<html><head></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space; ">Scott said:<div dir="auto"><blockquote type="cite"><div><div id="divtagdefaultwrapper" dir="ltr" style="font-size: 12pt; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: Calibri, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><p style="font-size: 12px; ">I'm working on a news article titled 'The Public Trial of John Sakowicz'. As you may know, he's running for a seat on the Mendocino County Public Broadcasting board of directors. If you have any information about Sako you'd like to state on the record, please respond here.</p></div></div></blockquote></div><div>Thank you Marianne and Scott,<div><br></div><div>Well, Scott, you got my attention. "The Public Trial of John Sakowicz" is a perfect title leaving room for comment from all sides while appealing to John's love of the limelight. <div><br></div><div>The topic came up for me when a friend of John's asked me to please remove some articles about John from my web site (<a href="http://Greenmac.com">Greenmac.com</a>). These articles go back to 2009 when John was doing a popular show on KZYX called "The Truth About Money." At that time Manager John Coate was fine with John Sakowicz. Several critics challenged John's credentials in print and challenged KZYX's promotion of him. </div><div><br></div><div>One of the critics was Beth Bosk and I included her work in my 2009 web article "Vetting John Sakowicz."</div><div><br></div><div>So a few days ago, I decided to write to Beth and ask her what she thought I should do. She wrote back, bruskly, "My attitude toward John Sakowica has changed. Take it down." </div><div><br></div><div>Normally I would only take something down if I thought it was flase. </div><div><br></div><div>Is there something false here? Or is this all a political game? Once a distrusted friend of management; now a hero of the oppostion. Beth changed her mind, so erase it.</div><div><br></div><div> In my opinion John has done some useful things for the people side of KZYX, and like the rest of us, he has to live with his past. I think he can do it.</div><div><br></div><div>Long live KZYXtalk!</div><div><br></div><div>--King Collins</div><div> Yes I was once a member of the board, back in ancient revolutionary times (2003 - 2005) when there was a "board minority" made up of more than one person.</div><div><br></div><div>So here's what was said back in 2009, at the beginning of John Coate's 8-year reign at KZYX.</div><div><br></div><div><div><div>* * * *</div><div>((Excerpted from <a href="http://www.greenmac.com/hiddenAgenda/Issue7/index.html">http://www.greenmac.com/hiddenAgenda/Issue7/index.html</a>))</div><div><p align="left"><strong>Vetting Sakowicz</strong>:</p><p align="left"> Mr. Sakowicz and whether he is or is not some kind of con man is <em>not</em> the main issue. The main issue, in my opinion,
is whether the board/management of our radio station is ever to become a
transparent (honest is a word that might be used here) organization.
The <em>Media Forum</em> has followed the transparency issue since 2005. The current board and management of KZYX are not interested in even <em>trying to be</em> transparent in a meaningful way.</p><p align="left">Questions about Mr. Sakowicz and
his character are not resolved by the confidence expressed in him by Mr.
Coate or anyone else in the management of KZYX because, by policy and
inclination, they do not intend to let us know what is really happening.
<em>That </em>is the issue, and until community media finds a way to be
transparent and stops rejecting obvious solutions, the responsibility for such matters as vetting Mr. Sakowicz
falls to those who have the energy to find out for ourselves. --King Collins</p><p align="left">Here's some of the material sent to the <em>Media Forum</em>: </p>
                         <blockquote><p align="left">Beth Bosk, <em>New Settler </em><a href="http://www.greenmac.com/hiddenAgenda/Issue7/Bosk-KZYX.html">editorial "Beforeward" on KZYX and John Sakowicz</a>. It's a very interesting article. </p><p align="left">((For other articles go to the web site.))</p><div>* * *</div><div>Here's Beth's contribution:</div><div><br></div><div><h2 align="center"><strong>New Settler Editor, Beth Bosk<br>
O</strong><strong>n KZYX and John Sakowicz</strong><strong><br>
</strong></h2><p><em>This is an editorial published in the July, 2009 edition of </em>New Settler Magazine<em>.
I have not called Beth to ask for permission to put this up, yet. I
will call her but I don't think she'll mind. Beth was also at the recent
(July) meeting of the KZYX board. The financial crisis and the layoff
of Christina A. were the big topics at that meeting. I watched a video
of the meeting on-line. Beth was eloquent and irrepressible. Things are
not going well, folks. More info about the meeting soon, I hope. Just
got a call from Zac Zackary who says that meetings are taking place on
the coast around the current situation at the Philo station.</em> </p><p><em>At the end of this piece Beth says: "I'm looking for folks
who want to move KZYX away from its top-down, turf-driven corporate
structure towards a round-table approach to programming and management."
</em></p><p><em>I'm definitely going to give her a call. KC 7-13-09.</em></p><p><em>The Editorial by Beth Bosk:</em></p><p align="center">* * *</p><p>I'm going to start with a story about Judi Bari. </p><p>When Judi's car was bombed in Oakland and she, immediately
blamed by the Oakland police and FBI, then taken, barely conscious, to
the jail unit of a local hospital where she was shackled; the call went
out for a 24 hour a day vigil at the hospital. So many folks from
Mendocino County answered that call, broadcast and updated daily on KZYX
(almost 20 years gone by, only two seasons on the air) that the FBI
came to the station and told manager, Sean Donovan the station would
lose its new license if it broadcast any information about Judi Bari and
Darryl Cherney other than that Provided in FBI releases.</p><p>This really happened. A memo was attached to the large glass in
the studio, prohibiting updates from activists in Oakland and any calls
to assemble at the vigil, a vigil that in effect was keeping Judi safe
and alive.</p><p>I was the sole public affairs programmer at the station; a DJ
called me when the Memo went up and asked me what should be done: a new
phone update had just come in from Earth First!.</p><p>"Tear it down," I told the programmer. "That's prior
restraint"- a phrase I had picked up less than a fortnight before. "They
can't redact what you say before you say it."</p><p>That was the end of FBI interference with the tremendous outpouring of support for Judi.</p><p>KZYX/Z General Manager John Coate has gone rooting in the FCC
rule book and arbitrarily discontinued opportunities for listeners to
call into the morning public affairs shows with announcements of
quick-reaction rallies and actions, requests for communiques to
government agencies relevant to the issues that are always stunningly in
our faces, and often enough alleviated by local outcry.</p><p>The great loss is access to the Monday morning Reality Show,
But there have been secondary consequences: the dullness of one voice
sing-songing a list of scheduled events to elevator music. Another is an
insidious reduction in open line contact with the guests and hosts of
the public affairs programming. It began last year with the closure of
the lines to "The Truth About Money," where there has been no
opportunity to either probe or challenge John Sacowicz's wild claims of
say, teleconferencing with the Obama Economic team during the Transition
period--or anything he says about himself--and no opportunity for
locals to engage in brief dialog with his guests. The reasons for
closing of the lines changed as Sakowicz moved from Jay Johnson's Ukiah
Valley studio to the Philo quarters with lines galore. What hasn't
changed is the listeners remain locked out. </p><div> <br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><p>When I sit down and write this story for New Settler, it will
be cast as a modern day morality tale: as to how one benighted charlatan
vaulted up the progressive media ladder. And how there began to develop
a pivotal construct: the ethically opposite responses to the same
sensational information re: John Sacowicz by the two most crucial of the
alt-media swept up in his scams.</p><p>Two regional media: one a weekly lifestyle tabloid; the other a 24/7 public radio station with an hour slotted for local news.</p><p>One media, entrepreneurial. The other, non-profit, member supported.</p><p>One compiled by a seasoned, understaffed joumalist. The other
managed by a GM with no prior radio experience, who got the job at the
urging of his buddy, a member of the KZYX/Z Board of Directors; its news
department passed into the hands of a fool who came to the station a
complete stranger, and was given unitary power over the local newscast.</p><p>When I called Gretchen Giles, the editor of the North Bay
Bohemian, to tell her I was working on a story of how it was that a con
man (John Sakowicz, in this case) could so swiftly rise up the
progressive media ladder--the Bohemian, Ukiah Valley TV, our
NPR-affiliate KZYXlZ (the bi-weekly morning program, promptly sprawling
into a nightly gig jawboning Wall Street with the news director); Free
Speech Radio, a post on the Institute for Public Accuracy, Al Jazeera.
Sirius Radio the latest tit-for-tat; The Colbert Report the next gleam
in his eye--without ever having Sakowicz's totally fabricated wealth and
work history seriously vetted. I informed Gretchen of the content of a
series of Boston Globe stories; AND--just as starters--the inconsistency
of Sacowicz's most recent job in Mendocino County as a corrections
officer at the Mendocino County jail, with his having founded and
managed a multi-billion dollar offshore hedge fund he was still claiming
extant. Gretchen Giles gasped, opened up her computer, went straight to
the search words that brought up the Boston Globe series.</p><p>In 1992, the Boston Globe published 12 articles involving
Sakowicz; beginning with his nine month volunteer stint as the associate
director of a Massachusetts state Republican fundraising group called
Commonwealth Business Council, where his task was to shake down minority
vendors doing business with the state, as well as solicit donations
from business executives with promises of access to Weld administration
officials from lists provided by the Republican governor's staff.</p><p>John Sakowicz worked those many months as a full-time volunteer
for the fund raising operation with the expectation of a paying job
when it was over. One article reported a Letter of Recommendation
(written months before the scandal broke) in which two state Republican
leaders "praised Sakowicz's fund-raising to a Colorado businessman who
was hiring fundraisers for a Republican candidate for the US Senate."
This was one of four recommendations from top ranking state Republicans
John accrued for his search for a paying position. It was only when no
job came of it, that Sakowicz opted for the notoriety as a "whistle
blower" and himself went to the Boston Globe.</p><p>Frank Philips the chief investigative reporter dug further and
found a $20,000 civil suit filed in Baltimore; several fellow investors
in an investment club claimed Sacowicz had embezzled $20,000. Sakowicz
admitted to the embezzlement charges, and excused himself by telling
Phillips, he was a cocaine addict then. "Back when I was an active
addict, I had no moral judgment," the Boston Globe reports Sacowicz
saying. "That was 10 years ago. Since that time, I have asked for a lot
of people's forgiveness ... My credibility as a person in recovery is
strong, unshakable."</p><p>It is during this period of "unshakable recovery" while he was
immersed full-time in volunteer work (two years all-told, counting the
year in the office of the governor's chief secretary, from which he was
ousted) that Sakowicz now claims in his several lnternet profiles, that
he was co-founding and managing Battle Mountain Research Group, a
multibillion dollar offshore hedge fund headquartered in the Grand
Caymans.</p><p>But it was also the decade Sacowicz/Sacowitz was masquerading
as a gay man with HIV AIDs (which he has done several times since, for
monetary gain); in this case, the Boston Globe reported Sacowicz
disappeared a $12,000 grant for a special housing program for people
living with AIDS. Sakowicz claimed he used the money to set up a network
of privately owned "safe houses" whose owners took in homeless AIDs
patients. The lawyer who did legal work for the social service agency
where Sakowicz was hired as shelter director, told the Globe "he was
never able to give any accounting for the funds."</p><p>What is on the record is a job as a motel desk clerk on the
east coast, a campgrounds manager at Pikes Peak, and a jailer in
Mendocino County. It appears that for much of his adult life, John
Sakowicz has been often a vagabond and near broke.</p><p>The response of the editor of the North Bay Bohemian to the
Boston Globe series was shock and outrage: immediate recognition of how
her experience connected; an openness and a willingness to organize the
always scarce resources of the regional press in tandem. To disclose
this information about a columnist whose career she'd unwittingly
launched.</p><p>Doing so while working her way through the blocks and filters of a media chain.</p><p>While Arcata attorney, Steve Schectman, John Sakowicz's new
co-host on "The Truth About Money"--and non-disclosed business associate
in a recently registered LLC bond fund, Templar Advisors; the papers
were registered from Schectman's law offices, the same address as
Vicilla, LLC: the
forestland-conversion-into-large-marijuana-farms-with-bulldozers limited
liability corporation Schectman formerly served as president and chief
legal officer-until his partner, the son of a former Humboldt County
Supervisor, was indicted by the feds.</p><div> <br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><p>Schectman barraged Giles with insinuations of a SLAPP suit (the
sole purpose of a Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation is to
chill citizens, often journaiists, from exercising their
Constitutionally protected speech; punishing those who have done so:
chilling further reportage: often characterizing it as libel or Malice
or Gossip) if she so much as dropped John Sacowicz as a columnist. For
without the prestige of the North Bay Bohemian to point to, Sacowicz and
Schectman would lose their foremost media platform, the underpinning of
the business plan.</p><p>And they panicked when Gretchen showed signs of unraveling
Sacowicz's deceits. Not only was she checking backwards on his past
employment she was thrusting forward, contacting the IPA, this most
prominent of Progressive Speakers bureaus. </p><div> <br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><p>From his Washington, D.C. office, IPA communications director
Sam Hussein told Giles: "We didn't do a background check. He's a
self-nominated expert; most on our roster come to us through
recommendations, People who knock on our door are an extreme minority. I
checked with [IPA founder] Norman Solomon and he had words for praise
for The Bohemian. I sent a few of Sakowicz's articles to economists for
the content--is this guy saying reasonable things? They said, yeah, he
was." </p><div> <br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><p>Gretchen Giles is a seasoned, understaffed journalist who has a
staff of 1 1/2 employees. Her Nexis/Lexis was reduced to California
searches. How she knitted together an investigative team is its own
movie. More than anyone, Gretchen Giles knows how reflective of the
state of journalism in this nation is this morality tale. She's the
editor of a weekly tabloid that covers two counties. She supplements the
work of her "staff" with rotating columnists with engaging writing
styles about matters their resumes appear to verify. The Boston Globe
set five investigative reporters loose on their multi-part series
investigating the Commonwealth Business Council scandal in 1992. And
now, all those desks are empty.</p><p>If you want local news in newsprint these days, you got to go
to the regional tabloids, Hank Sims up in Humboldt County behind the
editor's desk at North Coast Journal, me in my virtual log cabin, Bruce
Anderson and his new Columbia School of Journalism trained reporter.</p><p>What you are going to get in a lifestyle tabioid these days is a
combination of good blogging, and knowledgeable columnists doing news.</p><p>That's how, a benighted charlatan and a crafty lawyer launched a
clever business plan while passing themselves off as the next flavor of
The Power of the People ready to Lead the Assault on the Bastille (in
their own words) How Sakowicz vaults up the progressive media ladder.
Along his way acquiring gullible, but well-placed and stubborn cohorts.
How that rise up the media ladder, that comfort zone created in the
minds of progressive audiences, becomes the crucial element for an edgy
(potentially) multi-billion dollar, offshore, western-centric,
Muslim-like bond fund.</p><p>John passed himself off to the editor of the Bohemian as a
Sonoma County hedge fund manager, the former national sales manager for
futures and commodities at Dean Willer blah, blah, biah. He was full of
decisive Wall Street shop talk. Giles contracted him to write an
occasional column for a $100 honorarium. In exchange, John wanted a
Bohemian email address and his own Extension # on their phone. He had
the honorariums made out to his teen-age stepson who he passed off as
his intern, and to a "research assistant" who turned out to be one of
his daughters. By having the honorariums made out in their names, he
avoided providing the Bohemian with his Social Security number. Even
when the hunches tickled, Gretchen was unable to verify his past
employments.</p><p>As soon as Gretchen Giles understood the depth of Sacowicz's
deception she canceled the email account he had set up at the Bohemian,
cut off the extension he had insisted upon because (said he) SEC regs
prohibited him from using his office phone. She pulled all his past
columns from the Bohemian website. By persistent sleuthing, she
discovered his important international, hedge fund job at the United
Bank Switzerland was a stint as an "Unregistered Trainee": There's no
evidence he ever passed a necessary Series 7 test on first try ... Do I
have your attention. Request a copy of the much longer text in progress
at nsi@mcn,org. KZYX/Z General Manager John Coate refuses to allow this
story to be aired. I'm looking for folks who want to move KZYX away from
its top-down, turf-driven corporate structure towards a round-table
approach to programming and management. To read Gretchen Giles piece in
the Bohemian punch in <a href="http://www.bohemian.com">www.bohemian.com</a> Gretchen Giles 05.06.09 --Beth
Bask </p><div> <br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div>
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