Monday, November 28, 2011

11282011 - Portage Police Chief Becker Resigns - Portage Mayor Snyder refuses to interview Becker


Portage Police Chief Becker resigns
Post-Tribune (IN) 
December 7, 2011

PORTAGE — City Police Chief Mark Becker will resign his post effective Dec. 17. Last week, Becker was informed by Mayor-elect Jim Snyder that he will not be considered for the position in Snyder’s administration.

On Nov. 28, Snyder informed Becker he was starting to interview candidates for the chief position and Becker would not be granted an interview.

Becker submitted a letter of resignation to Mayor Olga Velazquez that will go into effect at midnight Dec. 17. Assistant Police Chief Larry Jolley will serve as interim chief for the rest of the year.

Becker became chief of police after 32 years at the FBI, including serving as an original member of the Gary Response Investigative Team.

In preparation for the selection of a new chief, Becker provided a summary of department activity over the past four years, including goals and accomplishments.

Becker thanked Velazquez for her leadership and for the opportunity to serve as chief.

“I thank you and those I worked with for all the support that I have received, and I wish the city of Portage continued success,” Becker said in a statement.













Snyder says cops have his back
Post-Tribune (IN)
July 27, 2011
http://infoweb.newsbank.com

Jim Snyder strolled up to my front door last month accompanied by Portage police officer Ross Haynes, which surprised me a bit.

I heard that the city’s police officers backed Snyder for Portage mayor, and he also nabbed the official endorsement of the department’s Fraternal Order of Police — a rare accomplishment in my city for any mayoral candidate.

But it caught my attention for cops to actually go door to door with Snyder, the Republican candidate who lost by only 302 votes to incumbent Olga Velazquez in 2007.

“We’re behind him,” said Haynes, a longtime officer in the city.

Snyder also received an endorsement from the city’s firefighters, and he is confident of getting a similar endorsement soon from the city’s streets and sanitation workers.

“All 14 firefighters who live in the city are behind Jim Snyder,” he said confidently.

Snyder claims the city’s police officers are supporting him because they want respect from their administration and the ability to communicate openly with the mayor’s office, among other policy issues.

Portage Police Chief Mark Becker is at least one officer who is not supporting Snyder, and he believes the FOP endorsement vote is deceiving.

“If you review those in attendance at the FOP meeting when the endorsement vote was taken, you will find that approximately only a third of our active officers were present,” Becker said. “Also, plans to take the vote were not made known to all of the members, which may not have been in accordance with state FOP standards.”

“I am a member of the FOP and I was not told of the intended vote,” he added, noting that not all the officers in attendance voted in favor of the endorsement.

However, police officer Troy Williams, who’s been on the force for 15 years, said the FOP vote was indeed a unanimous vote.

Last Saturday, he too campaigned door to door with Snyder and confirmed that the overwhelming majority of his department is backing him.

“Jim Snyder has the type of leadership we’re looking for,” Williams said.

Another officer told me that “80 to 85 percent” of the police department is behind Snyder.

“It does say something if you are the current mayor and all the city departments are publicly endorsing another candidate,” the officer told me, asking for anonymity.

‘Public safety’ campaign cry

Regardless of exactly how many officers are behind Snyder, “public safety” has become his war cry during the campaign battle leading up to Election Day on Nov. 8.

He routinely reminds voters that the city’s police station was “closed” to the public on Jan. 1, 2010. What he means is that citizens must use a phone in the station lobby to talk with police or call 911.

“We should have a police station that has its doors open all the time,” Snyder said.

Becker said he has clerical personnel on duty from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Friday, and on a more limited basis on Saturdays. Other police departments in the county also have a similar set up if not on a more limited basis.

“I fail to understand how a records clerk sitting behind a desk at 2 a.m. equates to increased public safety?” Becker asked. “Our crime rates are down (and) we consistently reach out to the public to help us identify problem areas.”

Snyder, a city resident since 2002, is a proud Republican who is pro-life regarding abortion, admires Ronald Reagan and believes in gun owners’ rights.

Although I never brought it up during our chat, he told me a few times that although he attended Fairhaven Bible College in Chesterton in his youth, he no longer is affiliated with the controversial church.

He’s also showed confidence in unseating Velazquez, citing several issues he has with the city under her reign. For starters, outsiders view the city as “anti-business” in regard to attracting and catering to new firms, eateries and factories.

“You don’t think that Olive Garden, Chili’s, and Chick-fil-A, for example, know how hard it is to do business in Portage?” he asked rhetorically. (Yet don’t be surprised by a pre-Election Day “surprise” of a Meier store coming to the city, he hinted.)

He also routinely reminds voters on his campaign trail that the city’s newest development project on Central Avenue is nothing more than a pricey unemployment office.

“You can call it a university center, and Ivy Tech has its name on the sign and will be there someday, but right now it’s a $6.1 million unemployment office,” he said, referring to the Workforce One building being built downtown. “Is that the best way to spend taxpayer dollars?”

Since meeting Snyder on my driveway last month, I’ve talked to dozens of Portage residents. Many are still on the fence regarding their choice for mayor, so next week I will talk to Velazquez for a follow-up column on these issues. Stay tuned.







Portage police secure with Velazquez, Becker
Post-Tribune (IN) 
August 26, 2011

Jim Snyder is slick.

Most people who run mortgage companies are.

But he’s also wrong and needs to be told.

Snyder is the Republican candidate for Portage mayor.

He’s facing Mayor Olga Velazquez, just as he did four years ago when he narrowly lost.

Snyder is trying to make the Police Department and public safety one of the key issues of his campaign.

You get the impression that Velazquez has let the Police Department go to hell and that crime is running rampant. Just the opposite.

And, unfortunately for Portage, Snyder has put city police officers at center stage of his campaign.

Snyder is walking arm-in-arm with members of the Police Department as he goes door-to-door around the city stumping for votes.

That’s the last thing any candidate for mayor should do.

Injecting police officers into the frontline of politics compromises those cops and jeopardizes the city.

Snyder says he received the unanimous endorsement of the Portage Fraternal Order of Police, although there is a question as to how many of the members were invited to the endorsement vote.

So bent is Snyder on ripping Velazquez on public safety that he talks about the Police Department being closed to the public at times, including New Year’s Day of 2010.

Snyder said that there are times when residents must use a phone in the station lobby to talk to police.

That is in the wee hours of the morning when it would make little sense to have a clerk on duty.

My gosh. Petty things like that shouldn’t even be a campaign issue.

What’s really confusing about the cops backing Snyder is that they don’t really say why, other than they think Snyder would be a better leader and they want the ability to communicate openly with the mayor’s office.

Given that a Police Department is a quasi-military operation, you go through the chain of command to talk to the boss.

Snyder is a bright guy but he doesn’t know a lick about law enforcement. Maybe that’s because he is in the mortgage business. Maybe because he’s still wet behind the ears.

While Snyder is trying to make public safety a cornerstone of his campaign, it also is the very reason he shouldn’t be mayor.

The most important thing Velazquez did after being elected mayor was to appoint Mark Becker as police chief.

Becker was a career FBI agent who retired from the federal agency to take the police chief’s job.

I know I’ll step on somebody’s toes, but it needs to be said. Becker is the best police chief in Northwest Indiana. There aren’t many better around the state.

Becker is extremely bright, strong and driven, yet compassionate.

He has a locker full of recognitions from his FBI days.

He was one of the best at pursuing white-collar crime and later tracked down and helped send Gary gangs to prison. That’s the kind of guy you ought to like as your chief in an ever-changing world.

Velazquez in her campaign literature says that burglary is down 28 percent, vehicle theft is down 41 percent and stolen property is down 46 percent.

Those numbers are attributable to the men and women of the Police Department. The same ones who call Becker “chief” every day.

So, if Snyder is elected mayor, he will dump Becker as the police chief because, well, because he can.

It doesn’t matter that it would be a terribly wrong thing to do.

I don’t know that I could vote for someone for mayor who had judgment that poor.

Rich James’ column appears on Fridays.







Portage mayoral candidates weigh in on public safety
By Joyce Russell joyce.russell@nwi.com, (219) 762-1397, ext. 2222 
NWI Times
Oct 23, 2011 


PORTAGE | One thing the two candidates for mayor can agree on is that public safety is a top issue in this year's campaign.

Democratic incumbent Mayor Olga Velazquez said she's made great strides in protecting Portage residents. It started, she said, with the hiring of former FBI agent Mark Becker as the city's police chief nearly four years ago.

"The things Chief Becker has implemented are working. Crime is down in Portage. It was one of the best decisions I made to bring this professional to our community," Velazquez said.

Velazquez said Becker has stepped up traffic stops as a crime prevention method, improved communication through his chief's email, increased continuing education for officers and teamed with various drug- and gang-prevention agencies.

Republican mayoral challenger James Snyder disputes the crime statistics.

"The mayor talks about crime decreasing during that time, but it is the way crime was logged that has changed. Ask any police officer in the city and none believe crime is down. At the same time, I believe our police officers are doing a great job and I don't believe crime is rampant," Snyder said.

Velazquez said the crime statistics Snyder is doubting are those reported to the FBI each year. Those statistics indicate the city's crime rate has decreased 22 percent since 2008.

"She's correct on her numbers, but it is a fudge job," said Snyder, contending that during her administration, the department has changed systems on the way crime is logged and that has affected the numbers.

The two also disagree on 911 dispatching.

During her term, the city's dispatch center was consolidated with that of Porter County. The effort, Velazquez said, was mandated by the state and has saved the city money.

State law requires each county to consolidate to no more than two dispatch centers by 2014.

"We were very conscientious in taking our time in making the decision. We did not take it lightly. We did our due diligence in looking at all the aspects and considered the 2014 state mandate for consolidation," said Velazquez, adding the city also worked to make sure the city dispatch employees were hired by the county.

"State law said they would have paid for a study. She didn't ask for a study," said Snyder, adding that he would work to see dispatchers return to the city and, if that were not possible, would work with the county to make sure Portage dispatchers man the Portage consoles at the county center.

Snyder said the closing of the dispatch center also has left the police station closed to the public at night and on weekends. He said he would work to reverse that.

Velazquez disputes Snyder's accusation.

"The police station is not closed. It is a 24/7 operation," she said, adding that a telephone system is available to residents who may come to the police station when clerical staff is not available. "If the dispatch center were still there, they would still have to call 911."

Another issue is police efforts within private residential developments.

The city has signed agreements with two private developments to allow police to patrol on private streets, a crime prevention effort, Velazquez said.

Snyder said he believes that is the wrong approach. If elected, he said, he would like to see the private developments -- apartment complexes and mobile home parks -- charged a special assessment for public safety protection or, at least, have them hire their own security to patrol the streets within the developments.







Snyder needs to say if he would replace qualified police chief
Post-Tribune (IN) 
November 4, 2011

It’s time for Jim Snyder to man-up.

Snyder is the Republican candidate for Portage mayor.

And he and his followers are becoming more obsessed with Portage Police Chief Mark Becker by the day.

A month or so ago, I wrote that Becker — who retired from the FBI to take the chief’s job in Portage — would be ousted if Snyder won the mayor’s race.

I went on to say that it would be a shame because Becker has more law enforcement knowledge than any chief in Northwest Indiana — perhaps even the entire state.

Becker, quite simply, is that good at what he does, except for the fact he is a Green Bay Packers fan.

Snyder had a fit, saying he had never said he would fire Becker if elected mayor.

Well, then, I said, if that is the case, tell me that you will keep Becker as your chief if elected mayor.

Nope, can’t do that, Snyder said.

So that means you are going to fire him, I said.

Nope, it doesn’t mean that at all, Snyder roared back.

If you won’t say that you will fire Becker and you won’t say that you will keep him, then how are you going to select a police chief, I asked.

By committee, Snyder said.

By committee, I wondered to myself. Just what Portage needs is a butcher, a baker and a candlestick maker picking the city’s police chief.

OK, so there will be one former law enforcement guy on the committee.

Then it made me think about that sign that read, “God so loved the world that he didn’t send a committee.”

Anyway, Snyder reiterated the fact that he thought I was a fairly despicable person because I said he would fire Becker, and he said he hadn’t said that. But yet, he couldn’t say he would keep him either.

Then Snyder said something that almost tipped his hand.

He said there are rumors that Becker is going to run for Porter County sheriff and that he would have to start campaigning for that at the first of this coming year.

The point being that he’d be campaigning almost full-time and wouldn’t be much of a police chief.

I don’t know if Snyder made that up or someone whispered in his ear.

The point is that he was off by a couple of years. Porter County won’t elect a new sheriff until 2014, with the winner taking office in 2015.

But, what the heck, there’s no sense in letting the facts get in the way.

But now the worm has turned.

Now the Snyder supporters are the ones saying their candidate never has said he would oust Becker.

Some of those Snyder folks are writing letters and telling anyone who will listen that he won’t fire Becker.

Nope, he won’t have to. What the backers now are saying is that Snyder has said the police chief will have to be a resident of Portage.

I guess the thinking is that if you don’t wake up in Portage you wouldn’t have a clue about Portage crime, or how to go about fighting it.

I guess that means burglaries in Portage are totally different from, say, burglaries in Chesterton.

And, I guess it doesn’t matter that the chief doesn’t have the best crime-fighting mind available, as long as he or she lives in Portage.

There’s no light at the end of that tunnel.

You’ve probably figured it out by now. Becker doesn’t live in Portage.

Apparently that hasn’t been a handicap over the last four years.

Man-up, Snyder.

Just admit you don’t want Becker as police chief.

It’s really not that hard to say.

And if Mayor Olga Velazquez is re-elected, Snyder won’t have to say anything.

Rich James’ column appears on Friday.







EDITORIAL - ELECTION 2011 ENDORSEMENT: 
We pick Velazquez in close call
NWI Times
Nov 6, 2011 


The slugfest between Portage mayoral candidates Olga Velazquez and Jim Snyder has given validity to the term "grudge match" for a second contest between political candidates. The bitter campaigns made our decision in this race difficult — much more so than any other mayoral race in Northwest Indiana.

Democrat Velazquez, the incumbent, has made campaign fundraising blunders that caused us to question her judgment. When the first fundraising controversy arose, she should have immediately addressed it by saying she was returning the money inappropriately given by the nonprofit donor — on whose board she sits — and that she was giving extra scrutiny to other donations to make sure any other money given inappropriately was returned to the donors. Instead, the public endured waves of criticism against her.

But we have to give Velazquez credit, too, for results. It is under her watch that Fronius announced it would relocate to Portage, bringing vital jobs with it.

And while the Stone Avenue reconstruction project was rocky, she brought not just repaving but entirely new infrastructure to a part of the city that needed it most.

Republican Snyder, who was narrowly defeated four years ago, promises department heads will not campaign or raise money on his behalf. He also said the right things about supporting regional efforts involving other communities.

Snyder has a strong focus on making Portage a business-friendly environment. At the same time, he is sensitive to Portage's union-heavy population and has bucked his party in opposing right-to-work legislation in Indianapolis.

But then he seems to undermine the leadership of the city's highly respected Police Chief Mark Becker by siding with rank-and-file police officers from whom he is getting support.

Snyder raised the possibility of undoing the 911 dispatch consolidation Velazquez accomplished. Despite the state law that forces consolidation, Snyder said Portage could serve as a backup to the county and vice versa. But Porter County already has backup, in a neighboring county.

That stance on 911 consolidation is a red flag. But Snyder's position on patrolling apartment complexes and mobile home parks, which have private roads but high population density, is appalling.

Velazquez's administration has made arrangements for police to patrol two of those private areas. That effort should continue.

Snyder wants those developments to hire private security to patrol those areas. Portage police still would respond to reports of emergencies.

Since when does the Portage Police Department not serve and protect apartment dwellers and mobile home residents, often low-income areas, as well as as it does residents in single-family homes?

What is that saying to the drug dealers and other criminals? Come here. That's the wrong message.

Embracing the police union's desires and going against Becker's leadership is a fatal flaw.

If Snyder is elected, we hope he reconsiders his position on this issue.

It is a close call, but we endorse Velazquez. Snyder's position on the police issues was the tipping point for us.

We urge the voters to re-elect Velazquez.







Snyder picks transition team, begins evaluations
By Joyce Russell joyce.russell@nwi.com, (219) 762-1397, ext. 2222 
NWI Times
Nov 12, 2011 

PORTAGE | Just days after his victory in the Portage mayoral race, James Snyder has begun to put together a transition team he says will help him evaluate and offer advice in decision making prior to taking office Jan. 1.

Snyder, a Republican, defeated incumbent Democratic Mayor Olga Velazquez last week by 238 votes in a sometimes contentious race for the city's top seat.

Jim Fitzer, a retired NIPSCO official, will head the transition team, Snyder said. Additional members will be Dave Fagan, a former Republican Portage City Council member and financial secretary for the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150; Susan Kelly-Johnson, a local attorney and member of the city's Redevelopment Commission; and Dave Kasarda, director of the Portage Township YMCA.

Snyder said he intends to appoint a fifth member to the committee, but the individual has not yet committed.

He said he also is drawing on advice from Valparaiso Mayor Jon Costas, former Portage Mayor Doug Olson and Marion Mayor Wayne Seybold.

"They will help me evaluate each department head and each department," adding it is not his intention at this point to "clean house" of present city employees.

"It is my priority not to be emotional, but to also be firm," he said.

Police Chief Mark Becker became an issue during the election. Snyder said he has not decided whether he will ask Becker to continue to serve.

He does, however, believe the police chief should be a resident of the city. Becker lives in Union Township.

"The police chief should go through what we go through on a daily basis," he said.

The same residency requirement may not have to be met for other department heads. Portage Fire Chief Tom Fieffer lives in Chesterton.

"We will take it on a case-by-case basis," Snyder said.

He did not hint last week as to which department heads may be asked to stay or leave. He said those department heads who will not be asked to remain with his administration will be notified by Thanksgiving.

Snyder said he also hopes to meet with the City Council to review goals and learn what residents told them during the campaign.

"I want to create a plan of what we can do quickly, and they will be a part of that," he said, adding he also hopes to sit down with Velazquez at some point to facilitate a smooth transition.

One top priority, he said, will be to begin discussions on modernizing city trash collection. Snyder proposed mechanizing trash pickup to make it more efficient and save money.

He also pledged last week to "do everything we can to make the University Center a success." The building under construction on Central Avenue was an issue of debate during the mayoral race. 

Snyder said, once in office, he will conduct a survey of the community about City Hall operations and to evaluate customer service. He has not determined how the survey will be conducted.

He also added that he plans on being a full-time mayor with no plans of hiring a deputy mayor.

"My office has run well for the last six months (while running for the mayor's office) and it will do well when I take office," he said of his mortgage business.

"No city in Indiana has the opportunities that we have here. There is so much we can do here to have a direct effect on jobs recovery," Snyder said.

"I will be the mayor for everybody. I want to make the people who worked so hard to elect me proud. I am not perfect. I will make mistakes. I am a listener. I want to listen to people," he said.







New Portage mayor-elect begins transition on the fly
Post-Tribune (IN) 
November 13, 2011

Jim Snyder’s life has gone from super busy to crazy super busy, literally overnight.

The new Portage mayor-elect had a roller-coaster, bittersweet Election Day on Tuesday, eventually ending in jubilation with his close victory over incumbent Mayor Olga Velazquez.

But hours earlier, Snyder was stunned to hear of the death of 19-year-old Ashley Burbee of Portage, who was killed that morning in a traffic crash on Indiana 49. Burbee was a volunteer in his campaign, and Snyder was asked to break the news to members of her family who were working at Portage polling sites for his election.

“It was very rough for them,” Snyder told me Friday morning at his Central Avenue office during a brief break in his busy schedule.

There, his phone is constantly buzzing or ringing. His list of office guests is growing. He’s already leaning on his mayor mentors for guidance. His receptionist, Amanda Lakie, is swamped with coordinating his future. And prayers are welcome, he often tells supporters.

But he loves it all, and he appears giddy at the task ahead of running this region’s third-largest city, beginning Jan. 1.

These days, Snyder is reassessing the city’s strengths, weaknesses and employees. By Thanksgiving, he plans on notifying any city employees who may not be retained after he officially gets into the mayor’s office.

“Otherwise, it’s not fair to them to drag it out for a long time,” he explained.

After months of rumors that Police Chief Mark Becker will be one of those fired or demoted employees, Snyder still maintains that Becker’s position is up for review along with other city workers.

A transition team has already been created, and no one on this team has a financial interest in city business, Snyder said.

“Each person is each going to be assigned a different department to help me make those important decisions regarding the evaluation of all department heads,” said Snyder, who has hit the ground running.

“(Former) Mayor (Doug) Olson brought me to reality, telling me the day after election that he had five months to plan his transition and I have only six weeks,” he said. “But we’re humbled and excited.”

His broad goal over the next four years is to get as many Portage residents into city government as possible.

“There’s no city in Indiana with the opportunities as this city,” he said while donning a suit jacket to leave his office. “I feel we have a good plan in place.”

All of Snyder’s efforts and energy were focused on getting elected, he said, up until Wednesday morning when he started looking to Jan. 1.

“Hopefully in the next couple of years, people of this city are going to say that I meant what I said and I did what I said I would do.”

He has his critics, and they will surely keep close watch of his actions, decisions and campaign promises. And so will I.

And across the county line ...

Gary Mayor Rudy Clay routinely calls the mayoral position in his city the “toughest mayor’s job in the country,” and I don’t doubt it.

But regardless of what you think about the city, its leaders and its past reputation, you have to admire and appreciate the new buzz since Karen Freeman-Wilson was elected mayor.

Yes, she faces a daunting task. And yes, that buzz may fade when things settle down. But I find it refreshing for my hometown’s residents to once again have an opportunity to believe in something more tangible than rusted promises.

From a columnist’s standpoint, I’m looking forward to writing about this renewed attempt to change the city’s reality and, almost as important, its perception from outsiders.

I certainly don’t wear rose-colored glasses with this issue, but it would be nice to focus on a new vision for realistic change.

Listen to Jerry’s new radio show “Casual Fridays” on Fridays at noon on WLPR 89.1-FM or www.thelakeshorefm.com.







Snyder picks transition team, begins evaluations
Times, The (Munster, IN) 
November 13, 2011

PORTAGE -- Just days after his victory in the Portage mayoral race, James Snyder has begun to put together a transition team he says will help him evaluate and offer advice in decision making prior to taking office Jan. 1.

Snyder, a Republican, defeated incumbent Democratic Mayor Olga Velazquez last week by 238 votes in a sometimes contentious race for the city's top seat.

Jim Fitzer, a retired NIPSCO official, will head the transition team, Snyder said. Additional members will be Dave Fagan, a former Republican Portage City Council member and financial secretary for the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150; Susan Kelly-Johnson, a local attorney and member of the city's Redevelopment Commission; and Dave Kasarda, director of the Portage Township YMCA. Snyder said he intends to appoint a fifth member to the committee, but the individual has not yet committed.

He said he also is drawing on advice from Valparaiso Mayor Jon Costas, former Portage Mayor Doug Olson and Marion Mayor Wayne Seybold.

"They will help me evaluate each department head and each department," adding it is not his intention at this point to "clean house" of present city employees.

"It is my priority not to be emotional, but to also be firm," he said.

Police Chief Mark Becker became an issue during the election. Snyder said he has not decided whether he will ask Becker to continue to serve.

He does, however, believe the police chief should be a resident of the city. Becker lives in Union Township.

"The police chief should go through what we go through on a daily basis," he said.

The same residency requirement may not have to be met for other department heads. Portage Fire Chief Tom Fieffer lives in Chesterton.

"We will take it on a case-by-case basis," Snyder said.

He did not hint last week as to which department heads may be asked to stay or leave. He said those department heads who will not be asked to remain with his administration will be notified by Thanksgiving. Snyder said he also hopes to meet with the City Council to review goals and learn what residents told them during the campaign.

"I want to create a plan of what we can do quickly, and they will be a part of that," he said, adding he also hopes to sit down with Velazquez at some point to facilitate a smooth transition.

One top priority, he said, will be to begin discussions on modernizing city trash collection. Snyder proposed mechanizing trash pickup to make it more efficient and save money.

He also pledged last week to "do everything we can to make the University Center a success." The building under construction on Central Avenue was an issue of debate during the mayoral race. Snyder said, once in office, he will conduct a survey of the community about City Hall operations and to evaluate customer service. He has not determined how the survey will be conducted.

He also added that he plans on being a full-time mayor with no plans of hiring a deputy mayor.

"My office has run well for the last six months (while running for the mayor's office) and it will do well when I take office," he said of his mortgage business.

"No city in Indiana has the opportunities that we have here. There is so much we can do here to have a direct effect on jobs recovery," Snyder said.

"I will be the mayor for everybody. I want to make the people who worked so hard to elect me proud. I am not perfect. I will make mistakes. I am a listener. I want to listen to people," he said.






Redevelopment panel payments spawn dispute
Times, The (Munster, IN)
December 1, 2011
http://infoweb.newsbank.com

PORTAGE -- What is normally a quiet meeting turned contentious Wednesday as a Portage Redevelopment Commission member balked at funding the Portage Economic Development Corp. and paying for a marketing flier.

Member Susan Kelly-Johnson, former president of the PEDCO board who resigned from the organization about a year ago, criticized PEDCO's operations and proposed budget for 2012.

The Redevelopment Commission annually supports the economic development group. This year, PEDCO requested a $73,975 contribution, the same level as in two previous years.

Kelly-Johnson said she would only support providing funding for the first quarter of the year because executive director Bert Cook is leaving the post after serving less than a year.

Kelly-Johnson said PEDCO should come back in January after the new city administration is in place and request additional funding. Kelly-Johnson is also a member of Mayor-elect James Snyder's transition team.

"I have a lot of concerns," Kelly-Johnson said about the group's proposed budget and operations.

PEDCO President Diane Thalmann said it was important to have full funding in place to attract a new director. Thalmann said an interim director will be chosen quickly and a search for a new director will begin soon.

Cook said he is leaving PEDCO to return to his old job as director of the Greater LaPorte Economic Development Corp.

The full budget request was approved 3-1 with Mayor Olga Velazquez and members Allen Ekdahl and Ed Gottschling voting in favor.

Kelly-Johnson also objected to spending $2,505 of commission money on a marketing piece involving the University Center. The piece was mailed shortly before the mayoral election in November and became an issue in the election.

Kelly-Johnson said the commission never saw or approved the document before it was sent and that the document was not an advertising piece for the higher education facility.

Velazquez said the marketing piece was requested by the universities who will offer classes in the center next year in an effort to attract students.

The claim eventually was approved by the same 3-1 vote.







Portage mayor-elect begins forming administration
By Joyce Russell joyce.russell@nwi.com, (219) 762-1397, ext. 2222 
NWI Times
Dec 3, 2011 


PORTAGE | With four weeks to go before taking office, Mayor-elect James Snyder is beginning to put his new administration in place.

There are some old names that will be returning to City Hall.

A.J. Monroe, who served as the city's planner under the Sammie Maletta and Doug Olson administrations, will remain to work with Snyder. The mayor-elect has chosen Monroe to serve as the city's director of public works, replacing Craig Hendrix.

"A.J. oversaw, from the planning side, some of the greatest expansion in the city of Portage. It is a privilege to have him," Snyder said.

Gregg Sobkowski, who serves on the Board of Works and as attorney for the Redevelopment Commission, was named as city attorney, replacing Ken Elwood. Sobkowski also served as city attorney for the Olson administration.

Amanda Lakie, Snyder's secretary at his mortgage business, will be Snyder's administrative assistant, replacing Norma Laboy.

Snyder said he also has decided to retain Don Slawnikowski as the plant division superintendent for the Utility Service Department.

Snyder said he has not made any other decisions concerning personnel but hopes to have his administration put in place by the time he takes office Jan. 1.

"My goal is not to make rash decisions but to make strategic decisions," he said, adding he is looking at a balance of "continuity and change" when making personnel decisions.

"We are also looking at the city budget and finding savings where we can. We are making sure we are fiscally sound next year," he said.

Snyder said he is working with a committee to choose a new police chief. Thus far, he said, he has received between six and nine applications for the position. Those applications have come from within the department's ranks. Police Chief Mark Becker is not among the applicants.

Snyder said he is looking at all other city departments but has not made any decisions.

"We are not going to trade quality for speed," Snyder said, adding that personnel changes will give him an opportunity to restructure City Hall.

"The first part is finding out who is going to be where. The second part is finding how to structure City Hall to be the most efficient and responsive to meet residents needs," he said.

He and his staff have adopted a motto — "Excellence and Efficiency" — for city employees for 2012, he said, and signs will be posted in City Hall and "every police car and firetruck" to remind employees of their responsibilities.







Becker resigns top police post
By Joyce Russell 
NWI Times
Dec 7, 2011 


PORTAGE | What likely would have been a routine City Council meeting Tuesday night gave way to farewells.

In a letter read by Mayor Olga Velazquez, Police Chief Mark Becker announced he would resign his post effective Dec. 17.

Becker told Velazquez in the letter that incoming Mayor James Snyder had informed him Nov. 28 that Becker would not be a candidate for police chief in Snyder's administration.

Becker, a former FBI agent, was out of town Tuesday and did not attend the meeting. Assistant Chief Larry Jolley was appointed interim chief effective Dec. 17.

Tuesday likely was the final council meeting for Velazquez, longtime City Council members Ed Gottschling and Richard Turnak and one-term councilman Steve Sonaty. Gottschling and Turnak were defeated in the May primary, and Sonaty was defeated last month in the general election.

"I want to thank the residents and citizens," Velazquez said. "We accomplished some great things."

Velazquez, who presented plaques to outgoing councilmen and outgoing Clerk-Treasurer Donna Pappas, said the job as mayor has been "extremely rewarding." Velazquez defeated Pappas in the May mayoral primary.

Director of Public Works Craig Hendrix, who will not continue with the Snyder administration, also gave his goodbye.

"I'm really proud of what we've done and what this administration has done," he said.

Velazquez, who choked back tears, said, "I commend you for the dedication to this city. I thank you for the partnership. It has been wonderful."

Turnak, who served 20 years on the council, and Gottschling, who served 16 years, said their tenure and service to residents had been a privilege.

"Mayor Olga has done more for this city than we had done in a long, long time," said Turnak, adding he will be back.

"I may stop by once in a while because I'm a citizen now," he said.







Portage Police Chief Becker resigns
Post-Tribune (IN) 
December 7, 2011

PORTAGE — City Police Chief Mark Becker will resign his post effective Dec. 17. Last week, Becker was informed by Mayor-elect Jim Snyder that he will not be considered for the position in Snyder’s administration.

On Nov. 28, Snyder informed Becker he was starting to interview candidates for the chief position and Becker would not be granted an interview.

Becker submitted a letter of resignation to Mayor Olga Velazquez that will go into effect at midnight Dec. 17. Assistant Police Chief Larry Jolley will serve as interim chief for the rest of the year.

Becker became chief of police after 32 years at the FBI, including serving as an original member of the Gary Response Investigative Team.

In preparation for the selection of a new chief, Becker provided a summary of department activity over the past four years, including goals and accomplishments.

Becker thanked Velazquez for her leadership and for the opportunity to serve as chief.

“I thank you and those I worked with for all the support that I have received, and I wish the city of Portage continued success,” Becker said in a statement.







Snyder continues to make administrative appointments in Portage
By Joyce Russell joyce.russell@nwi.com, (219) 762-1397, ext. 2222 
NWI Times
Dec 16, 2011 


PORTAGE | Mayor-elect James Snyder continues to make appointments to his administration, announcing Friday the retention of two department heads and the return of two others.

Steve Charnetzky will return as street and sanitation department superintendent. Charnetzky served in the position for 16 years. He left the post in December 2007 after losing to Mayor Olga Velazquez in that year's May mayoral primary.

"Steve was there for 16 years and had done a good job. He has been most efficient in the role of superintendent," Snyder said about the appointment.

Charnetzky will replace street superintendent Chuck Haskell.

Also returning to the city will be Sherry Smolar as superintendent of the utility service department's billing office. Smolar served in that position under former Mayor Doug Olson. She is replacing Joan Sobczak.

"When she was at the water reclamation job, she did very good work," Snyder said of Smolar.

Snyder said he is retaining Utility Department Field Superintendent Bob Dixon and Fire Chief Tom Fieffer.

"I am very grateful to have all four of them agree to serve in my administration," Snyder said.

Snyder said no decisions have been made about police chief and parks department superintendent.

Previous appointments made by Snyder were A.J. Monroe as director of public works, Don Slawnikowski as utility department plant superintendent, Gregg Sobkowski as city attorney and Amanda Lakie as his administrative assistant.







11282011 - News Articles - Portage Police Chief Mark Becker resigns










Becker resigns top police post
December 07, 2011 1:00 pm
NWI Times
By Joyce Russell http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/porter/portage/becker-resigns-top-police-post/article_9b6ac157-5954-5cd9-ba8f-c94e71007fc5.html

PORTAGE - What likely would have been a routine City Council meeting Tuesday night gave way to farewells.



In a letter read by Mayor Olga Velazquez, Police Chief Mark Becker announced he would resign his post effective Dec. 17. Becker told Velazquez in the letter that incoming Mayor James Snyder had informed him Nov. 28 that Becker would not be a candidate for police chief in Snyder's administration.

Becker, a former FBI agent, was out of town Tuesday and did not attend the meeting. Assistant Chief Larry Jolley was appointed interim chief effective Dec. 17.

Tuesday likely was the final council meeting for Velazquez, longtime City Council members Ed Gottschling and Richard Turnak and one-term councilman Steve Sonaty. Gottschling and Turnak were defeated in the May primary, and Sonaty was defeated last month in the general election.

"I want to thank the residents and citizens," Velazquez said. "We accomplished some great things."

Velazquez, who presented plaques to outgoing councilmen and outgoing Clerk-Treasurer Donna Pappas, said the job as mayor has been "extremely rewarding." Velazquez defeated Pappas in the May mayoral primary.

Director of Public Works Craig Hendrix, who will not continue with the Snyder administration, also gave his goodbye.

"I'm really proud of what we've done and what this administration has done," he said.

Velazquez, who choked back tears, said, "I commend you for the dedication to this city. I thank you for the partnership. It has been wonderful."

Turnak, who served 20 years on the council, and Gottschling, who served 16 years, said their tenure and service to residents had been a privilege.

"Mayor Olga has done more for this city than we had done in a long, long time," said Turnak, adding he will be back.

"I may stop by once in a while because I'm a citizen now," he said.









**********





























Thursday, November 24, 2011

11242011 - News Article - Former city official close to plea in mortgage fraud



Former city official close to plea in mortgage fraud
Post-Tribune (IN)
November 24, 2011
The former director of Gary Community Development appears ready to plead guilty to federal charges that she took part in a mortgage fraud scheme that reaped almost $200,000. 

According to a motion filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court in Hammond, Jacquelyn Drago - Hunter said she is close to reaching a plea agreement with federal prosecutors. The government filed a response Wednesday, also saying they believed a plea deal was likely. 

However, prosecutors said in the same filing that they still want the trial for Drago - Hunter ’s co-defendant, Philip Rucker, to start as scheduled on Dec. 5. 

Rucker and Drago - Hunter both face charges of wire fraud, and Drago - Hunter faces additional charges of aggravated identity theft. According to a federal indictment, the two worked with co-defendants Jerry Haymon and Sheila Chandler to sell homes for far more than they were worth and to pocket the extra value by filing fake liens against the property. 

Drago - Hunter , who was suspended earlier this year, months after charges were filed, from her position with Gary Community Development, took part in the scheme by using her position with a title company to forge signatures on closing documents to hide the scheme from the banks and the people selling the houses. 

Rucker, a former Gary reserve police officer, is accused of recruiting buyers for the scheme, according to documents filed in the court. 

Haymon, who owns Priced Right Construction and K&L Reality, pleaded guilty in the case earlier this week, and Chandler pleaded guilty earlier this year. 

Drago - Hunter asked in her filing to delay her trial, which is scheduled to take place along with Rucker’s, because of the plea deal. Because of this, the government has asked to separate her from Rucker, saying it did not want to delay his trial. 

“The government has twice prepared for trial and believes it will potentially be prejudiced if the case is postponed again,” the filing says. 

Prosecutors argue in the filing that the criminal acts charged took place three to four years ago and that another delay won’t help witnesses in trying to remember details. 

Monday, November 21, 2011

11212011 - News Article - April 16 trial set in Portage murder case



April 16 trial set in Portage murder case
NWI Times
November 21, 2011 - 12:00 pm
http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/porter/portage/april-trial-set-in-portage-murder-case/article_4e8f6d06-55b1-5e5f-82c2-be1f18aa98fe.html


Fredrick Cashner. Photo provided by the Porter County sheriff's department.

VALPARAISO - An April 16 trial has been set for Fredrick Cashner Jr., who is accused of killing his estranged wife by firing at least eight bullets into her body with a high-powered semiautomatic rifle.

Porter Superior Judge Roger Bradford set aside a week for the trial and scheduled a March 26 hearing to address last-minute issues.

The case had been set to go to trial the first week of November but was derailed at the request of defense attorney Paul Stracci, who said he would not be available.

Stracci told the court Monday he had just received a packet of evidence sought from prosecutors and did not have time to determine whether it includes everything he requested. If anything is missing, he said he would file a motion to complete the request.

He had requested the release of statements made by Cashner. He also sought access to the crime scene and any evidence collected, a long list of witness statements, search warrants, cellphone records, autopsy and other lab reports, and E911 call recordings.

Cashner, of 371 E. Tratebas Road in Jackson Township, has pleaded not guilty to the single charge of murder, which carries a potential sentence of 45 to 65 years in prison.

Cynthia Cashner, 50, was found dead April 24 on an air mattress after police received a 911 call about 10:25 p.m. from the Mystic Moon Herbal Shoppe, 5830 U.S. 6, Portage, which she owned.

Dispatchers reportedly heard faint breathing on the line and nothing else, though on second review, detectives later heard a male voice in the background say, "It's too late," followed by three or four gunshots, police said.


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

11162011 - VIDEO - Bond Denied For Man Charged In Murder Of Amanda Bach



[IN] Bond Denied For Man Charged In Murder Of Amanda Bach 
Nov 16, 2011


11162011 - VIDEO - Bond Denied For Man Charged In Murder Of Amanda Bach



Bond Denied For Man Charged In Murder Of Amanda Bach 
CBS News – Chicago IL
November 16, 2011 - 6:33 PM
chicago.cbslocal.com/2011/11/16/bond-denied-for-man-charged-in-murder-of-amanda-bach/"/bond-denied-for-man-charged-in-murder-of-amanda-bach




[IN] Bond Denied For Man Charged In Murder Of Amanda Bach- Nov 16, 2011

VALPARAISO, Ind. (CBS) – Bond was denied on Wednesday for Dustin McCowan, the man charged with killing 19-year-old Amanda Bach in September.

As CBS 2’s Roseanne Tellez reports, McCowan, 18, has been charged with first-degree murder and has been held without bond since he was charged on Sept. 19, two days after Bach’s death.

His attorney, Bob Harper, had sought to have the judge in the case set bond for McCowan, claiming prosecutors "jumped the gun" by charging him without any physical evidence linking McCowan to the murder.
McCowan’s parents didn’t want to talk on camera after Wednesday’s hearing, but said detectives "should be ashamed of themselves."
Judge William Alexa denied bond, however, and after Wednesday’s hearing, Bach’s family gave a brief statement saying McCowan is exactly where he deserves to be.

"Today justice was set forth for Amanda through the bond hearing. Our daughter Amanda can never seek justice for herself, so it’s our duty to seek justice for Amanda. I’m confident that justice will soon be served," her father, William Bach, said.

The courtroom was packed during the hearing and the sight of McCowan arriving in his orange jumpsuit had many of his relatives in tears.

During the hearing, prosecutors provided the first public look at the evidence in the case and the three things that place McCowan in the area where Bach’s body and car were found.

Investigators used GPS technology to track McCowan’s cell phone to the area near where Bach’s body was found between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. on Sept. 17. Authorities believe she was killed between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. on Sept. 17.

Detectives also said that blood hounds traced McCowan’s scent from his house to where her body was found, about 300 feet away from the McCowan home in Union Township.

Also, prosecutors said that an eyewitness claimed he saw McCowan walking in the same area around the time of the murder on the main road between the store where Bach’s car was found abandoned and McCowan’s home.

The witness claimed he’s 100 percent certain McCowan is the young man he saw in the area at 2:30 a.m. on the morning of Bach’s death.

All the while, the lead detective said McCowan was texting friends that he was at home.

Detectives also found it odd that McCowan told them he was the last to see Bach alive and, within hours of her disappearance, told friends she was probably dead.
McCowan’s father, a police officer, reportedly has told police that he is missing a gun. Prosecutors said the bullet that killed Amanda is the same type of bullet that was in the mising gun.
McCowan’s trial has been set for the week of Jan. 30, but that could change.
 

11162011 - News Article - Bond denied to 19-year-old in Bach slaying



Bond denied to 19-year-old in Bach slaying 
NWI Times

November 16, 2011 - 5:45 pm
nwitimes.com/news/local/porter/portage/bond-denied-to--year-old-in-bach-slaying/article_9eaf1189-a93e-5f4b-80a0-0355e1ac434c







VALPARAISO - On the night 19-year-old Amanda Bach was slain, former boyfriend Dustin McCowan spent nearly three hours text messaging a neighbor claiming to be wrapping up chores at his Union Township home before coming over to visit.

Yet, McCowan never showed up at the neighbor's home and a trace on his cellphone placed it not only at his house, but also at the nearby sites where Bach's body and her vehicle were found, Porter County police Capt. Jeff Biggs said during a bond hearing Wednesday.

A police bloodhound also tracked McCowan's scent to where Bach's body was found about 300 yards from McCowan's home on Canadian National Railway Co. property, Biggs said. Bach's scent also was tracked back to McCowan's house.

A motorist driving in the area during the same early morning hours of Sept. 16 told police he saw a "Justin Timberlake-looking kid" walking along the road, whom he later identified as 19-year-old McCowan after McCowan's arrest photo appeared in newspapers, Biggs said.

Porter Superior Judge Bill Alexa decided that this and other evidence was enough to continue holding McCowan without bond on a charge of murder.

McCowan repeatedly shook his head following the ruling, as family and supporters of the McCowan and Bach families looked on from the tight security of the packed courtroom.

"I think they jumped the gun," defense attorney Bob Harper said of the case against his client.

Yet Biggs told the court that after investigating the case for the past two months, collecting 90 pieces of evidence and interviewing up to 150 people, nothing points to anyone but McCowan as being responsible.
Other revelations to surface Wednesday include McCowan's father and Crown Point police Officer, Joseph Elliott McCowan, telling police a .38-caliber revolver is missing from his home and ammunition for that weapon appears to match the bullet taken from Bach's body.
McCowan also told others early on in the investigation that Bach, of Portage, probably was dead and had told a friend in the past that if he ever needed to dispose of something, he would do so at the same place where Bach's body was recovered, Biggs said.

Bach's father, Bill Bach, was pleased by the outcome of the bond hearing.

"I'm confident justice will soon be served," he said.

McCowan, who is believed to be the last person to have seen Bach alive, left on a planned trip to Bloomington after the girl went missing and her vehicle was found abandoned outside Dean's General Store on Ind. 130 in Wheeler.