Chuck Turner Is Out

Published December 1, 2010

For the first time in 100 years, Boston city councilors have expelled one of their own colleagues:

The Boston City Council has expelled Councilor Chuck Turner following his conviction on federal corruption charges. The council voted 11-1 on Wednesday to remove the 70-year-old Turner from office.

Chuck Turner (WBUR)

Chuck Turner (WBUR)

Councilor Charles Yancey, a Turner supporter, was the only member to vote against expulsion, after stamping his feet on procedural grounds and trying to delay or postpone the hearing.

Councilor and Turner protégé Felix Arroyo and Councilor Ayanna Pressley delivered emotional speeches before saying they would vote “yes,” with heavy hearts.

WBUR’s David Boeri, reporting from council chambers, said Turner supporters booed and called out “Traitor!” to Arroyo and Pressley.

From the Globe:

Turner represented the heart of Boston’s African-American community and has accused the FBI and federal prosecutors of targeting him because he is black.

“The reality is that the conviction that is being used as the reason for my removal … was a setup,” he told fellow councilors in a speech before the vote. “That conviction was rotten.”

After the vote, he called the council’s decision “a grievous error.”

Turner has to get out of his office by Friday.

Decision Time For The City Council

Published December 1, 2010

Update 3: The City Council voted 11-1 to expel Turner.

Update 2: You can stream the hearing live on the City Council website (that is, if you have a way of viewing the old-school RealPlayer format.)

Update: Universal Hub is live-tweeting Turner’s expulsion hearing @universalhub.

City Councilor Chuck Turner, with WBUR’s David Boeri at left, leaves the Moakley federal courthouse Oct. 29th after being found guilty on all counts in a corruption trial. (Dominick Reuter for WBUR)

City Councilor Chuck Turner, with WBUR’s David Boeri at left, leaves the Moakley federal courthouse Oct. 29th after being found guilty on all counts in a corruption trial. (Dominick Reuter for WBUR)

Convicted Councilor Chuck Turner faces the music at 3 o’clock, when the Boston City Council votes to let him stay or let him go.

Council President Michael Ross and five other councilors have said publicly they will vote to oust Turner, and others have said privately they will do the same. It will take eight votes to kick him off the council. And it would be the first time the council has ever kicked off one of its own members. (Turner has recused himself from today’s vote.)

He remains defiant, telling WBUR’s Bob Oakes on Wednesday morning it would be a “moral mistake” to remove him before he is sentenced. If he gets probation instead of jail time, Turner reasons, he should be able to serve out his term.

A testy exchange came in the middle of the interview, when Bob pushed back hard (listen at the 2:30 mark):

The councilors know that there was no basis in my work with them for (former) U.S. Attorney (Michael) Sullivan initiating a sting operation.

Well hang on, hang on, hang on for a second Councilor Turner, because we’re not going to re-litigate the whole case this morning. Let me ask you this…

Wait a minute, wait a minute, see, the issue I’m raising is a very important one, and that is that if I’d pleaded entrapment I think I would not have been convicted….

But you didn’t do that, you didn’t do that, and you were convicted.

…I didn’t plead entrapment…

…But you didn’t do that, and you were convicted.

Turner has an army of supporters, including many constituents in his own district (who re-elected him last month despite a federal indictment). Left-wingers say his conviction, of taking a relatively small bribe — $1,000 — is a political attack on the civil rights movement.

But commenters around the Web aren’t so kind. Ozman writes on wbur.org:

You have been found guilty on every count. time to be a man and move on with your life. Serve your time in jail. And don’t take tax payers money as a retirement benefit, you don’t deserve that.

Turner has served his district, which includes Roxbury and parts of the Fenway, South End, Dorchester, for more than 10 years. If sent to prison, he says, he will do prison organizing.

What do you think? Is it time for Turner to “be a man and move on” with his political life? In the comments, specify whether you live in Turner’s district.

Pay Off Your Pahking Ticket With A Toy For Tots

Published December 1, 2010

Update: The BPD has extended the deadline for “Toys for Tots” donations to Dec. 17.

(Sean Future/Flickr)

(Sean Future/Flickr)

If you get a parking ticket in Boston today, tomorrow or Friday, you can be forgiven by donating a toy to a needy kid.

The toy value must be equal to or greater than the cost of the citation — this Barbie® I Can Be…™ News Anchor Doll won’t cut it if you forget to feed the meter, but the FurReal GoGo My Walkin’ Pup should cover it.

Sorry, but you won’t be forgiven for double parking or for parking in a handicap spot, in front of a fire hydrant, in the middle of a crosswalk, in front of a hydrant, in a no stopping/standing zone.

From the city’s parking website:

To participate in Toys for Tickets, drivers have from Monday, December 6th through Friday, December 10th to turn in the toys with a receipt from purchase, to either the Parking Clerk in Room 224 on the second floor of City Hall or the BTD Tow Lot at 200 Frontage Road.

The mayor’s office says the program yielded $3,000 worth of toys last year.

In other holiday parking news, metered parking is free on Saturdays until Dec. 26 to encourage shopping. A two-hour limit will still be enforced.

With Neighbors Like These…

Published December 1, 2010

One more follow-up to my story about tax-free online shopping. As I mentioned, hardly anyone in Massachusetts pays the use tax due on items purchased out of state.

(Say you drive to New Hampshire to buy a mattress, or you purchase a laptop from Amazon.com. You won’t pay sales tax, but you are obligated to pay a use tax to Massachusetts while filing your year-end tax returns.)

I asked Bob Bliss, the Department of Revenue spokesman: Are Massachusetts taxpayers ever audited and found to owe use taxes?

“Basically, no,” he said. There was this one time, though, when a man purchased a sunroom from New Hampshire and trucked it back home to Massachusetts. Someone tattled on the man, and he was surprised to find a very large tax bill from the commonwealth.

“I cannot tell you with a straight face that that’s an everyday occurrence,” he said.

What Are Julian Assange’s Boston Connections?

Published December 1, 2010

Julian Assange in October (AP)

Assange in October (AP)

Time interviews Julian Assange, the shadowy founder of WikiLeaks:

And the source or sources of all the diplomatic cables? Stengel asked Assange if U.S. Army PFC Bradley Manning, now detained in Quantico, Va., was the sole source of the megaleak. “We’re a source-protection organization,” Assange said, “so the last thing we would do is discuss possible sources. However, we do know that … the FBI, State Department and U.S. Army CID [Criminal Investigation Command] has been going around Boston visiting a number of people there.”

On Nov. 3, FBI agents are said to have detained and interrogated David House at Chicago’s O’Hare airport. House is a Cambridge man who helped set up a legal defense fund for Manning, the alleged WikiLeaker himself. House has visited Manning multiple times while in detention.

House didn’t return phone calls and e-mails from The Associated Press, and the FBI said it can’t confirm whether House was interviewed.

Are there other Boston connections?

Weds. Morning: State Street Layoffs, Defiant Chuck Turner

Published December 1, 2010

What’s news on cloudy, soon-to-be-rainy Wednesday in Boston:

State Street Corp. is laying off 400 people in Mass. And 1,400 in total. (Globe)

Chuck Turner says it would be a moral mistake to expel him from the city council. The convicted councilor will learn of his fate at today’s meeting. (WBUR)

Politicians implicated in the damning Probation Department report got campaign cash from the lawyer who authored the report. Paul Ware and his firm, Goodwin Procter, contributed more than $200,000 to Beacon Hill politicians. (Herald)

Justice Roderick Ireland got death threats after the 2003 gay marriage ruling. He faces confirmation hearings today for chief justice of the state’s Supreme Judicial Court. (Globe)

Ian Bowles, the Patrick administration’s environment chief, is leaving. He pushed for the approval of Cape Wind during his tenure. (AP)

After a city tow truck crashed into his building, a Roxbury landlord got a ticket. “Accidents happen,” the city told him. (Globe)

Police seized nearly 200 pounds of cocaine in Revere last night. Great headline. (Universal Hub)

Bush Tops Jon Stewart On Black Friday Weekend

Published November 30, 2010

As I mentioned in my story about tax-free holiday shopping, Amazon.com does not provide sales figures. The company did agree to provide a localized list of bestsellers over the four-day shopping period (beginning “Black Friday” and ending “Cyber Monday”).

You might be surprised by which newly published author comes in at No. 1.

George W. Bush's memoir was the best-selling book on Amazon.com in Massachusetts on Black Friday weekend.Here’s how Massachusetts shoppers spent their (tax-free) dollars on Amazon.com Nov 26-29:

  1. “Decision Points” (Bush, George W.)
  2. “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth” (Kinney, Jeff)
  3. “Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption” (Hillenbrand, Laura)
  4. “Life” (Richards, Keith)
  5. “The Investment Answer” (Daniel C. Goldie, Gordon S. Murray)
  6. “Autobiography of Mark Twain, Vol. 1″ (Mark Twain)
  7. “The Book of Awakening: Having the Life You Want by Being Present to the Life You Have” (Nepo, Mark)
  8. “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Presents Earth (The Book): A Visitor’s Guide to the Human Race” (Stewart, Jon)
  9. “Barefoot Contessa How Easy Is That?: Fabulous Recipes & Easy Tips” (Garten, Ina)
  10. “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” (Larsson, Stieg)

The Scott Brown effect?

Tax-Free Online Shopping Is A Disadvantage For Mass. Retailers

Published November 30, 2010

In this November 2009 file photo, Marcus Marintez pulls items for shipment inside the 800,000 sq. ft. Amazon.com warehouse in Goodyear, Ariz. (Ross D. Franklin/AP)

In this November 2009 file photo, Marcus Marintez pulls items for shipment inside the 800,000 sq. ft. Amazon.com warehouse in Goodyear, Ariz. (Ross D. Franklin/AP)

By all accounts, this is good news for the Massachusetts economy:

Shopping centers across the region saw a jump in sales over the holiday weekend and they expect a robust rest of the season — as long as retailers keep rolling out the deals.

The Globe says five malls “reported a year-over-year increase in sales over the three-day weekend.” Jon Hurst, president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts, estimated a 2 percent increase in sales over the Black Friday weekend.

Even so, Massachusetts retailers lost out on millions of dollars of sales — but it’s difficult to know exactly how much. Why?

“It’s a combination of things. It’s Internet sales. People still buy out of catalogs. … And it’s sales lost to New Hampshire,” says Bob Bliss, a spokesman for the Mass. Department of Revenue.

Those three things have a competitive advantage in common — they don’t charge sales tax.

I suspect mail-order sales are no longer a big threat to Massachusetts retailers; the New Hampshire problem is an old one, but the fact that you have to put on pants and drive there is a deterrent to would-be tax evaders. An Internet retailer such as Amazon.com is hard to beat, though.

I can go to my local Best Buy and purchase a 32″ Samsung LCD TV, on special, for $539.99 + $33.75 tax. Or I can buy the same television at Amazon.com for $537 + 0 tax (and free shipping).

Amazon.com does not have to collect Massachusetts sales tax because it does not have a physical presence in Massachusetts. Slate’s Farhad Manjoo wrote a terrific explainer on how Amazon.com (legally) gets away with this. (I asked Amazon.com for Massachusetts sales figures, but they don’t provide them, so I can’t even make an estimate of lost revenue.)

Now, you’re supposed to report your Internet purchases every year on your tax returns — it’s called a use tax — but who does that?

“The last number I saw was probably 3 or 4 million in (use) taxes that were paid,” Bilss said. Wow, I said, that sounds surprisingly high. “It’s quite minimal,” he said — seeing as total sales tax revenue in Mass. is something like $4.5 billion.

This drives state lawmakers and local businesseses and Jon Hurst crazy.

[pullquote author=”Jon Hurst, Retailers Association of Massaschusetts”]”Amazon.com has a 6-and-a-quarter percent head-start over our own employers.”[/pullquote]

“Government shouldn’t pick winners and losers in the marketplace,” Hurst says. “Amazon.com has a 6-and-a-quarter percent head-start over our own employers.”

Earlier this year, outgoing U.S. Rep. Bill Delahunt, a Democrat who represents Massachusetts’ 10th District, introduced the “Main Street Fairness Act,” which would simplify tax collection for states that choose to participate. It would authorize an interstate compact that forces online retailers to collect taxes.

Such a compact already exists, actually, but it is nothing without Congressional approval. In 2009, Gov. Deval Patrick pushed the Legislature to join the compact and pressure Congress. A 2009 analysis by the University of Teneesee at Knoxville estimated that could generate $545 million for Mass.

The debate over a so-called Internet sales tax has gone on for years. Until it’s settled, enjoy the tax-free holiday every day.

____

Full disclosure: WBUR participates in the Amazon Affiliates program.

Tuesday Morning: Feds Target Probation, Turner Fights On

Published November 30, 2010

What’s news on a cold Tuesday morning in Boston:

Globe: A federal grand jury is targeting the Probation Department. “Federal prosecutors are asking a US grand jury to weigh charges, including fraud, extortion, and conspiracy, in the widening patronage scandal.” (Globe)

Convicted Councilor Chuck Turner has an army of support as he faces expulsion. Turner was convicted of extortion, and there appears to be enough votes on the city council to remove him Wednesday. Left-wing groups say the FBI is making a political attack on the civil rights movement. (Herald)

A man was killed in Dorchester yesterday. This is at least the 70th homicide in Boston this year. The city’s 10-year high was 75, in 2005. (BPD)

Tufts University has a new president. Anthony Monaco is a geneticist and a professor at Oxford. (Tufts Daily)

Michael Curry declared victory in the NAACP presidential election. He is a 42-year-old advocate for community health centers. This was the group’s first contested election in more than 10 years. (Globe)

Photo Of The Day: Starcatcher

Published November 29, 2010

Photographer Dennis H Miller submits a lot of pretty pictures to the WBUR Flickr group, but this one is just wow!

Connected (Dennis H Miller/Flickr)

Connected (Dennis H Miller/Flickr)

It’s a long exposure (almost three hours) in Sturbridge, southwest of Worcester, where the Pike meets Route 84.

I concur with one of the commenters, Dan Squires, on the Flickr page (who also suggested the title for this post): “I really like how you can see the different colors of the stars.”

Share your photographs if you want to see one featured here.