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All Muck is Local: Help Wanted
Ramona Cunningham's job was to help unemployed Iowans. Instead, she and other executives of the Central Iowa Employment and Training Consortium (CIETC) are charged with stealing millions of taxpayer dollars targeted toward the effort. That may seem an egregious crime. But really, who better to teach wayward job seekers how to seize opportunity when it comes?
Cunningham was the chief executive officer at CIETC, a non-profit that used to be the primary state-funded job training organization in central Iowa. During its heyday, it ran on millions in federal, state, and local grants. But a state audit in the spring of 2006 revealed that between $1.3 and $1.8 million in taxpayer funds designated to train unemployed Central Iowans were instead used to inflate the salaries and bonuses of the three top CIETC executives. Cunningham's salary during the 30 months that public money was being pilfered was $795,384, three times that of Iowa's governor. Four CIETC officials were indicted and two have pleaded guilty.
Besides dipping into public funds, Cunningham went on trips to casinos across the state with favored CIETC employees who drank and gambled during business hours, time they claimed to be working. CIETC workers also skipped all or part of out-of-town training conferences to gamble in Las Vegas, Reno, St. Louis and Kansas City. All of those activities took place during times when government paperwork showed that the employees were working. One employee, who prosecutors characterized as Cunningham’s favorite, made more than 100 workday gambling trips between 2003 and early 2006 (if his co-workers who testified are to be believed). Victor Scaglione said he felt that the trips were kosher because he felt compelled by Cunningham to participate (and don't good employees always listen to management?). He will serve 16 months in a halfway house and home confinement for lying to the grand jury during its investigation of the misused funds.
The 2006 audit also described a too-close-for-comfort relationship between CIETC and the government agency that was supposed to oversee it, Iowa Workforce Development. And it seems that while CIETC workers enjoy gambling, IWD workers enjoy dumping boxes of potentially incriminating documents in the trash at 4:30 in the morning.
One month after The Des Moines Register reported that Cunningham's precipitous fall had led her to a job in a Farmerville, LA nursing home, while living in a house owned by fellow CIETC defendant Dan Albritton (she faced foreclosure on her home because of more than $7,500 in missed mortgage payments), she reportedly attempted suicide. The account was challenged by Cunningham’s neighbor, who was convinced that Cunningham was “too happy to be depressed” and that her hospitalization was actually for pneumonia, but the AP reported that doctors judged it a suicide attempt.
The suicide attempt, real or not, may not draw the judge's sympathy. Judge Ronald E. Longstaff already declined to postpone a November hearing because Cunningham's lawyer, William Kutmus, said he could not contact his client, who was in 24-hour care at a mental hospital. Now Kutmus is saying Cunningham is currently mentally incompetent to stand trial for 30 counts of various forms of fraud, conspiracy and obstruction, scheduled for February 2007. A hearing is scheduled for December 17th.





Unless we humans are diligent at behaving ethically, we fall very easily into a lemming mentality. And though I risk sounding naive in saying this, most of us have been taught to look at our leaders as role models, especially in civic life.
I know the culture of corruption predated the Bush Administration, but it has reached heights that I have never seen before in my lifetime. The trickle-down theory of economics may be bunk, but corrupt behavior trickles down very effectively.
If you see enough leaders being corrupt--and barely suffering penalties from their corruption--those less diligent about their ethics take on a "Why not me, too?" mentality that leads to stories like this.
Since the Cheneys and Wolfowitzes of the world don't publish how-to manuals (at least not that I know of), the Cunninghams of the world try their hand at corruption without expert guidance and ultimately make a hash of it. But the damage they've done along the way isn't repaired by fines or even jail time.
Cunningham and her cronies should be judged by the number of people who didn't receive the job training they should have, because of their greed and venality. The problem is--and will likely remain to be--that it's the low-level corruption lemmings who'll get caught and prosecuted, not their role models.
December 9, 2007 1:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
The magnitude of unethical conduct and outrageous corruption the bu$h administration has brought to our government will take decades to wash out of the system.
These kleptomaniacs hate government, the only use for it that they have is the feeling of entitlements that they are permitted to rob the government bone dry of ever dollar and penny till none is left.
After they stuffed their pockets with taxpayer's money - so that they are about to explode, then they will say, see - I told you the government is broken and can't be fixed.
Our children and grandchildren will be sacrificing to payoff the debt from this Neo-Con heist of self enrichment.
December 9, 2007 10:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
You'd think by now conservatives would start to notice that all the operations that have been privatized are riddled with scandal, embezzlement and fraud (by conservatives I mean the voters not the perpetrators).
In addition, it seems to me the taxpayers' money has never been squandered with so little return for as long as I can remember.
December 10, 2007 3:52 AM | Reply | Permalink
To Republicans government is a tool for fleecing the gulls, rigging the markets, or tormenting enemies -- nothing more.
A Republican in office is like a pedophile in kindergarten; the Wisdom of the Market tells him, "Go wild."
December 10, 2007 8:58 AM | Reply | Permalink
Bill Bennett will feature her as the hero of his next "Book of Virtues."
December 10, 2007 9:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
In all fairness, these were Democrats. We have a politically motivated Right Wing US Attorney in Des Moines. He has targeted several long time Democratic politicians in Des Moines. This one he seems to have hit gold on. He is prosecuting one other openly Gay lawmaker for "extorting" $2000 in a failed business partnership.
December 10, 2007 2:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
OK, let me get this straight.
Unemployed poor people are given the opportunity to get help and training, funded by the government that's there to support them. Three greedy people at the top of this particular chain take money from this fund to give themselves even higher paychecks.
You can't even make a metaphor that explains this kind of corruption better.
December 10, 2007 3:59 PM | Reply | Permalink
TPM - look into the non-profit agencies that have federal mandatory status. lots of waste on the top of those also.
December 10, 2007 4:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
Isn't it ironic that the politicians espousing the government is a waste of tax payer dollars are the first to waste our taxes on their personal welfare.
December 11, 2007 12:02 AM | Reply | Permalink