Thursday, October 30, 2003

10302003 - News Article - Pastrick says Post-Tribune story 'immoral'



Pastrick says Post-Tribune story 'immoral' 
Post-Tribune (IN)
October 30, 2003
East Chicago Mayor Robert Pastrick angrily denied knowledge of a drug kingpin working on behalf of his administration. 

Pastrick responded Wednesday to a Post-Tribune investigation, which detailed how one contractor involved in illegal city work in 1999 said he took orders from East Chicago resident Ronald Markowski. 

In a 1983 federal indictment, Markowski was identified as the head of an international cocaine trafficking operation. 

"I don't know this person," Pastrick said after an unrelated news conference. "I have never had any dealings with this person." 

But Dave Johnson, owner of Munster-based Dave's Tree Service, said in a Sunday story that Markowski was his City Hall contact, delivering orders and approving payment for work done in 1999. 

City records show no record of Markowski ever having been employed by the city. 

But records show no contracts were signed for more than $20 million in city work done in 1999, including paving, tree removal and electrical work on private property. 

Federal prosecutors, who have so far indicted six city officials for coordinating that work, say the work was done to encourage votes for Pastrick . 

Pastrick declined to return calls seeking comment last week, but after reading of the Markowski ties, Pastrick said he was "distraught" by the story and said the Post-Tribune was "immoral" for writing it. 

Pastrick said he then talked with "two or three departments (heads) to find out if they had any communication with this person, whomever he is, and they denied it. 

"I was ready to do some drastic things. I talked to my attorneys and I cooled down." 

Markowski, reached at his East Chicago home last week, would neither confirm nor deny acting on behalf of the city, and instead berated both Johnson and officials at City Hall. 

But state and city records show Johnson was getting orders from somewhere to remove dozens of city trees. 

State audits have determined Dave's Tree Service did at least $130,000 in city-sanctioned work on private property. 

Johnson said it was Markowski who asked him, in early 1999, if his company would be interested in "some city work." 

Markowski, he said, got a daily list from someone at City Hall, listing which trees the city would pay to have removed. 

Johnson gave Markowski his prices, he said, and Markowski would "say 'yea' or 'nay.'" 

Johnson said Markowski served as his conduit to City Hall and also introduced him to Calumet Concrete owner Bob Velligan, whose company paved millions of dollars in sidewalks and driveways across the city. 

Johnson said he was told to submit invoices to Velligan, who, he said, would include a substantial markup before submitting the bills to the city. 

Johnson said their arrangement resulted in only one payment, though, leading him to sue Velligan for the hundreds of thousands he said he was due. 

After a city audit determined Dave's Tree Service was due money, Johnson said, Velligan settled the lawsuit. 

But in spite of Johnson's detailed descriptions of the arrangement and the court-record-backed financial settlement, Pastrick said he doesn't know where Dave's Tree Service got its orders to do work. 

And, Pastrick insisted, Markowski was not acting on behalf of his administration. 

"Nobody knows of him," Pastrick said. "They (department heads) don't have any idea that there was a connection." 

Tim Raykovich, special assistant to Pastrick , said the story "knocked our socks off." 

Raykovich said, "I've never heard his (Markowski's) name. I don't think anyone in City Hall knew who this guy was." 

Markowski was one of 41 people indicted in 1983, as part of "Operation Skycaine," a federal investigation into cocaine being smuggled from Colombia into the United States. 

Sentenced to 45 years in prison, he served 10 years and court records related to his early release have been sealed. 

Markowski mingled with the elite of the drug world, including those tied to former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega and famed Medellin cartel leader Pablo Escobar. 

Officials with the U.S. Attorney's office declined to comment on Markowski. 

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

10282003 - News Article - Hot mayoral races stir absentee voters into action - Thousands of ballots requested, cast for Nov. 4 general election - ROBERT CANTRELL



Hot mayoral races stir absentee voters into action
Thousands of ballots requested, cast for Nov. 4 general election
NWI Times
Oct 28, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/state-and-regional/hot-mayoral-races-stir-absentee-voters-into-action/article_d8ac458e-4aa9-5e53-b3e8-8b48353c20cf.html
CROWN POINT -- A wave of last-minute absentee ballots and applications rolled over the Lake County election board staff.

Michelle Fajman, supervisor of elections, and a team of clerks worked after hours processing 500 forms either hand-carried or mailed into the office Monday, the last day applications for such votes would be accepted for the Nov. 4 general election.

Fajman said ballots have been requested in the name of 4,273 voters.

She said nearly half -- 2,089 -- already have voted either in person Monday or by mail. Absentee ballots still can be cast in person here until Nov. 3 and received in the mail and be counted on Election Day.

The most absentee votes have been cast in Hammond, where there is a spirited mayoral contest between Duane Dedelow Jr., the incumbent Republican, and Democratic challenger Thomas McDermott Jr. Voters there have requested 1,094 ballots and have cast 536 to date.

Gary, where Mayor Scott King is running against Republican Charles Smith Jr., has requested 494 applications and cast 214 ballots to date.

Crown Point residents, who must choose between Republican Daniel Klein and Democrat Wayne Isailovich, have requested 413 ballots and cast 253 to date. Merrillville voters have applied for 394 and cast 223.

East Chicago, where Mayor Robert Pastrick is challenged by Republican A. Santos, has requested 343 ballots and cast 114.

Munster residents have applied for 242 and cast 85. Whiting, where Democrat Joseph "Joe" Stahura and Republican Mary Comstock are vying for mayor, requested 191 and cast 75.

Schererville applied for 155 and cast 75. Hobart, where Mayor Linda Buzinec is being challenged by Republican John Guthrie, has applied for 160 ballots and cast 126 to date.

Lake Station, where Mayor Shirley Wadding is being challenged by Republican Edward Peralta, has applied for 216 ballots and cast 68 to date.

New Chicago requested 98 and cast 58. St. John requested 76 and cast 46.

Fajman said the most energetic campaign workers brought in absentee ballot application stacks of 50 and 100. However, only voters can bring in or mail the completed ballots.

The late surge again raises questions whether candidates were again orchestrating absentee ballot campaigns as allegedly happened last spring when Pastrick's election staff solicited more than 1,000 absentee ballots.

Although a recount judge overturned 155 as invalid, the remainder provided the decisive edge in his victory over challenger George Pabey.

Supporters of Schererville Town Judge Deborah Riga put her over the top last spring with hundreds of absentee ballots. However, the recount overturned her victory following evidence 23 absentee votes were invalid.

A Lake County special grand jury, County Prosecutor Bernard Carter and Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter are conducting a wide-ranging investigation into absentee vote fraud in which more than 100 people have been targeted for election law violations. Those targeted include candidates' campaign workers accused of illegally possessing absentee ballots and assisting voters in filling them out.

Cam Savage, a spokesman for Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita, said Monday there have been a number of complaints around the state about absentee ballot violations, "but not as many from Lake County as you might think."

He said anyone who felt pressured to apply for absentee ballots can avoid casting one illegally by voting in person.

None of the attention on this issue has discouraged either Dedelow, McDermott, or Klein from soliciting absentee ballots.

The candidates said it is perfectly legitimate.

Klein said Monday, "We sent them out. We didn't fill them out."

He said his staff has solicited absentee ballots from Crown Point teenagers who are on college campuses. He said about 7 percent of the votes cast for him in the spring primary were by absentee ballot, and he expects to get a similar number in the general election.

Dedelow couldn't be reached Monday for comment. He said in September his staff was following the law.

McDermott said Monday, "I don't think it is going to come down to absentee ballots. I think it will be a clear-cut winner. We had no coordinated absentee ballot campaign. If I ran into somebody who requested it, but we didn't really push it."

More than 4,000 absentee ballots were cast four years ago in the fall.

Sunday, October 26, 2003

10262003 - News Article - Markowski has long criminal past - East Chicago native has drug ties to Manuel Noriega, Medellin cartel



Markowski has long criminal past 
East Chicago native has drug ties to Manuel Noriega, Medellin cartel 
Post-Tribune (IN)
October 26, 2003
Small airplanes packed with cocaine taking off from Colombian jungles and later landing in Northwest Indiana. 

Gunfights along airstrips. 

Low flights skimming the Atlantic Ocean to avoid radar. 

It's the stuff of movies. 

Except, according to federal indictments throughout the 1980s, it was among the real-life experiences of Ron Markowski. 

Markowski is now being tied to the 1999 East Chicago sidewalk scandal which has, so far, resulted in six indictments. 

Markowski had been out of federal prison about three years, records show, when private property began being paved at taxpayer expense, all in anticipation of Mayor Robert Pastrick's upcoming election. 

At least one contractor involved said Markowski was his contact for city work. 

Markowski would neither confirm nor deny his involvement in that scandal. 

But questions about his past brought forth instant anger. 

"I did the crime and I did my time," the 65-year-old angrily replied. 

In 1983, federal officials said Markowski was among those at the head of an international drug ring, through which millions of dollars were funneled and tons of cocaine and marijuana were smuggled into the United States. 

From 1977 through 1983, prosecutors said, Markowski mingled with those later tied to ex-Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega and famed Colombian Medellin drug cartel kingpin Pablo Escobar. 

Markowski was one of 41 people indicted in 1983, part of an investigation federal officials dubbed "Operation Skycaine." 

They said Markowski, an accomplished pilot, flew and directed flights from Colombia through the Bahamas, into Florida and, ultimately, landing at Northwest Indiana airports with thousands of kilograms of cocaine and marijuana. 

Prosecutors estimate he was personally responsible for flying at least 49,000 pounds of marijuana and two tons of cocaine into the United States, for which he was paid around $1 million. 

Convicted of nine felonies, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison, without parole. 

It surprised some people -- including federal officials -- when a Post-Tribune investigation linked him to the East Chicago sidewalk scandal. 

Some thought he was still in prison. 

Others thought he was dead. 

But the Post-Tribune recently found him living in the same neighborhood where he grew up. 

Though Markowski wasn't eager to talk about his high-profile past, court records and newspaper reports chronicle his rise and fall and give some indications as to how he was back in East Chicago just 10 years into his 45-year sentence. 

The operation 
It was 1977 when Markowski began making runs for drugs in small Piper and Cessna planes, federal prosecutors said. 

Over the next five years, they said, he flew and directed flights in and out of airports in Lansing, Gary, Valparaiso and LaPorte, bound for Colombia. 

Among those Markowski introduced to the trade, records show, were Andrew James, then 25, of Dyer; James Millsap and Jack Griechunos, both then 34 and of Hammond; and Eric Demchak and Jack Hubbard, then LaPorte residents, ages unknown, all of whom were also indicted. 

Some of them would testify against Markowski. 

Others testified against foreign kingpins bigger than him. 

It is through those court hearings that the made-for-movies storylines are uncovered: 
* When a plane Markowski sent out for dope crashed, he dispatched a helicopter rescue. 

* When one runner crash-landed on a far-off island, he was ordered to use the bales of marijuana to build a hut until Markowski could send help. 

* When Markowski and an accomplice temporarily landed on a remote airstrip in Georgia with 1,800 pounds of marijuana on board, a gunfight eventually ensued with police. 

* A plane so packed with cocaine it had to detour and ditch somewhere in Belize, crashed anyway, due to its heavy load. 

* A Miami attorney set up a dummy company, Marlowe Enterprises, using part of Markowski's name, to register planes in the operation, just in case they were ever seized. 

* Miamian Jack Devoe started an airline service strictly as a smuggling front. 

Even after Markowski was indicted, prosecutors said, he continued running drugs, picking up a shipment of 1,900 pounds of marijuana at the LaPorte County Airport in 1983. 

Court records show Markowski was welcomed to the ring by a high-profile Bahamian attorney, F. Nigel Bowe, who, witnesses testified, funnelled money to the Bahamian government to ensure Markowski's flights wouldn't be bothered en route to the states. 

Markowski's Colombian contact, court records show, was Jose "Pepe" Cabrera, alternately described as an independent trafficker and "a big shot" with the famed Medellin cartel. 

Escobar headed that cartel. 

Cabrera was indicted two years after Markowski, and in 1994 Bowe was indicted. 

Cabrera would later testify against both Bowe and Noriega. 

From the time Markowski was convicted in 1984 to the time Bowe was indicted in 1994, Markowski had filed about a dozen requests to appeal his conviction or reduce his 45-year sentence. 

For 10 years, Markowski couldn't even get a hearing. 

Then, just months after Bowe's indictment, Markowski was granted a hearing. 

And, in September 1995, he was released from a low-security prison in Milan, Mich. 

Most of the records from Markowski's successful appeal hearing have been sealed. 

But court records and Miami Herald newspaper reports show that in the months preceding his release, some of the most powerful drug dealers in the world were indicted. 

Reporter Steve Patterson can be reached at 648-3105 or spatterson@post-trib.com. 

Mayor Robert Pastrick declined to return calls seeking an explanation as to why Markowski would be in a position to speak on behalf of the city and to dole out work. 

It's not clear how many other contractors took orders from Markow-ski, nor is it clear who was Markow-ski's city contact. 

Court records show that 20 years ago Markowski, 65, mingled with the elite of the drug-dealing world, rubbing shoulders with those later tied to the likes of former Medellin cartel leader Pablo Escobar and ex-Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega. 

Now, he has been tied to the Pastrick administration. 

Markowski was indicted in 1983, sentenced to 45 years in prison, but only served 10 years after cooperating with federal officials on other drug cases. 

Markowski, reached at his East Chicago home, angrily demanded to know the name of the person who had linked him to the sidewalk scandal. 

He berated Johnson and city officials but would neither confirm nor deny his involvement. 

"Those people (at City Hall) don't intimidate me whatsoever," Markowski said. "I'm no idiot. I did 20 years (sic). Those (expletives) don't scare me." 

Then, he demanded, "Leave me out of your story." 

Verbal deal goes sour 

It was just a few months before the May 1999 primary, Johnson said, when he got a phone call from Markowski. 

"He said he had city work," Johnson recalled. "He wanted to know if we were interested." 

City officials began preparing for paving work in late 1998, planning to spend $450,000 on sidewalks. 

A year later, $20 million had been spent on paving sidewalks, driveways and patios, removing trees and doing other work for residents at city expense. 

Plans to obtain bids were thrown out the window, prosecutors say, and instead work was doled out on an oral basis. 

Work went to established companies and to companies created just before work started, some without proper licensing or bonding, as required. 

It was a flurry of work that saw private work done with public money, prosecutors say, to encourage votes for Pastrick and his City Council allies in the 1999 primary. 

While three of those council members and three Pastrick department heads have been indicted for their roles in the plan, Pastrick has denied any involvement or knowledge of it. 

Johnson said he never dealt with anyone from the city -- nor did he submit a public bid, nor did he sign a city contract. 

Instead, he said, all of his work went through Markowski and Cal-umet Concrete. 

In early 1999, Johnson said, Markowski introduced him to Calumet Concrete owner Bob Velligan, through whom all tree removal work would be done. 

Johnson said he submitted all bills to Velligan, who, he said, would include a substantial markup before submitting an invoice to the city for payment. 

But their deal, he said, fell apart after the first payment. 

"His first bill to the city was for $37,000 and he cut me my $17,000," Johnson explained. "But then, for a year, I had to try and get the rest. 

"It was ridiculous." 

City records show at least three payments of an estimated $37,000 to Calumet Concrete between April and May 1999, but with no indication of what type of work was billed. 

But court records show Dave's Tree Service sued Calumet Concrete in April 2000, seeking damages for failure to pay on work done. 

They settled out of court in 2001. Neither Johnson nor his attorney, Michael Dobosz, would reveal settlement figures. City attorney Dave Cerven did not respond to messages, while Velligan has not returned repeated calls. 

But Johnson said, "We had four crews working seven days a week for two to three months. That's $200,000 a month for two or three months." 

Johnson said he "took an $80,000 hit" because outside of his company records, he couldn't prove every tree he'd cut. 

"The stumps were gone," he said. "There was concrete over some of them. We knew a tree had been done, but it was gone. 

"Then things got sticky." 

Plenty of regrets 
Things got sticky because, almost immediately after Pastrick's 1999 victory, federal officials began investigating. 

A four-year investigation culminated in a September indictment that leveled 72 charges against six city officials. 

The six -- City Councilmen Frank Kollintzas , Joe DeLaCruz and Adrian Santos, city engineer Pedro Porras, city controller Edwardo Maldonado and park director Joe Valdez -- are set to be tried together in 2004. 

Campaign finance reports show no contributions by Markowski to those officials, Pastrick or elected officials from the Roxanna area. 

Johnson said he doesn't know where Markowski got his daily orders, and "I didn't want to know -- as long as I got paid." 

Court records verify that Johnson did get paid for the work done in East Chicago, but records showing an exact amount couldn't be located by Lake County Court Clerk staff. 

City records show no direct payments to Dave's Tree Service but do include $100,000 in payments to Calumet Concrete specifically for trees. 

All told, city records show, $5.1 million was paid to Calumet Concrete. 

"After an internal city audit, we settled for a percentage on the dollar," Dobosz said. "Dave and Calumet Concrete walked away relatively unhappy -- everybody took a loss on this. But Dave wanted to get past it." 

State Board of Accounts officials say while Dave's Tree Service may have received a settlement, the company owes East Chicago taxpayers money. 

Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter is responsible for recovering $2.5 million in private work done with public money -- including $130,000 paid to Dave's Tree Service and $1.7 million from Calumet Concrete. 

But Johnson says all blame should fall on the city. 

"It wasn't my fault they mismanaged things," he said. "I was doing what I was told. Now, I wish I never got involved." 


Caption: Drugs from South America Planes carrying drugs flew from Columbia to the Bahamas, then into the United States through Miami before making their way to Northwest Indiana. Miami Bahamas Panama Markowski's link to the Columbia's Medellin drug cartel was Jose "Pepe" Cabrera of Bogota, Colombia. Cabrera was a multimillionaire cocaine supplier who had ties to the famed Medellin cartel. He was Markowski's cocaine connection and later testified against ex-Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega. Cabrera was Markowski's link to Pablo Escobar, head of the notorious Medellin cartel. Escobar is considered the world's first billionaire who made his money strictly through dealing drugs. He was killed by authorities in 1993. Columbia Escobar filtered money to Manuel Noriega in Panama. Noriega was convicted of allowing drugs to flow from Colombia, through his country, en route to the United States. Cabrera said Noriega was a main contact for Colombian dealers. F. Nigel Bowe of the Bahamas was a high-profile attorney with connections to then-Prime Minister Lynen Pindling. Bowe was accused of funneling money from drug dealers to top Bahamian officials and law enforcement, ensuring smuggling planes stopping over wouldn't be bothered.(PHOTO) Ronald Markowski of East Chicago was a pilot who was at the head of an international drug ring and smuggled thousands of pounds of Colombian dope into the U.S. from 1977 through 1983; bringing drugs through airports in Lansing, Ill., Gary, Valparaiso and LaPorte. Convicted in 1984, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison without parole. But he was released 10 years into his sentence, shortly after several of the top drug dealers in the world began to be indicted. Records of his release have been sealed by the U.S. government.(PHOTO) (MAP) (PHOTO) (PHOTO) 

10262003 - News Article - Drug kingpin was middleman - Ex-con said to be contractor's link with City Hall



Drug kingpin was middleman 
Ex-con said to be contractor's link with City Hall
Post-Tribune (IN)
October 26, 2003
Before his connections with the 1999 East Chicago sidewalk scandal, federal officials say Ron Markowski's long criminal past included ties to former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega and famed Colombian Medellin drug cartel affiliate Pablo Escobar. They also say he piloted thousands of pounds of cocaine and marijuana into Northwest Indiana airfields. 

A former drug kingpin served as a middleman between East Chicago City Hall and at least one contractor involved in the 1999 sidewalk paving scandal. 

A Post-Tribune investigation has linked Ronald Markowski with the $20 million paving project that has led to the indictment of six city officials. 

Markowski was the ringleader of what was described in 1983 as "the largest cocaine conspiracy smuggling case in Indiana history," one that included small airplanes loaded with Colombian dope flying into Northwest Indiana airports. 

One contractor involved in the 1999 work, which involved paving, tree removal and other public work, admits it was Markowski who was his connection to City Hall orders. 

"I gave Ron my prices before doing any trees and he'd say 'yay' or 'nay,' " said Dave Johnson, owner of Munster-based Dave's Tree Service. 

"Ron would ride with us every day and show us which trees to do. He'd go every day and get his list from the city, because I didn't know any of those guys, so he'd get the list." 

Johnson's interview with the Post-Tribune marks the first time he has told of the arrangement, he said. 

Johnson said he wasn't subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury that issued the indictments of six city officials. 

Had he been, he said, he would have told how Markowski reached out to him on behalf of the city, introduced him to others involved in the sidewalk work, and continued to serve as his City Hall contact. 

East Chicago records show no proof of Markowski having ever been employed by the city, nor was Markowski under contract to act on behalf of any city officials. 

A federal investigation found there were no contracts signed for any of the 1999 work. 

Mayor Robert Pastrick declined to return calls seeking an explanation as to why Markowski would be in a position to speak on behalf of the city and to dole out work. 

It's not clear how many other contractors took orders from Markowski, nor is it clear who was Markowski's city contact. 

Court records show that 20 years ago Markowski, 65, mingled with the elite of the drug-dealing world, rubbing shoulders with those later tied to the likes of former Medellin cartel leader Pablo Escobar and ex-Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega. 

Now, he has been tied to the Pastrick administration. 

Markowski was indicted in 1983, sentenced to 45 years in prison, but only served 10 years after cooperating with federal officials on other drug cases. 

Markowski, reached at his East Chicago home, angrily demanded to know the name of the person who had linked him to the sidewalk scandal. 

He berated Johnson and city officials but would neither confirm nor deny his involvement. 

"Those people (at City Hall) don't intimidate me whatsoever," Markowski said. "I'm no idiot. I did 20 years (sic). Those (expletives) don't scare me." 

Then, he demanded, "Leave me out of your story." 

Verbal deal goes sour 
It was just a few months before the May 1999 primary, Johnson said, when he got a phone call from Markowski. 

"He said he had city work," Johnson recalled. "He wanted to know if we were interested." 

City officials began preparing for paving work in late 1998, planning to spend $450,000 on sidewalks. 

A year later, $20 million had been spent on paving sidewalks, driveways and patios, removing trees and doing other work for residents at city expense. 

Plans to obtain bids were thrown out the window, prosecutors say, and instead work was doled out on an oral basis. 

Work went to established companies and to companies created just before work started, some without proper licensing or bonding, as required. 

It was a flurry of work that saw private work done with public money, prosecutors say, to encourage votes for Pastrick and his City Council allies in the 1999 primary. 

While three of those council members and three Pastrick department heads have been indicted for their roles in the plan, Pastrick has denied any involvement or knowledge of it. 

Johnson said he never dealt with anyone from the city -- nor did he submit a public bid, nor did he sign a city contract. 

Instead, he said, all of his work went through Markowski and Calumet Concrete. 

In early 1999, Johnson said, Markowski introduced him to Calumet Concrete owner Bob Velligan, through whom all tree removal work would be done. 

Johnson said he submitted all bills to Velligan, who, he said, would include a substantial markup before submitting an invoice to the city for payment. 

But their deal, he said, fell apart after the first payment. 

"His first bill to the city was for $37,000 and he cut me my $17,000," Johnson explained. "But then, for a year, I had to try and get the rest. 

"It was ridiculous." 

City records show at least three payments of an estimated $37,000 to Calumet Concrete between April and May 1999, but with no indication of what type of work was billed. 

But court records show Dave's Tree Service sued Calumet Concrete in April 2000, seeking damages for failure to pay on work done. 

They settled out of court in 2001. Neither Johnson nor his attorney, Michael Dobosz, would reveal settlement figures. City attorney Dave Cerven did not respond to messages, while Velligan has not returned repeated calls. 

But Johnson said, "We had four crews working seven days a week for two to three months. That's $200,000 a month for two or three months." 

But, Johnson said, he "took an $80,000 hit" because outside of his company records, he couldn't prove every tree he'd cut. 

"The stumps were gone," he said. "There was concrete over some of them. We knew a tree had been done, but it was gone. 

"Then things got sticky." 

Plenty of regrets 
Things got sticky because, almost immediately after Pastrick's 1999 victory, federal officials began investigating. 

A four-year investigation culminated in a September indictment that leveled 72 charges against six city officials. 

The six -- City Councilmen Frank Kollintzas , Joe DeLaCruz and Adrian Santos, city engineer Pedro Porras, city controller Edwardo Maldonado and park director Joe Valdez -- are set to be tried together in 2004. 

Campaign finance reports show no contributions by Markowski to those officials, Pastrick or elected officials from the Roxanna area. 

Johnson said he doesn't know where Markowski got his daily orders, and "I didn't want to know -- as long as I got paid." 

Court records verify that Johnson did get paid for the work done in East Chicago, but records showing an exact amount couldn't be located by Lake County Court Clerk staff. 

City records show no direct payments to Dave's Tree Service but do include $100,000 in payments to Calumet Concrete specifically for trees. 

All told, city records show, $5.1 million was paid to Calumet Concrete. 

"After an internal city audit, we settled for a percentage on the dollar," Dobosz said. "Dave and Calumet Concrete walked away relatively unhappy --everybody took a loss on this. But Dave wanted to get past it." 

State Board of Accounts officials say while Dave's Tree Service may have received a settlement, the company owes East Chicago taxpayers money. 

Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter is responsible for recovering $2.5 million in private work done with public money -- including $130,000 paid to Dave's Tree Service and $1.7 million from Calumet Concrete. 

But Johnson says all blame should fall on the city. 

"It wasn't my fault they mismanaged things," he said. "I was doing what I was told. Now, I wish I never got involved




Saturday, October 11, 2003

10112003 - News Article - Grand jury continues focus on absentee voting - Ballots linked to 'Bosko' Grkinich being examined in Schererville case - ROBERT CANTRELL



Grand jury continues focus on absentee voting
Ballots linked to 'Bosko' Grkinich being examined in Schererville case
NWI Times
Oct 11, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/state-and-regional/grand-jury-continues-focus-on-absentee-voting/article_73fe0f51-8fa9-5fa1-b476-bdeb84128dd4.html
CROWN POINT -- A special Lake County grand jury investigating vote fraud maintained its focus on the Schererville Democratic primary.

Stojanka Jovanovic and Djuro Balac, of Schererville, were two of a dozen witnesses called Friday to appear before grand jurors examining absentee ballots cast May 6 for Schererville Town Judge Deborah Riga.

The grand jury also continued for a second week to focus on allegations revolving around absentee ballots linked to Bob "Bosko" Grkinich, a Schererville businessman and Democratic committeeman of Schererville's heavily Serbian 10th Precinct.

Riga won the primary by 11 votes, but her nomination was reversed last month by a recount judge who declared challenger Kenneth Anderson the winner after disqualifying 23 absentee ballots in her name.

Anderson's lawyers alleged Grkinich was involved in the illegal possession of absentee ballots and the illegal assistance of absentee voters.

Grkinich took the Fifth Amendment on the advice of criminal defense lawyer Kevin Milner and refused to answer questions last month during the recount suit about his role in alleged vote fraud on grounds it might incriminate him.

The witnesses testimony before the grand jury is secret, but Jovanovich testified last month in open court as part of the recount suit that an absentee ballot cast in her name for Riga didn't arrive by mail as required by law.

Instead, Grkinich delivered it to her. She remembers signing it and giving it back to Grkinich, but not filling it out.

Balac also cast an absentee ballot for Riga, although Anderson's lawyers allege he didn't fill out the ballot alone or mail it to the county election board as required by law.

Balac said Friday he doesn't speak English well. He needed a Serbian translator when testifying in the recount suit and a translator also was present Friday to assist Balac before the grand jury. Critics complain ethnic residents with limited language skills often become victims of voting fraud schemes.

County Prosecutor Bernard Carter impaneled the grand jury in August to look into allegations of public corruption and vote fraud in Schererville, East Chicago and other communities.

Tuesday, October 7, 2003

10072003 - News Article - Riga lets deadline go by - Anderson is the Democratic nominee for Schererville town judge - ROBERT CANTRELL



Riga lets deadline go by
Anderson is the Democratic nominee for Schererville town judge
NWI Times
Oct 7, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/local/riga-lets-deadline-go-by/article_617ab3cc-9291-5a73-8866-658801b2ed38.html
SCHERERVILLE -- The deadline to appeal the decision in the ongoing case of the Schererville Town Court judge election passed without incident.

Schererville Town Court Judge Deborah Riga had until Monday to file an appeal regarding a decision naming attorney Kenneth Anderson the victor in last spring's Democratic primary.

Neither Riga nor her attorney, Robert Vann, returned calls from The Times seeking comment. However, officials for Lake County Judge Mary Beth Bonaventura said nothing had been filed with the court.

Anderson's attorney, John Craig, said no matter what happens, they are ready to go forward.

"If they file something, fine. If not, great," he said. "I'm glad it's over."

Late Monday, Anderson said he was happy.

"But I'm trying to be conservative," he said. "There's still a chance that she could file and serve us by mail and we wouldn't get it until Tuesday or Wednesday. We don't believe she has filed but there's always a chance. I thought our attorneys did a very good job and the evidence was such that it could not be appealed.

"Since the Supreme Court had ruled earlier on the procedural issues and the court case was regarding the substantive issues, I thought an appeal would be pointless."

The issue began following the primary.

Anderson won the popular vote in the primary but lost to Riga by 11 votes when absentee ballots were counted. He demanded a recount, charging fraudulent voting in Precinct 10. However, the Lake County Election Board ruled there wasn't enough evidence of fraud and would not overturn the election.

Anderson took his case to court, and Bonaventura, a juvenile court judge, was appointed special judge in the case. Riga subsequently filed a motion with the Indiana Supreme Court in an effort to get a change of venue and said Anderson had missed the deadline to have his case heard.

The Indiana Supreme Court sent the case back to the local level.

In a 45-page decision, Bonaventura ruled last month that Anderson was the victor. She also cited illegal and deliberate actions in regard to absentee voting.

From there, Riga had 30 days to file an appeal. That deadline was Monday.

Anderson does not face a Republican challenger in the November general election. He is expected to take office Jan. 1.

Sunday, October 5, 2003

10052003 - News Article - Isailovich on defensive over county contract - C.P. mayoral nominee says his firm did good work - ROBERT CANTRELL



Isailovich on defensive over county contract
C.P. mayoral nominee says his firm did good work
NWI Times
Oct 5, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/local/isailovich-on-defensive-over-county-contract/article_9dcc9f46-35d7-508b-a1a6-aae67462eb31.html
CROWN POINT -- Since announcing his candidacy in January, Democratic mayoral nominee Wayne Isailovich has campaigned as a fiscal conservative who will defend taxpayers against wasteful government spending.

But his opponent describes him as just the opposite - a man who landed a fat contract for his business through a political connection and then failed to account for the work he did when his patron left office.

At issue is the four-year, $480,000 contract Isailovich won for his Merrillville business, Addiction and Behavioral Counseling Services, to provide counseling to inmates at the Lake County sheriff's work release program.

Isailovich and his former partner, George Sufana Jr., received the contract shortly after opening their business in 1999. 

Isailovich's longtime friend, former Sheriff John Buncich, had invited them to provide the services.

The partners accepted, and soon their business was making $120,000 a year counseling inmates on anger management and drug and alcohol addiction. Sufana died that November, leaving Isailovich as the business' sole owner. Each year he provided Buncich with an annual report of the services his business provided to the county, according to Isailovich and the former sheriff.

On Nov. 21, 2002, Buncich wrote a letter to the Lake County Board of Commissioners asking them to renew Isailovich's contract for two years with a 10 percent raise, bringing the business' annual fee to $132,000. But the sheriff was on his way out of office, prohibited by law from seeking a third consecutive term.

Incoming Sheriff Rogelio "Roy" Dominguez asked the commissioners not to vote on Isailovich's contract until he could review Isailovich's work. But when he went to review the records, he said, they were nowhere to be found.

"I don't believe they were lost, but they weren't here," Dominguez said. "I simply asked him for the records. I would think that whatever he sent to the previous sheriff, he would have had a copy of those records. I would not ask for specific client information, but rather statistical data on the type of counseling they provided -- pretty basic stuff."

But if Dominguez's request was routine, Isailovich's resistance took him by surprise. The sheriff's assistant chief, Melvin Maxwell, made repeated attempts to contact Isailovich by phone, but his calls went unreturned.

In January, Dominguez sent Isailovich a certified letter requesting information about the work Addiction and Behavioral Counseling Services provided the county. The letter went unanswered. A month later, on Feb. 13, Dominguez sent Isailovich a second letter informing him his contract would not be renewed.

"I regret having to take this action," Dominguez wrote, "but your failure to respond in any manner to my request for the empirical data has left me with no reasonable alternative."

The contract was subsequently awarded to Hammond-based Addiction and Family Care Inc., led by Dominguez supporter Nancy Fromm. Fromm's contract is worth $70,000 a year, or $62,000 less than Isailovich had requested.

Isailovich's opponent in the election, Republican Dan Klein, made the controversy the subject of a question he asked Isailovich in last week's mayoral debate. Klein said a friend of his, whom he declined to name, obtained Dominguez's letters to Isailovich through a public records request.

"It struck me that if you're getting paid almost half a million dollars and you have nothing to show for it, that's not being accountable," Klein said afterward. "Is that what we're going to anticipate in his administration?"

Isailovich did not address the issue directly at Monday's debate. But later in the week, he said Dominguez never intended to renew his contract. In last year's Democratic primary, Isailovich had supported Buncich's hand-picked successor -- and Dominguez's opponent -- Miguel Arredondo.

Given his support of the losing candidate, Isailovich said, Dominguez's decision not to renew his contract was a foregone conclusion. He said Dominguez's letters were part of a political game, and to respond would have been a waste of time.

"The request was a pretext to get rid of me," he said. "It's just that simple."

Buncich, who said he has been friends with Isailovich for 30 years and is now working on his campaign, agreed.

"It was clear from the get-go that the contract was going to go to Fromm and (her consultant, Bobby) Cantrell because of their support for Dominguez," he said. "It's unfortunate politics had to play a role in that."

Fromm did not return a phone call last week.

Dominguez denied being politically motivated.

"That would not be true, because I offered him the opportunity to provide the information to me so I could evaluate it," he said. "When I have no records, no response and I can save $124,000 (over two years) -- I guess it's easier to say it's just political. But it was a lot more than politics."

Buncich praised Isailovich's work with inmates, saying he had observed several counseling sessions himself.

"I was very impressed by what he provided over there," he said. "The quality of the service was there, and I think for the amount, it was well worth it."

Isailovich staunchly defended the work his company did for the county. He became a counselor after struggling with alcohol addiction himself, he said. He took his last drink in 1992, and has since devoted himself to helping others recover.

"From the time I stopped drinking, I have dedicated my life to helping other people," he said. "My past is my greatest asset. I've dealt with the problems in my past. I've learned from them and continue to learn from them. ... Since I've been in this business, we've helped thousands of people. We've taken drunken drivers off the road. We've educated individuals that have had problems."

That his business' contract was not renewed, he said, is no reflection on the work he did.

"We got that job because we did good work," he said. "We provided a service that was needed. We dedicated everything we had to make sure that the inmates were treated in the proper manner. And I defy anyone to prove otherwise."

Saturday, October 4, 2003

10042003 - News Article - Ex-E.C. police chief testifies before grand jury - Corruption investigation focuses on Schererville vote fraud allegations - ROBERT CANTRELL



Ex-E.C. police chief testifies before grand jury
Corruption investigation focuses on Schererville vote fraud allegations
NWI Times
Oct 4, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/local/ex-e-c-police-chief-testifies-before-grand-jury/article_ba3430cf-6711-5cb9-a942-9463d4303b9b.html
CROWN POINT -- Gus and Roberta Flores were called Friday as witnesses, possibly targets, of a special Lake County grand jury investigating absentee vote fraud in Schererville.

But they weren't treated as objects of scorn as they sat on a wood bench in the Lake County Criminal Courthouse outside the grand jury room waiting to testify.

Gus Flores shook hands with a court security officer who recognized him, conducted a breezy conversation on county politics and visited with grandchildren, including one in a baby carriage brought up to visit him.

Gus Flores is an ex-East Chicago police chief and a top administrator in a company owned by Stephen R. Stiglich, the Lake County auditor, Democratic County chairman and a former East Chicago police chief. Roberta is Stiglich's personal secretary.

Asked what he expected to be testifying about, Gus Flores said, "I haven't got a clue."

Their names were prominent in a Schererville recount dispute in which the results of the spring municipal judicial primary was overturned on grounds of fraudulent absentee voting.

Schererville Town Judge Deborah Riga won the May 6 primary by 11 votes, but her nomination was reversed last month by a recount judge who declared challenger Kenneth Anderson the winner after disqualifying 23 absentee ballots in her name.

Anderson's attorneys allege three of the invalid ballots were improperly mailed to the Flores' home in Schererville and cast in the names of Dusanka Drljaca and her parents Lazar and Sena Drljaca of Norridge, Ill.

Anderson's lawyers said those three were ineligible to vote in Schererville because they had not lived in town for more than a year before the primary. The three testified they hadn't seen and didn't sign ballots allegedly cast from their previous address in Schererville.

Gus Flores said last month he and his wife have nothing to do with the absentee ballot fiasco. They suggested any violations might have involved Roberta's brother-in-law, Bob "Bosko" Grkinich, a political novice in the area's Serbian community.

Anderson's attorneys allege the handwriting on the allegedly forged ballot signatures matches that found on 20 other questionable ballots.

Grkinich took the Fifth Amendment on the advice of criminal defense lawyer Kevin Milner and refused to answer questions about his role in alleged vote fraud on grounds it might incriminate him.

It is a Class D felony, punishable by up to three years in prison to forge a ballot.

Mike Lakich, of Schererville, was called Friday afternoon as a witness. He testified in the Schererville recount trial he didn't vote in the election, but someone forged his signature on an absentee ballot and ballot application in his name. One of his relatives, Jovanka Lakich, said Grkinich brought a ballot that already had been filled out in advance, to her home, and she signed it in his presence and that she never mailed it to county election officials.

It is a crime for anyone other than a poll worker or a family member of the voter to assist in completing an absentee ballot.

Lake County Prosecutor Bernard Carter impaneled the special grand jury in August to look into allegations of vote fraud in East Chicago and Schererville as well as other forms of public corruption in the county.

The prosecutor invited Indiana Attorney General Steven Carter to join the investigation last month following allegations the prosecutor might be involved in a conflict of interest because of political contributions exchanged between him and some of the apparent targets of the probe.

Both Bernard Carter and Steven Carter appeared Friday before the grand jury. Steven Carter declined to comment on what they told the grand jury, but said afterward, "We appreciate their taking on this role. It is important to the citizens of this county and state."

The daily operation of the grand jury will be run by deputy prosecutors Robert Neumaier, Marilyn Kortenhoven and Emory Christian and assistant attorneys general Charles Todd, Cynthia Crispin and attorney Robert W. Gevers II. Three investigators from the attorney general's office will help Mark Day from the Indiana State Police Department.

10042003 - News Article - Deadline Monday to appeal town judge primary - Anderson's name already on ballots; no word from Riga camp - ROBERT CANTRELL



Deadline Monday to appeal town judge primary
Anderson's name already on ballots; no word from Riga camp
NWI Times
Oct 4, 2003
nwitimes.com/news/local/deadline-monday-to-appeal-town-judge-primary/article_f3ec84a7-060a-5b5a-b872-34e0f4c0caf2.html
SCHERERVILLE -- Time is running out for Schererville Town Court Judge Deborah Riga.

Riga has until Monday before her 30 days is up to appeal a decision that Schererville attorney Kenneth Anderson won the May Democratic primary following a court battle between the pair.

The ballots have been printed and Anderson is listed as the candidate for Schererville town court judge. He also is running unopposed, practically guaranteeing him the position in January.

Bruce Lambka, Lake County election board attorney, said Anderson's name is on the ballots pursuant to the order of the court.

"It would be difficult to make changes, not impossible, but certainly difficult," he said.

Riga did not return calls. Her attorney Robert Vann also could not be reached for comment.

The 30-day deadline is Sunday but because it's the weekend, the last day to file an appeal and prevent Anderson from becoming the new town court judge is Monday.

Anderson said he hasn't heard of any legal action.

"I would have to say that I'm happy for all the people who worked so hard," he said. "It really wasn't me. It was a team of people who wanted to see that votes were properly counted in Lake County."

There are two avenues Riga could take to prevent or slow Anderson's ascension. Lawyers could file a motion to correct errors, essentially telling Lake County special Judge Mary Beth Bonaventura there were errors in her decision and here's an opportunity to review it. The second avenue is to make a direct appeal before the Indiana Court of Appeals, legal experts said.

The motion to correct errors is a much slower process but it is still a way that preserves the right to appeal.

Anderson said he believes the legal team he put together did an excellent job.

"The people who supported me deserve the kudos. They fought for a voting system that is fair and just," Anderson said.

The outcome of the Schererville judge's race has been tied up in court since Anderson filed a challenge to Riga's primary win. Anderson beat Riga at the polls but lost the election by 11 votes once the absentee ballots were counted. He charged that 23 votes from Precinct 10 were fraudulent.

An election panel ruled that four votes were illegal because those voters no longer lived in town, but they did not believe corruption was rampant enough to invalidate Riga's win.

Anderson appealed that decision before Bonaventura, a juvenile court judge serving as special judge in the case. He contended the primary was so tainted, a new one should be held in Precinct 10.

A volley of legal motions followed with Riga's team moving to get the case dismissed. She argued that the case should not be heard at the local level. Her team also charged that Anderson didn't file the case within the statutory deadline.

The Indiana Supreme Court ruled that the case should be heard at the local level.

The case went back to Bonaventura who issued a 45-page decision last month, citing fraudulent voting and reversing the outcome of the election making Anderson the victor.