Department of Administrative Services
This is an unknown, secret entity, but
the source of the most hits to the
website where this was originally
posted:
http://newswire.indymedia.org/en/2005/10/825416.shtml
So someone is actually there, at
DAS.gov, but this is the only evidence
we have that someone at least uses their
computer, at DAS, for internet access.
State Ethics Commission:
This entity is lacking a definition because there
isn't anyone in the entire State who is eligible to be a member of the
Commission - that being the definition of "Corrupticut." The last person
they hired lied on his resume, and was referred by the Governor's office.
The Governor's Chief of Staff was caught in a lobbying/fundraising violation the
same week.
No one
knows where the Ethics Commission is,
except for the actual ethics commission
members who spend all their time
persecuting each other and having
illegal closed-door meetings to conspire
about how they will skewer their own
commission co-members. One of the
conspirers (Maureen Regula) replaced the
fired Sarah Gibson as "principal
attorney" of DCF New Haven.
Therefore the new Ms. NH-DCF Fraudulence
was appropriately placed, according to
the State of Corrupticut.
See
also
Administratium or "Revolving Door
Policy" ("These
312 particles are held together in the
nucleus by a force that involves the
continuous exchange of meson like
particles called morons.")
Former Ethics Board Director Plofsky Files
Fed Suit
By JON LENDER The Hartford Courant
May 22 2006, 11:45 AM EDT
Former state ethics chief Alan S. Plofsky, who two months ago won a state
appeals board's ruling that the former State Ethics Commission fired him in
2004 without reasonable cause, is claiming unspecified compensatory and
punitive damages in a federal lawsuit filed Monday against eight former
members of the now-defunct ethics board.
Plofsky has been reinstated to state employment since May 12, at his former
salary of about $120,000, in the consumer protection department of Attorney
General Richard Blumenthal's office. But that position is not equivalent to
his former managerial job as executive director and general counsel for the
old state ethics panel and does not comply with the appeal's state
Employees' Review Board's March 31 reinstatement order, Plofsky said in the
lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Hartford.
The old ethics commission was abolished by the legislature in 2005, the year
after the crippling controversy that resulted in Plofsky's ouster, and has
been replaced by the reconstituted Citizen's Ethics Advisory Board and the
Office of State Ethics.
Plofsky was fired in September 2004, in proceedings later ruled to be marred
by illegal secrecy, when subordinates alleged misconduct in his operation of
the office.
The Employees' Review Board also ordered Plofsky receive about $200,000 in
back pay and benefits for the 18 months he was unemployed.
"I believed that ... the state would move expeditiously to fairly settle
this matter. Regrettably just the opposite has been true," Plofsky said
Monday. He said he had been "forced," in effect, to take the current job by
administrative services commissioner Linda Yelmini, "the same person who
played a central role in violating my due process rights."
He added: "My attorney's attempts to negotiate a settlement of this matter,
at a cost to the state far less than what it will have to expend to litigate
my lawsuit, have been rebuffed. Unbelievably, the state now seems to be
preparing to squander millions of dollars in taxpayers money in an attempt
to defend my illegal firing and the trampling of my constitutional rights."