Al's office has spent $631,509.13 on special counsel
to date for fiscal year 2013, according to documents from the finance
office. This has him handily beating his previous record of $525,478.94, set in FY 2010.
Special
counsel is brought in when the county attorney lacks the skills to
handle a case or has a conflict of interest. Sometimes it's due to laziness, or because
his staff has other priorities, such as cursing citizen
whistle-blowers and making up power points to justify their crappy legal
advice on the vacation rental issue. Other times, it's because the county attorney
and/or his boss — Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. — make really bad
decisions that result in extensive and/or protracted litigation.
In
Al Castillo's case, it's all of the above.
So
where is all that money going?
To
find out, I submitted a public records request to the County
Attorney's office for all the special counsel funding sought from the
Council since January 2013. I know the records exist in electronic
form. But rather than email me PDF files, Al insisted I pay $7 to
have his staff make photocopies of 18 pieces of paper, which I would
then have to review at his office in Lihue.
I'm
not sure whether Al was trying to pull a petty power play or throw up
a roadblock or both. But I got the information for free
elsewhere, and it speaks volumes about the sad state of this county.
The
biggest chunk — a whopping $211,000 this year alone — is due to
Al's handling of Councilman Tim Bynum's case against the county,
which could have been resolved long ago. But Al is weak, and afraid
to face the political fallout of a settlement. So instead he has
sought $111,000 to defend former Prosecutor Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho,
$50,000 to represent planning supervisor Sheilah Miyake and $50,000
to lawyer up the county.
When
you add the $211,000 for the first six months of this year to the
$75,000 requested last fall — $25,000 for each defendant — the
tab for special counsel in that case is now up to $286,000. Must be getting close to the county's insurance deductible.
Let's
see, what else? There was $15,000 to keep fighting the sex
discrimination case filed by Kathleen M. Ah Quin against the county
bus back when the agency was run by the mayor's gal Janine Rapozo,
who was transferred — go figger — to the human resources office.
Then
there was $20,000 for the police commission to challenge the mayor's
decision to suspend Police Chief Darryl Perry and Assistant Chiefs
Roy Asher and Ale Quibilan — in addition to the $45,000
requested last year.
And
let's not forget $25,000 to represent Officer Chris Calio, the cop
who shot an unarmed man on his roof when the police department was
essentially leaderless, with the top brass on mayor-ordered suspension.
Another
$44,944 was sought to represent the County Council in the
hostile workplace claim filed by Ron Rawls against County Auditor
Ernie Pasion “and related matters.” With the $15,000 from last
year, that brings us to nearly $60,000 in legal fees for that
office.
Al
also requested $61,000 so far this year to represent the county in
Jeffery Sampoang vs. Harvey Brothers, LLC: et al.; $36,000 in Ricky
L. Ball vs. Kaua'i Lagoons Resort Company, Ltd. (in addition to
$25,000 last fall), and $8,920 in Wayne R. Daniel v. Kodani
and Associates, Inc., et al., on top of $54,680 for that case from last fall.
Unfortunately,
most if not all of these cases remain unresolved, so the meter is
still running and the settlements have yet to be paid.
While
digging around, I was amused to find this reference in a Dec. 1, 2010 story on the Council's 6-1 vote — with Councilman Mel Rapozo
opposed — to reconfirm the mayor's appointment of Al as county
attorney:
County
Attorney Al Castillo will also keep his job. Castillo got the job in
March 2009, and since then the County Attorney’s Office has relied
less on outside counsel, a practice that can easily drain hundreds of
thousands of dollars from county coffers in a single litigation, he
said.
Indeed.
Not sure its fair to blame him for the County always getting sued. That more because of bad choices by the Mayor or the voters. The Council has to approve settlements. Is it their fault things keep dragging out? Furfaro should be screaming "Get these cases settled!" Do people still do mediation? Al serves the Council right? Or is it the Mayor?
ReplyDeleteTechnically, Al is supposed to serve the entire county. But it is quite obvious from his actions at Council that he serves the Mayor, who appointed him.
ReplyDeleteWhat a waste of money. Something is not right.
ReplyDeleteJoan - thank you for covering / exposing / investigating what TGI won't touch (or is incapable of touching). This comes down to a bad mayor. As the singer says, he's ultimately responsible. So, Mr. Singer, exercise that responsibility and stop wasting my money.
ReplyDeleteShay and her attorney Rich Wilson come to council and threaten. They say don't settle, give me more money so we can continue to screw Bynum. The councils says " what ever you say shay"
ReplyDeleteOkay, let's start wiht the Mayor. Who wants to run for Mayor?
ReplyDeleteAl was a good attorney but now he dances to the strings attached to him.
ReplyDeleteWho is pulling the strings? Puppet master please stand up to be recognized.
Who wants to run for Mayor?
ReplyDelete$120,000/year and all the gas you can steal.
is any information available about how much $$ other counties spend on outside counsel, as a percent of their budget...?
ReplyDeleteThe problem is that we lack Statesmen. Statesmen who are above petty feuds. Statesmen who speak artfully and use and understand nuance. Statesmen who are decisive and proclaim and defend their positions instead of kicking political cans.
ReplyDeleteStatesmen like, in contemporary history, Churchill, De Gaulle, Mandela, Golda Meir or Roosevelt.
Why would someone of that caliber spend their valuable time posturing on local tv here on Kauai where it's all about the show?
ReplyDeletefor some strange, gut reaction to all of this, i believe that Bynum was encouraged by Alfred and cohorts to file the lawsuit against Iseri-Carvalho, Miyake.
ReplyDeleteThe timing was perfect to bring more negative press for Iseri-Carvalho. Oh well, karma is a kicker!
Al the wizard conjuring up lawsuits to manipulate the voters? Bernard's opponents next year better watch out.
ReplyDeleteI'm an attorney, and I've dealt with Al and seen his work.
ReplyDeleteI can say, without question, that the council would get better advice from a 2nd year law student.
I think that he bends it the way the Mayor wants it and the heart of this problem lies in the Administrator...election time yet?
ReplyDeleteShay just needs to leave the island. She think she's someone on par as Queen Elizabeth. She's no one. Just someone whose riding on someone else's family name and nothing more, and did a sad job while in office but still thinks someone owes her something.
ReplyDeleteJoan, Let's remember Castillo only makes the request to the Council, but it is the Council that approves the money. The Council can also decide to setle any case that they want to settle.
ReplyDeleteThe mayor needs good and competent people around him ASAP,at least before campaign season begins - -or he will be doomed next year. He needs to get rid of the kings and queens of county.
ReplyDelete