Simon Offers Snafu 'Regret'
Politics: The candidate calls his mistaken
claim that the govener broke the law a 'sorry episode'.
A David aide asked, "Where's the apology?"
By MATEA GOLD and MICHAEL FINNEGAN
Los Angeles Times; October 11, 2002
Republican gubernatorial nominee Bill Simon, Jr.
expressed regret Thursday for accusing Gov. Gray Davis
of illegally accepting a political donation calling the
matter a “sorry episode” that has distracted voters
from the important issues of the race.
“I find it necessary to express to everyone my
sincere regret for the way this matter was handled,”
the GOP
candidate said during a speech to Town Hall Los Angeles
at a downtown hotel.
“Now many of you may have seen my latest
commercial, where I say I’m not perfect, and that’s
indeed true,” he added. “Now we know, of course, my
campaign is not perfect.”
Simon’s remarks were his first public
acknowledgment that he erred this week when he claimed
that a photo showed Davis taking a $10,000 check from a
police organization in his state office when he was
lieutenant governor. Accepting campaign donations in
state offices is a misdemeanor.
However, the photograph of Davis and the group’s
former executive director, Alfred Angele, was actually
taken at a private home in Santa Monica.
The candidate said he offered his regrets in the same
spirit in which he demanded an apology from Davis for
attacking Simon’s record during Monday’s
gubernatorial debate. But Simon stopped short of using
the word “apology.” And he maintained that he had
never said the photograph was taken in the lieutenant
governor’s office – even though on Tuesday he had
called the picture “proof” that the governor
violated the law.
“I never said that picture was what other people said
it was,” Simon told reporters after his speech. When
pressed on the matter, he added: “To the extent to
which I should have said ‘purported,’ I accept
that.”
Simon said he was eager to move on to other matters,
but the Davis campaign said the issue was not settled.
“Where’s the apology?” asked Davis campaign
strategist Garry South. “This man, a so-called former
prosecutor, stood in public before the state press corps
and called the governor a criminal and said he had
evidence to prove it. He owes the governor an apology
– not an apology to the people, but to the person he
defamed.”
The other man in the picture, Angele, held a new
conference Wednesday at the lavish house where the
picture was taken in January 1998. Surrounded by
television cameras in the foyer, the spot where the
photo
was shot, Angele demanded letters of apology from both
Simon and the police organizations for charging that he
had given Davis the check in the state capitol.
“I don’t understand why somebody didn’t pickup the
phone and at least call me and say, “Where was this
picture taken?” Angele said. Angele said he was
particularly incensed by allegations that he broke the
law, because he is a Davis appointee to the Board of
Prison Terms, where he holds sway over the sentencing of
prisoners.
Angele’s lawyer, Stephen Warren Solomon, told
reporters the house – then the home of developer Bruce
Karatz – was “392 miles from the lieutenant
governors office.” “This is a defamatory act,
accusing him of a crime,” Solomon said. “It was done
with reckless disregard of the truth, and we are
reviewing now a potential defamation suit against all
potential parties in this matter.”
He said Angele would wait a few weeks for letter of
apology before deciding whether to sue. “Unlike Mr.
Simon, we’re not going to jump and run,” Solomon
said.
The episode, occurring with just weeks to go before
the Nov. 5 election, has roiled Simon’s already
struggling campaign and astonished many political
strategists, who were dumbfounded at what they termed a
severe misstep.
On Wednesday, Simon campaign strategist Ed Rollins
acknowledged that the incident had caused the
businessman’s candidacy serious damage. “Some people
in our campaign thought this was a silver bullet,” he
told reporters. “I think it was a bullet. I think we
put it in the gun wrong. We shot ourselves in the
head.”
Rollins actually went further than Simon on Thursday,
offering his apology to the candidate and the governor.
“I apologize for being a part of something that
accused him of lawbreaking with no evidence,” Rollins
said. He added that the campaign would continue to
embrace the endorsement of the group that supplied the
picture: the California Organization of Police and
Sheriffs.
During his Los Angeles speech, Simon said he believed
COPS when its leadership told his campaign it had
evidence of illegal behavior by the governor. He said he
believed it in part because reporting the instance would
also implicate the group, and he noted that Davis’s
fund-raising practices have been questioned in the past.
Simon spokesman Mark Miner, meantime, said any legal
action by Angele would be “nothing more than a
frivolous lawsuit.”
“The information was provided by COPS in a
good-faith effort and turned out to be inaccurate,”
Miner said. “We admitted our mistake, and now we’re
moving on.”
Rollins, however, said the campaign is considering
writing a letter of apology to Angele.
The incident, which has upset Republicans and
demoralized Simon’s campaign staff, was initially seen
as a way fro the campaign to get on the offensive. Low
on money, Rollins said, the campaign had hoped that the
release of the photo would give Simon’s candidacy a
much-needed bump.
“We’ve been running on fumes,” Rollins said.
“When you’re sitting there with 4 or 5 million
dollars... and he’s got 21 [million] left and he’s
been hitting us with $30 million, we’ve go to do
things like this to stay in the game. We’re in
guerrilla warfare.”
Rollins said campaign officials didn’t have and
opportunity to verify the photo before the police
organization released it Tuesday, but went forward with
the charge because they were repeatedly assured by
members of the group that is was authentic.
“We’re not stupid,” Rollins said, adding that
the campaign asked about the veracity of the picture
scores of times. “In hindsight, we look stupid.”
Simon was not aware that the police organization was
going to release the photograph until Saturday, when his
advisers told him to ask Davis during Monday’s debate
if he had ever taken political money in a state office.
Rollins said the candidate did not ask them if they had
vetted the picture.
“I think we were so assured it was going to happen
the way we laid it out to be, he said, adding: “We
made some assumptions that obviously shouldn’t
have.”
After enduring four days of often-hostile questioning
about the photo, Simon said he was eager to move on onto
other matters. He vowed to spend the rest of the
election talking about such issues as the economy,
education and the state’s infrastructure.
“”In the last 26 days, I want to do my level best
to raise the dialogue in the campaign,” he said.
Solomon Saltsman & Jamieson are
attorneys practicing in the areas of ABC law, ABC
Appeals Board cases, and all related Land Use Matters
such as City and County Conditional Land Use Permits,
Variances, Police and Fire Permits, Entertainment Law,
Gaming Law, as well as Personal Injury litigation.
Solomon Saltsman & Jamieson can be contacted at
800-405-4222.
|