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The Debate You Didn't See

A presidential hopeful talks about milk

The Debate You Didn't See

Filed under: News

Mr. Griff, a middle-age man with loose cornrows and baggy brown pants, sits in a green plastic chair and orders students not to cut through the parking lot at the University of Miami campus. He's been there since 8:00 a.m. It's now 6:30 p.m.

"You are going to ask them about Iraq? Or immigration?" he asks Riptide, referring to the candidates assembled for Sunday's Democratic forum, to be broadcast live on Univision. He heaves a hearty sigh and shakes his head. "I'd ask them what are they going to do about gas prices? You know how much a gallon of milk costs now? Five dollars."

In the media room, a group of about 100 journalists watches the debate via closed-circuit monitors. The screens go black at 6:56, prompting panic among the reporters.

"Mal, mal, mal," grumbles a balding middle-age man in a suit.

"This is the most ridiculous thing I have ever covered!" shouts a blond-bobbed Associated Press reporter.

The video returns. The audio doesn't. As a solution, at 7:07, a microphone is set near a bank of video feeds while the forum steams ahead, one room away from this media purgatory. Sound crackles with the quality of a ham radio relay from Bangkok. A broadcast journalist slips out of four-inch heels to squat close enough to hear.

A woman begins translating over Univision forum moderator Jorge Ramos, giving him a wavering, librarianlike voice. She calls Gov. Bill Richardson a senator a few times, addresses Sen. Hillary Clinton as Clinner, and says Finland instead of finally.

By 7:30 the sound is restored. As Mr. Griff predicted, moderators ask about Iraq and immigration. They ask about Cuba and Latin America. The press room snigger of the night goes to Sen. John Edwards for comparing border security to a video rental store: "We can figure out when somebody's walking into a Blockbuster. It seems to me we can figure out when somebody's coming into the United States of America."

After the debate, in "Spin Alley" — a postforum press trough set aside for reporters to speak with candidates and their backers — Senators Edwards, Clinton, and Barack Obama are no-shows. Rep. Dennis Kucinich agrees to talk about the price of milk. He says his health care plan requires that people set aside 2.5 percent of the money they make for coverage: "And suddenly you have more money for clothes. You have more money for the kids. You have more money to pay for gas. Thank you for asking that question. You're the only one in this place who has."

Don't thank us, congressman. Thank Mr. Griff. Janine Zeitlin


The Young One

Filed under: Culture

It's fall, and you know what that means: another new courtroom reality show to follow in the footsteps of the timeless classic The People's Court. This week Miami's very own Judge David Young began presiding from the bench on daytime television, with a national audience. (His show, Judge David Young, will be aired locally Mondays at 1:00 p.m. on CBS affiliate WFOR.)

When he was a local judge, Young heard several high-profile cases, including the one in which he sentenced two America West pilots on charges of drunk flying. Young also once sentenced an 81-year-old woman to prison for 31 years — the same length of time she had been on the lam from a murder charge.

Watching Young's show should be entertaining. "Viewers will learn something about life from watching my show," he tells Riptide via e-mail, "through humor, through singing show tunes, and whatever mechanism I use to teach." Young is no stuffy robed dude: He collects penguins (more than 1000), is a member of Weight Watchers (he attends weekly meetings), and loves Batman (hence the penguins). He's also one of the few openly gay men on the bench: He and his partner, Miami Judge Scott Bernstein, have been together for 12 years.

Young says he has no intention of relocating for the show. "I am a native Miamian," he says. "I have no plans to move elsewhere. Miami's for me." Tamara Lush


Duo's Dalliance Draws Disapproval

Benigna Marko's passionate correspondence with Abel Lera has gotten the pair into more trouble ("Dade Disclosure," August 23). To recap: Marko is an assistant director for Miami-Dade's planning and zoning department, earning an annual $141,704. In 2004 Marko was on a three-person panel that hired Lera as the department's $80,000-per-year graphics and drafting manager. Earlier this year the hiring was the subject of an ethics investigation. Lera and Marko were alleged to be having an extramartial affair; both are married to other people.

According to the ethics commission's August 30 report, Lera said he has been good friends with Marko for five years, but he did not confirm if they had a romantic relationship. He admitted that Marko notified him about the manager position, that she helped him prepare his resumé, and that he knew beforehand she would be on the interview panel.

Marko was advised by her attorney, Ray Taseff, not to answer questions because she is the target of a separate ongoing criminal investigation. "Marko did everything within her power to orchestrate the hiring of her paramour, Lera," says the report, calling her actions "highly inappropriate." Taseff declined to comment.

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  • observer 09/21/2007 5:05:00 AM

    Is there a statue of limitation to incompetence?. The Ethics Commission you get him for that. It is not ethical that someone without expertise and lack of at least adequate knowledge be running the section. It is a disgrace. But for a glorified computer technician, it's good enough. It's a joke to see Mr. Lera in action, he looks so flustered, confused, insecure but yet self-sufficient.

  • fed up 09/18/2007 5:07:00 AM

    What does Lera's attorney mean when she says Lera was "only a witness?" He was in the love tryst. Hasn't she ever heard "that it takes two to tango"? And how can he only be a witness when traded his paramour skills for a sweet $80k/yr. job?

  • Craig 09/17/2007 6:24:00 PM

    There is no statute of limitations. The ethics commission just made that up. That's why the reporter wrote, "The statute of limitations apparently has expired." I think the reporter used the word "apparently" because he didn't believe it either. I know a lot of ethics ordinance violators are breathing a big sigh of relief knowing the ethics commission has now created an artificial time limit for violations. Shame.

  • knew it 09/16/2007 11:26:00 PM

    yeah, saw this coming. what a joke. why do people even bother with government? it should be outsourced to private industry and be done with it. this is just ridiculous. how can two people stay in their positions that are paid by taxpayers who clearly don't want them there? i guess the saying is true, "you have to kill someone to be fired from a government job." pluuuu-eze.

  • taxpayer 09/15/2007 6:23:00 PM

    Please post where the statute of limitations for ethics violations is written. Thank you.

  • name withheld by request 09/15/2007 6:20:00 PM

    I have read and re-read the ethics ordinance 100 times. I am unable to find a "statute of limitations." Where can I find this time limit for violations? Or is this yet another cop out by our Ethics Commission which has dissappointed us once again. www.co.miami-dade.fl.us/ethics/library/Ethics-Brochure-2005.pdf

  • Concerned in Miami 09/14/2007 7:49:00 AM

    It is really unbelievable. This must be some kind of a joke. If this article is real then the Ethics Commission should be looked into and their by-laws revised or we, the public, will loose the little faith and respect we have in our leaders.

  • Statute 09/14/2007 7:13:00 AM

    You've got to be kidding. When was there a statute of limitation on corruption, misuse of your office, theft, cheating, and the list goes on and on. WTF is the Ethics Commission thinking? If there ever was a case for eliminating this waste of taxpayer dollars, here it is.

 
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