Garofalo resignation imminent, mayor says
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Danette Goulet
Councilman Dave Garofalo is close to stepping down from his elected
position and may resign by Friday as the result of the district
attorney’s nearly two-year investigation, Huntington Beach Mayor Debbie
Cook confirmed Wednesday.
“As far as I know, Monday was his last meeting,” Cook said. “I think
he’s going to make an announcement on Friday.”
Two other council members said they had heard the same news of a
possible Friday resignation by Garofalo, but did not want to be named.
Neither Garofalo nor his attorney, Allan Stokke, could be reached for
comment.
Garofalo is facing possible felony charges and if convicted of those
charges would be barred from holding any public office.
Garofalo did make a comment at Monday night’s council meeting that
many feel was an indication of his impending resignation.
“He did make reference to ‘this could be my last official vote’ on
Monday,” Cook said, adding that he was oddly jovial.
In a related matter, before taping an “Our City, Our Issues” talk show
for HBTV-3 this week, Garofalo told Rich Barnard, the deputy city
administrator and station manager, that he had also withdrawn his bid for
a seat on the state Board of Equalization, which he had filed for in
November, Barnard said.
What Garofalo later said during the taping is unclear. Requests to
view the tape are being reviewed by City Atty. Gail Hutton and no
decision had been made by press time.
Garofalo has been scrutinized in investigations by the district
attorney’s office, as well as the Orange County Grand Jury and Fair
Political Practices Commission for nearly two years now over possible
conflicts of interest stemming from his business, David P. Garofalo &
Associates.
The district attorney has been investigating allegations that Garofalo
repeatedly voted on issues that affected the flow of advertising revenue
to his publishing business.
In July, the district attorney’s office filed court papers that
included an affidavit by investigators in which investigators report the
councilman failed to cite the source of more than $25,000 in business
income.
Investigators also report in the the court papers that Garofalo voted
200 times between 1997 and 2000 on issues that affected businesses that
advertise in the Local News, the annual Huntington Beach Visitors Guide
as well as the city’s Chamber of Commerce Business Directory -- all
publications that were owned by the councilman.
Investigators’ reports were based on interviews and information
gathered when search warrants in April allowed them to seize computer
equipment and files from Garofalo’s Main Street home, as well as a
SeaCliff Office Park publishing office and from Coatings Resource Co.,
owned by longtime friend Ed Laird.
Laird purchased the publishing rights to the city’s visitors guide
from Garofalo in 1998.
Investigators’ reports quote Garofalo declaring, during the June 19,
2000 council meeting, that he had “completely divested myself of any
responsibilities of any of the publishing businesses I built over the
past decade.”
“That includes any administrative issues including but not limited to
publishing, editing, designing, graphics, etcetera,” he said, according
to the papers.
His words, however, are at odds with statements made by Pat Rogers,
marketing director for the Huntington Beach Mall, investigators said.
Rogers told an investigator that on Nov. 27, 2000, more than five
months later, she received a phone call from Garofalo asking her to pay
the balance of $500 that the mall owed him for advertising in the
Visitor’s Guide.
Garofalo reportedly left a voicemail message for Rogers informing her
that he expected the Fair Political Practices Commission to clear him of
“everything” in the next two months.
Garofalo has consistently denied any wrongdoing throughout the
investigation since it began in June 2000, telling supporters he would be
vindicated.
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