions director.

 

“It is therefore likely that the applicant whom the regent recommended would have been on a list that received priority admission from the waitlist,” the audit said. “Given the low likelihood of this applicant’s admission and the prominent and influential role that regents have within the university, we conclude that the decision to admit this applicant was likely influenced by the regent’s advocacy.”

 

Blum said he never thought the letters “ever had much influence.”

 

But the audit called the incident “particularly problematic,” since UC policy specifically says that regents should not seek to influence admissions decisions beyond sending letters of recommendation through the regular admissions process, which Blum appears to have sidestepped.

 

UC Berkeley spokeswoman Janet Gilmore said in an email the university didn’t have enough information yet to “weigh in on the matter.”

 

https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/09/24/uc-regent-who-helped-unqualified-student-get-into-cal-identified-as-richard-blum-husband-of-sen-dianne-feinstein/

Anonymous ID: bee43f Sept. 24, 2020, 5 p.m. No.10776169   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6252 >>6357

County Official, Conspirators Charged by Attorney General with 134 Counts of Mail-in Ballot Fraud

 

One Gregg County Commissioner and three others have been arrested in connection with a 2018 organized mail-in-ballot fraud effort.

 

Commissioner Shannon Brown and citizens Marlena Jackson, Charlie Burns, and DeWayne Ward, the indictment documents say, conspired to harvest votes during the 2018 Democratic primary by urging voters who did not qualify for mail-in-ballots to fraudulently claim disability.

 

Furthermore, the defendants selected Brown on voters’ ballots without their permission and mailed in their ballots illegally.

 

In all, 134 felony charges were filed against the quartet and the penalties associated therein range from six months in jail to 99 years in prison.

 

Texas law currently stipulates that only those who have a verifiable sickness or disability, are 65-years of age or older, or are away from their county on Election Day may cast a ballot by mail.

 

Democrats wish to expand this option to the entire electorate due to coronavirus concerns, but have been unsuccessful thus far. Republicans, Attorney General Ken Paxton chief among them, have objected over concerns of its susceptibility to fraud.

 

Paxton said of the indictments, “It is an unfortunate reality that elections can be stolen outright by mail ballot fraud. Election fraud, particularly an organized mail ballot fraud scheme orchestrated by political operatives, is an affront to democracy and results in voter disenfranchisement and corruption at the highest level.”

 

“Mail ballots are vulnerable to diversion, coercion, and influence by organized vote harvesting schemes. This case demonstrates my commitment to ensuring Texas has the most secure elections in the country, and I thank the Gregg County Sheriff and District Attorney for their continued partnership. Those who try to manipulate the outcome of elections in Texas must be held accountable,” he concluded.

 

The issue’s become a hot topic as the election nears. As of July, 457 instances of fraud have been prosecuted by Paxton’s office since 2004.

 

Allegations of voter fraud can be filed with the secretary of state, and then after a very minor degree of evaluation, they are forwarded to the attorney general’s office for further investigation.

 

Mail-in-ballot fraud exists, but to date has not proven rampant enough to swing a presidential election. However, down-ballot races are much more susceptible as raw vote margins thin.

 

Brown won his Democratic primary race by five votes in 2018. At least 30 different voters were victims of the scheme.

 

He faces 23 felony counts while Jackson faces 97, Burns faces eight, and Ward six.

 

The Gregg County Sheriff’s Department assisted in the investigation.

 

https://thetexan.news/gregg-county-commissioner-and-conspirators-charged-with-134-counts-of-mail-in-ballot-fraud-ken-paxton/