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Did County Employees Violate Ethics Rules? Report remains secret: taxpayers may never know

Updated 12:00 PM PDT, Tue, Jan 6, 2009

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A county-run program that provides wheelchairs and other medical devices for handicapped children was the subject of an investigation, but details of alleged wrong-doing by program employees may never be known by the public. The investigation of California Children's Services started in 2007, after a complaint from an unidentified whistleblower.

Did County Employees Violate Ethics Rules?

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Allegations are being made that employees of California Children Services may have funneled business to medical equipment companies in return for gift...

Records obtained by NBCSanDiego.com reveal that some disciplinary action was taken against one or more county employees. The documents are notes of staff meetings, in which employees and supervisors discussed allegations that therapists at the Children's Services program received gifts from certain vendors, an apparent violation of the county's ethics policies.

The minutes refer to lottery tickets and other gifts given to county therapists by vendors. Those therapists work closely with families, who have a choice of vendors from whom they can buy wheelchairs and other devices. The staff notes refer to one meeting in which employees and supervisors discussed a baseball game, with the implication that a vendor or vendors had given one or more staffers free tickets or other game-related gifts or freebies.

The minutes read:

"Q. What happened to the baseball game?

A. In short, we were told to cease and desist. The investigators decided that it would look bad."

Full details about the alleged gifts, and the possible conflict of interest posed by those gifts, are spelled out in an investigative report compiled by the county. But the county's top attorney and the head of the county's Health and Human Services Agency, have refused to make that report public.

County attorney John Sansone told NBCSanDiego.com and its media partner, voiceofsandiego.org, that the report is protected by "attorney-client privilege" because it was overseen by county lawyers, and that it cannot be seen by taxpayers, despite the details it contains about the publicly-funded program.

Comments (3)

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  • andonandon Tuesday, Jan 6 at 9:18 AM FLAG COMMENT "the report is protected by "attorney-client privilege" because it was overseen by county lawyers" Hey! We are the clients! Who do you think pays the salaries of the county lawyers? This is bs. It is all one huge corrupt system that believes "it" is more important than the people it was suppose to serve. Stop paying all taxes. Then they figure it out.
  • Anonymous Monday, Jan 5 at 6:17 PM FLAG COMMENT More and more I see evidence of the attitude "it's only illegal if you get caught". The sad part is that I've come to expect this type of behavior from public servants.
  • Meatwad Monday, Jan 5 at 4:38 PM FLAG COMMENT I am sick and tired of public employees using privacy laws to hide their crimes from We The People that hired them. ALL public employees SHOULD be under constant camera/audio survielance accessable to anyone online. If anyone of them hem and haw at this idea, boot them OUT! These same public employees are paying to setup cameras to watch YOU, why not turn the table on THEM this time around.

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