Monday, April 29, 2024
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Monday, April 29, 2024

Milwaukee Press Club 'Excellence in Wisconsin Journalism' 2020 & 2021 Award Winners

Milwaukee City Attorney Tearman Spencer Trashes His Harassment Accusers

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“Buckle up because this is just beginning.” – Milwaukee City Attorney Tearman Spencer

Milwaukee City Attorney Tearman Spencer trashed the employees who have accused him of harassment on talk radio Monday, accusing them of “crying wolf” and “conspiring” against him, implying several times that he was being targeted because he’s black and ousted a long-term incumbent.

“So often do we see now people blowing the whistle, saying that someone is raping them, robbing them, etc., and mainly minorities, and only to find out someone is crying wolf to get the police out to kill them,” said Spencer, a close ally of U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Milwaukee). “I think we need to have something in place when we find that individuals blew that whistle falsely, they should be held accountable for that instead of tarnishing someone’s reputation and character.”

Spencer added, “Buckle up because this is just beginning.”

Radio host Sherwin Hughes asked, “So why can’t you just fire everybody?” Rather than pledging not to retaliate against the accusers, Spencer replied, “unfortunately, not. They have civil service protection.” He added that he was told he could pick his own deputy city attorneys, though, but claimed the city “hindered and stifled me” from doing so.

Harassment – and retaliation – are banned by the city’s anti-harassment policy, but the city investigators found that, as an elected official, Spencer isn’t bound by it.

Hughes raised the fact that Spencer is Milwaukee’s first black city attorney; Spencer responded, “I knew it was coming…It’s not the first time they accused an African-American elected official of impropriety with females or the like. That’s right out of the playbook. Attorneys in the office think they can cry wolf.”

Spencer, who claimed he’s the one working in a “hostile environment” despite the numerous claims against him, also lied on the radio that he was “exonerated” of “any wrongdoing.” In fact, the city’s report did not make a conclusion on the harassment allegations, saying that the city’s anti-harassment policy did not cover Spencer because he is an elected official. It also alleges of Spencer, “Some comments he admitted making, some were made to lighten the meeting/conversation with humor, and some comments or actions he did not recall.”

Some aldermen are trying to change it so elected officials fall under the city anti harassment policy, although we’ve previously reported they already have the power to remove Spencer for cause under state law, were they so inclined. The report did find, in a separate conclusion, that investigators did not find that “adverse employment actions were taken because of gender.”

The December 2020 report, which we received via an open records request from the city, says: “At least six (6) employees have individually complained about Mr. Spencer, and there are several others who have witnessed the behavior. Among such concerns are several incidents of potentially offensive/discriminatory verbal comments and behavior, as well as one incident of unwelcome physical contact with a female colleague.” The complaint said: “One female employee reported that she was physically touched on her body by Mr. Spencer.” Read the report and details on the accusations here.

The report says: “Several employees expressed a strong fear of retaliation, even though the employees have Civil Service job protection.” It adds, “The person with the most power in this situation, City Attorney Mr. Tearman Spencer, needs to understand the role he plays, and the culpability belonging to him in key City Attorney office changes as well as in the potential costs to the city.”

Hughes has a show on 101.7 the Truth, a new radio station targeting black listeners. Hughes is a former Jim Doyle appointee who has worked for Tom Barrett, John Kerry, and Lena Taylor.

Spencer, who has been city attorney for a year after ousting long-time respected incumbent Grant Langley, stressed he was “deeply disappointed” that the city released the harassment investigative report against him to the public, while also claiming his office is transparent in the same interview.

Hughes declared himself “a little disturbed” by the news coverage, telling his listeners that the accusations were “alleged by a colleague in the office that there was some harassment going on.”


The Tearman Spencer Harassment Accusers

According to the report, there are multiple accusers, and at least one of the incidents was witnessed by two other lawyers. They didn’t file filed a formal complaint because they feared retaliation, but the investigation included interviews with 19 people.

Spencer cast the harassment claims as part of a widespread conspiracy against him by 16 people in his office and some aldermen who “didn’t want the change” and were “attached” and loyal to Langley, the incumbent he ousted a year ago.

What changes has he sought? The Milwaukee Police Association’s leader has expressed grave concern that Spencer is too quick to settle and admit wrongdoing in cases involving police officers, potentially wrecking their careers and costing taxpayers millions of dollars (including in a case where the man shot had a gun and the officer was acquitted). Police don’t believe that Spencer is acting as their attorney, which is partly his role.

Spencer promised to “always make judgment on the side of righteousness” and said he was “trying to be more inclusive.”

He claimed that “folks not wanting that change, they had to get together and figure out a way to disrupt that,” claiming he was the one who faced a “hostile environment.”

He said that subordinates were immediately “disrespectful, disgruntled” and that he knew “something was coming down five or six weeks in. Sixteen or so odd attorneys in the office were going to come together and do this with just what you see right now,” he said.

He said he took precautions not to meet with people one by one.

He said that a male attorney named in the report and “a group of others conspired and colluded” into “how they’re going to get me out of there. That’s the key.”

Hughes told Spencer, “You subjected yourself to an investigation which I didn’t even think was warranted in the first place” and questioned why personnel records were released, to which Spencer declared himself “deeply disappointed” by the release.

“Now that they set the tone, they opened the floodgates” on releasing personnel information, Spencer claimed.

He did say, “Everyone deserves not to be harassed. We should always investigate.”

He expressed concern that the city releasing the records could make them “liable,” calling the decision “selective.”

In fact, we spoke to a local employment attorney, Alan Olson, who told us the city is opening itself up to liability by NOT protecting the employees alleging harassment. The city is now on notice and has an obligation under federal and state law to protect its employees from harassment in the workplace, he said, strongly criticizing the city’s statement that Spencer didn’t fall under its anti-harassment policy.

That doesn’t remove the city’s duty to protect its workers, he said. The city did suggest a series of changes to practices in Spencer’s office, such as holding focus groups and more training, but Spencer wrote in an email that he didn’t think the city had the right to do so, as he is an elected official.

“An employer has a duty to maintain a workplace free of retaliation and discrimination and harassment,” Olson said. “It’s pretty absurd to suggest the city doesn’t have a responsibility to protect employees from the city attorney.”

Hughes also claimed that attorney-client privilege could have prevented the records from being released. “You’re looking at it totally right,” Spencer said, alleging, bizarrely, that the harassment allegations against him might “extend a little further into work product. We don’t have to disclose our work product.”

He said the city allowed the “veil to be pierced.”

Spencer singled out long-time aldermen Michael Murphy and Nick Kovac for criticism. He claimed the conspiracy against him was a “collective effort. Those at City Hall don’t want that change.”

In the interview, the city attorney said he wanted to reduce the costs of police misconduct, protect protesters’ first amendment rights, diversify his office, and make the office “more equitable when enforcing policies.”

Tearman Spencer Accusers

The report alleges in part,

“During a virtual meeting on or around April 28, 2020, Mr. Spencer asked men about their heights and told females that question was just for the men; in that same meeting, Mr. Spencer referred to female employees as dear, sweetheart and/or sweetie. Mr. Spencer also remarked about one female staying home to be with family and noted that being with children is the most important thing she could do.”

“During a virtual meeting on or around August 13, 2020, Mr. Spencer asked males about beards and females about their families.”

“In various meetings or conversations, Mr. Spencer called women over-emotional, smiley, having a nice smile, telling women they looked nice and commented on women’s looks or bodies/body parts.”

“In a virtual meeting including City Attorney employees and others outside of the City Attorney’s office, Mr. Spencer stated that ‘women like to be fashionably late.’”

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Wisconsin Pro-life Groups Tell Supreme Court There’s No Right to Abortion

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s pro-life groups are unified in telling the Wisconsin Supreme Court it is not the court’s job to create a right to abortion.

Wisconsin Right to Life, Wisconsin Family Action and Pro-Life Wisconsin all filed a joint brief with the court that argues there is no right to abortion and add that if there is to be one, that decision is up to lawmakers.

“The Supreme Court is not the proper venue to create health and safety law nor the proper mechanism to add a constitutional amendment. The legislature is the proper body to weigh the policy considerations and create law, not the court,” Wisconsin Family Action president Christine File said.

“Finding a right to abortion in our state constitution, where there clearly is none, would be the most extreme form of legislating from the bench,” Dan Miller, state director at Pro-Life Wisconsin, said. “The U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled in Dobbs that there is no federal constitutional right to abortion. Nothing in Wisconsin’s constitution or the history of our state would remotely suggest such a right. We implore the Wisconsin Supreme Court to reject Planned Parenthood’s radical and self-serving plans.”

Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin in February asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court to decide if there is a right to abortion in the state.

The Supreme Court has accepted the case, and the filing from Wisconsin’s pro-life groups is in response to that case.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty also filed a brief in the case.

“There is no right to an abortion in Wisconsin’s Constitution. No judge, justice, or lawyer should be creating policy for Wisconsinites out of thin air. Reversing Roe v. Wade through the Dobbs decision rightfully placed the abortion issue back where it should have been all along – in the halls of state legislatures,” WILL Deputy Counsel Luke Berg said. “That’s where the debate and conversation must remain.”

The court is expecting responses from everyone involved in the case by today. The court has not said when it expects to hear oral arguments.

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Prosecutors Begin Laying Out Case Against Trump to Jury

Federal prosecutors on Monday began laying out what they say is election fraud in 2016 by former President Donald Trump.

Trump, 77, is the first former U.S. president to be charged with a felony. Prosecutors and defense attorneys presented their opening statements to the jury of five women and seven men.

Prosecutors said Trump corrupted the 2016 election, The Hill reported on Monday.

"This case is about a criminal conspiracy and a cover-up," Manhattan prosecutor Matthew Colangelo said. "The defendant, Donald Trump, orchestrated a criminal scheme to corrupt the 2016 election, then covered it up."

Trump will spend four days a week in court in New York for the next six to eight weeks on state charges that he disguised hush money payments to two women as legal expenses during the 2016 election. Judge Juan Merchan has not scheduled trial days on Wednesdays.

On Monday, his defense attorneys said he had done nothing wrong.

"President Trump is innocent," Trump attorney Todd Blanche told the jury. "He did not commit any crimes. The Manhattan district attorney's office should never have brought this case."

Trump pleaded not guilty in April 2023 to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.

Merchan's gag order remains in place, ordered last month before the trial began. Trump, the nation's 45th president, is prohibited from making or directing others to make public statements about witnesses concerning their potential participation or about counsel in the case or about court staff, district attorney staff or family members of staff.

Prosecutors said Trump's $130,000 payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels was falsely covered up as a business expense, that the money was to help keep her quiet. Prosecutors say they had a sexual encounter.

Prosecutors also said Trump paid Karen McDougal, a Playboy magazine "Playmate," and reimbursed then attorney and fixer Michael Cohen to cover it up.

"This was a planned, coordinated, long-running conspiracy to influence the 2016 election, to help Donald Trump get elected through illegal expenditures to silence people who had something bad to say about his behavior," Colangelo said. "It was election fraud, pure and simple."

Reuters reported that Blanche countered that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg should have never brought the case to trial.

"There's nothing wrong with trying to influence an election" Blanche said. "It's called democracy. They put something sinister on this idea, as if it's a crime."

Prosecutors say Trump falsified internal records kept by his company, hiding the true nature of payments that involve Daniels ($130,000), McDougal ($150,000), and Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen ($420,000). Prosecutors say the money was logged as legal expenses, not reimbursements. In a reversal of past close relationships now pivotal to the prosecution against him, both Cohen and Daniels are expected to testify.

Under New York state law, falsifying business records in the first degree is a Class E felony that carries a maximum sentence of four years in prison.

Even if convicted and sentenced to jail, Trump could continue his campaign to return to the White House. He's facing the Democratic incumbent who ousted him in 2020, 81-year-old President Joe Biden.

Trump faces 88 felony charges spread across four cases in Florida, Georgia, New York and Washington.Trump has said the criminal and civil trials he faces are designed to keep him from winning the 2024 rematch versus Biden.

Waukesha County DA Declines Charges in Brandtjen Campaign Finance Case

(The Center Square) – Another local prosecutor declined to bring charges against a Republican state lawmaker in a campaign funding raising case.

Waukesha County’s District Attorney Sue Opper said she would not file charges against state Rep. Janel Brandtjen. But Opper said she is not clearing Brandtjen in the case.

“I am simply concluding that I cannot prove charges against her. While the intercepted communications, such as audio recordings may be compelling in the court of public opinion, they are not in a court of law,” Opper said.

Wisconsin’s Ethics Commission suggested charges against Brandtjen and a handful of others in a case that investigators say saw them move money around to allegedly skirt Wisconsin’s limits on campaign donations.

Opper said the Ethics Commission investigation was based on “reasonable suspicion and then probable cause.” But she added that those “burdens are substantially lower than proof beyond a reasonable doubt which is necessary for a criminal conviction.”

Opper said the Ethic Commission could pursue a civil case against Brandtjen and the others. She also opened the door to other investigations.

“This decision does not clear Rep. Brandtjen of any wrongdoing, there is just not enough evidence to move forward to let a factfinder decide,” Opper said.

She’s the fourth local prosecutor in the state to decide against filing charges.

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Brad Schimel Says He Won’t Repeat Mistakes of Last Supreme Court Race

(The Center Square) – Judge Brad Schmiel says he’s not going to repeat the mistakes of the last supreme court race in Wisconsin.

Schimel told News Talk 1130 WISN’s Jay Weber he isn’t going to politicize the race like liberal Justice Janet Protasiewicz, and he’s not going to ignore his campaign like former conservative Justice Dan Kelly.

Schimel said he can run for the court next year without injecting Republican politics into the court.

“I've had plenty of people on our side that suggested ‘Brad, you just got to do the same.’ No. I cannot do that,” Schimel said. “We still have to respect the rule of law. We still have to respect the Constitution. We still have to respect judicial ethics. I'm not going to go out and promise people what I'm going to do. But I will promise people that they can look at my record, and they know that I've done the right thing. That I have put the law above politics. I put the law above my own personal opinions.”

Republicans roundly criticized Protasiewicz for her comments about abortion and Wisconsin’s state legislative maps during the 2023 campaign.

Republicans also roundly criticized former Justice Dan Kelly, who lost to Protasiewicz, for his perceived lack of campaigning.

“We couldn’t have put a brighter, more reliable conservative on the Wisconsin Supreme Court than Dan Kelly,” Schmiel added. “But, with the campaign there were some mistakes that were made.”

Chief among them, Schimel said, was Kelly’s decision to reject money from the Wisconsin Republican Party that could have gone toward TV ads.

Schimel said that left Kelly at a huge disadvantage.

“Janet Protasiewicz took almost $10 million from the state [Democratic] Party. Dan took the money too late. He realized ‘Oh my gosh, I'm going to get burned on this.’ By the time he took it the best ad buys were gone, and he wasn't able to spend the money effectively,” Schimel said. “He spent $585,000 on TV. That was what his campaign spent. Janet Protasiewicz’s campaign spent $10.5 million. When you are out-spent 20-to-one on TV, you better just start writing your concession speech.”

Schmiel vowed not to be outspent this time around.

“I have made it clear. I will take all legal, ethical contributions to my campaign because we have to win,” Schimel said. “Because we have to stop standing on this hill of principle that we end up dying on.”

Defund NPR

Multiple Bills Introduced in Congress to Defund NPR

Several U.S. House Republicans introduced multiple pieces of legislation to defund National Public Radio following new allegations of “leftist propaganda” from the taxpayer-funded news source.

House Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good, R-Va., Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., and Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., introduced similar legislation to prohibit federal funding for NPR, including barring local public radio stations from utilizing money from federal grants to “purchase content or pay dues to NPR.”

Over the years, Republicans have made multiple attempts to defund NPR, citing similar complaints. The latest outrage follows an editorial from former NPR Editor Uri Berliner, who criticized the news source claiming it had "lost America's trust."

Berliner criticized NPR’s coverage of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, the COVID-19 lab leak theory and of Hunter Biden's abandoned laptop as examples of the outlet’s left-leaning bias. He described “the most damaging development at NPR: the absence of viewpoint diversity.”

Banks took aim at NPR’s new Chief Executive Officer Katherine Maher, who has expressed criticism of the First Amendment in efforts to combat “misinformation.”

“NPR’s new CEO is a radical, left-wing activist who doesn’t believe in free speech or objective journalism. Hoosiers shouldn’t be writing her paychecks. Katherine Maher isn’t qualified to teach an introductory journalism class, much less capable of responsibly spending millions of American tax dollars,” said Banks.

The Indiana congressman continued by describing the news outlet as a “liberal looney bin” under prior leadership, drawing attention to a systemic problem.

“It’s time to pull the plug on this national embarrassment. Congress must stop spending other people’s hard-earned money on low grade propaganda,” Banks lamented.

Good was a bit more reserved in his take-down of the news outlet.

“It is bad enough that so many media outlets push their slanted views instead of reporting the news, but it is even more egregious for hardworking taxpayers to be forced to pay for it. National Public Radio has a track record of promoting anti-American narratives on the taxpayer dime,” Good said in a news release. “My legislation would ensure no taxpayer dollars are used to fund the woke, leftist propaganda of National Public Radio.”

Tenney, a former newspaper owner and publisher, accused NPR of using taxpayer funds to “manipulate” and promote a political agenda controlled by “left-wing activists.”

"I understand the importance of non-partisan, balanced media coverage, and have seen first-hand the left-wing bias in our news media. These disturbing reports out of NPR confirm what many have known for a long time: NPR is using American taxpayer dollars to manipulate the news and lie to the American people on behalf of a political agenda. It’s past time the American people stop footing the bill for NPR, and the partisan, left-wing activists that control it," Tenney said in a news release.

The lawmakers cited the political make-up of the NPR’s D.C. news team, which they say includes 87 registered Democrats and no registered Republicans.

The Center Square uncovered records showing that Maher exclusively donated to Democratic political candidates before her role at NPR. Her largest donation of $1,500 was given to Virginia Congressman Tom Perriello in 2017, and most frequently donated to Virginia state Sen. Jennifer Carroll Foy, in the amounts of $25 over nine times.

Good underscored the original purpose for the publicly funded news outlet, which he says was “created to be an educational news source and to ‘speak with many voices.’” He added that NPR has now become “a primary outlet for advancing biased and radical media coverage of political and social issues.”

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