How it looks
from here
by DAVID TILSEN
The establishment
in Minneapolis didn’t really like Dean on the City Council.
He was too popular: He was effective in supporting both the homeless
and the city health department, as well as opposing giveaways to
dues-paying members. The last straw may have been his opposition
to the Twins’ stadium, or it may have been something else.
Anyway, the city was redistricted to put Dean’s house out
of his ward. At the same time, the only other Green Party-endorsed
council member was forced to run against the only other African
American on the Council.
Dean had to move to run in his ward. He also had to run against
Robert Lilligren, another popular Southsider, Native American, good
looking. They figured they had taken care of him. He didn’t
have money to move and run a campaign. But that darn Zimmermann.
He did it—moved and ran a successful campaign. What’s
an establishment to do?
The FBI had a developer named Carlson on a very short leash. Seems
this guy had been caught in some financial shenanigans. They put
a wire on him, gave him his script, loaded his pockets with money,
and sent him over to Dean to get him to take some. They did it four
times! Dean was stubborn, he just wouldn’t say the right things
on tape. But with Carlson saying the right things, and Dean’s
agreeableness, they did get what they hoped would be enough. Dean
was in a tight race and it was hard to raise money in one of the
poorest ward in the city. He also had a good-sized debt from the
lawsuit he had filed about the redistricting. Remember the redistricting?
Oh, by the way, even with this charge hanging over his head, Dean
only lost his re-election by 50 votes.
Council members take money all the time. They have to. Lisa Goodman,
who was running unopposed, raised over $100,000. Well, Dean took
the money. He tried to give it to the proper people but the lawyer
wouldn’t take it. The leftover lawsuit organization wouldn’t
take it. So he put it in his own checking account. He later wrote
a credit card check for it, but again, no one would take it. The
money got spent. No one is saying that was a crime, but it certainly
did not look good to the jury.
The crime was taking the money and agreeing to do political favors
for it. But wait, Dean says he didn’t agree to do anything
for the money. A careful listening to the tapes bears out this claim.
Nowhere does he say that he will do anything for the money.
The prosecution says that they didn’t need to prove that
he agreed to do anything. He says that Dean had a “predisposition”
to take the money. Is that a crime? Having a predisposition to take
money? I have a predisposition to flirt with women, but it has not
yet gotten me divorced. Don’t entrap me, please.
So they got him. And now they want to humble him by calling him
a bungler or “over his head.” Well, Dean is certainly
folksy. He does trust people who don’t deserve it, and he
did believe that it was possible to use elected office to make things
better for people. But bungling? Over his head? I don’t think
so.
This guy is smart. I have seen him take apart a 70-year-old counterweight
mechanism inside my wall, figure it out and get it working. In North
Dakota he moved a grain elevator that no one thought could be moved.
He just refused to play the political backstabbing and mud wallowing
games that are the norm at City Hall. Does this make him naïve
and bungling? Not to me.
What lessons should we learn from this? I would suggest a couple:
If you are an anti-establishment leader, don’t let anyone
talk you into keeping donations secret. Yell them from the rooftop.
If someone offers to contribute, recognize them from the stage,
tell everyone. The fact that the FBI told Carlson to tell Dean to
keep this donation a secret and that he did so was one of the most
damaging facts at the trial. Don’t EVER, EVER, EVER talk to
the FBI without witnesses, or preferably a lawyer. Dean, Brian Herron
and Joe Biernat were all hung by statements that the FBI attributed
to them. Remember, these guys are well-trained interviewers, and
you are their prey. I hope this doesn’t dissuade good people
from serving our city in elected office, but you have to wonder:
Why would anyone in their right mind put themselves through
this?
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