Who is the man that would risk his neck
for his brother man?
-Isaac Hayes
Government regulations assure that businesses play by the
rules.
I’m wondering what rules some Kentucky businesses are playing by.
The state’s “Unbridled Spirit” slogan is starting to look
like “anything goes.”
A few weeks ago, Mark Hebert at WHAS TV, broke a story
about nursing home “watchdog” Moses Young. Until recently, Young had been the number two
nursing home regulator for the state of Kentucky. He lives in a condominium owned by a nursing
home owner that he regulated!
Young has been living, allegedly rent free; in a $175,000
condo owned by Ralph Stacey Jr. Stacey owns the Garrard
Convalescent Center
in Covington.
Of the millions of landlords in the world, Young found one
who needed his blessing to stay in business.
It’s like a DEA agent renting from a drug dealer.
Young claims he paid Stacey $1300 a month in cash. He showed Hebert “receipts” for the cash
payments. If Young is telling the
truth, Stacey has a problem. The IRS will
want to know if Stacey has been reporting the cash on his income taxes.
Young called Stacey 427 times on a cell phone supplied by
the taxpayers of Kentucky.
I’d love to know what they were talking about.
After the nursing home story saga, an even bigger story
broke.
On August 9, The Louisville Courier Journal and Corbin Times
Tribune separately reported about an affidavit submitted to federal court by an
FBI agent. It alleged that a rich and powerful contractor gave cash payments to
a state transportation employee to get inside information about bids. .
If the allegations are true, what kind of signals are the
regulators sending to the people they regulate? How could businessmen think they could get
away with something so egregious?
Growing up in an environment where illegal activity took
place, I got to watch the process of corruption.
It usually started at small levels. Business people would buy lunch for a public
official or get them tickets to a sporting event. It then escalated to dinner and a free trip
to Florida.
Buying condos and handing cash to state employees are completely
over the line. Businessmen don’t do
something that bold unless they don’t think it’s possible to get caught.
There is a good reason why businesspeople normally don’t
bribe public officials. They are afraid
of going to jail
If you are handing out bundles of cash, the fear of jail
is not on your radar.
People must believe that Kentucky is “open for business” in a variety
of different ways.
Take the case of the nursing home owner. There is no question that he owned the condo
Young lived in. There is no question
that Young made 427 calls to Stacey on a state cell phone.
The question is whether Young paid rent on the condo and
if Stacey was tipped off before his nursing home was inspected. Those are
questions that the Kentucky
Attorney General and FBI need to find answers to.
The fact that the nursing home owner and Young, never
thought their arrangement was questionable makes me wonder why kind of world
they are living in.
427 calls seem outlandish. I can’t imagine that Young did anything all
day, other than talk to Stacey.
Young got the condo in 2005. He was terminated in 2008. People that worked with Young should have seen
something or said something. No one in
that department was going to risk their neck for fellow man.
When the transportation allegation broke, one charge made
little sense. It alleged that the
contractor was personally giving the government employee cash packages.
The book, The Godfather, (and also the movie Godfather II)
goes into great detail about how a Mafia king has “buffers” between themselves and
people they were trying to bribe. The
Godfather did not personally hand out cash; it was done at his behest.
If the allegation is true and the multi millionaire was
giving out cash directly, you have to wonder how long the practice had been
going on and how comfortable he was with it.
Businesses want a line between no regulation and too much
regulation. Too much regulation
strangles industry. No regulation means
government like a banana republic. In a no regulation environment, your connections
mean everything. Initiative and talent
mean nothing.
I wonder about the degree of regulation if the people who
protecting us are allegedly being furnished with nice condominiums and cash.
If the stories turn out to be true, Kentucky is operating in an unbridled
business climate.
Don McNay
is the author of the Unbridled World of
Ernie Fletcher & Son of a Son of
a Gambler. You can write to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read his award winning column at www.donmcnay.com
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