>>5140307 aND furthermore this one about the joint venture pay to play. ..
https://haitipolicy.org/2004/12/rep-maxine-waters-s-kin-cash-in
He got his entry in 1993, when the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors entertained bids on a contract to run county-owned Chester Washington Golf Course in South Los Angeles.
One of the bidders, Alton Duhon, a black golf professional, said he knew in his gut he was wasting his time as soon as he saw Williams sitting with another group on the day they were to be interviewed by a ratings panel. Duhon said he was with his partners, two other African American golf course professionals, while Williams was with a white-owned major company, American Golf.
“I knew that meant they weren’t going to go with us,” Duhon said. “I knew he was bigger than I was. He’s Mrs. Waters’ husband. He’s a football player. And his wife’s got all the action.”
Indeed, with Williams and Waters’ son, Edward, as minority partners, American Golf got the panel’s nod and the board’s approval for the 20-year lease to run Chester Washington, which has a rich history as a training ground for top-flight African American golfers.
County Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke threw her support behind the deal in 1993, just months after Rep. Waters had tossed Burke’s campaign a lifeline ? endorsing her in the waning days of a tight race. Because the golf course was in her district, Burke became the key decision-maker and the focal point for a lobbying effort on behalf of Duhon’s group, which had come in second with the ratings panel.
Burke declined to be interviewed. Her chief of staff, John Hill, said, “She doesn’t believe there was any linkage” between her endorsement by Rep. Waters and her backing of a group that included Waters’ husband and son.
Hill said Burke’s usual practice is to go along with the review panels unless there is good reason not to. He added that, a decade ago, affirmative action would have been a consideration and “this group came in with minority contractors as subcontractors.”