"This arrangement was satisfactory for a period of time, but has now been determined impermissible by the Indiana State Budget Agency," says John Davis. Davis concluded Rhoad's contract did not violate the state's conflict-of-interest law because Rhoad was not on the state payroll when he negotiated the terms of his employment. Since the State Budget Agency would not allow the travel and lodging compensation for Rhoad, the FSSA could resolve the problem by making Rhoad a contract worker not covered by state employee pay rules, Davis wrote.The contract at issue here was the direct result of the need by FSSA to honor their end of an employment agreement."
As the AP informs us, "Davis signed and dated his memorandum the day after Rhoad, Davis and Roob signed a contract that would have paid Rhoad's private company up to $2 million over two years for Rhoad and two other employees to provide consulting work, including the duties of agency CFO." A first year law student could offer more sound legal advice than Mr. Davis.
Look at what they are writing about you Governor: "Disclosure this week of both contracts has drawn criticism from outside the Daniels administration as a sign of the cronyism and the wasteful spending that Daniels had campaigned against while running for governor two years ago." This is not good. Please stop the bleeding.
Gary
ReplyDeleteCan you help explain what is the reason this contract is not being looked into for criminal misconduct? Isn't it similar to a case that our current prosecutor went after recently, giving leverage to Daniels to talk about how corrupt his then opponent's adminstration was? It seems it shouldnt be so one sided with criminal prosecutions and politics shouldnt be part of the equation.
FSSA gets a lot of federal funding. It's possible the feds are looking into it, even if the local prosecutor is not.
ReplyDelete