Lorrin Freeman District Attorney Wake County, North Carolina June 21, 2021

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lorrin Freeman District Attorney Wake County, North Carolina June 21, 2021 Lorrin Freeman District Attorney Wake County, North Carolina June 21, 2021 Dear Ms. Freeman, Common Cause North Carolina respectfully asks your office to investigate new eviDence we are providing with this letter inDicating possible significant violations of North Carolina campaign finance laws committeD by Louis DeJoy anD others connecteD to his former business, New BreeD Logistics. AttacheD is a DetaileD analysis anD memo by noteD campaign finance expert Bob Hall that outlines a Disturbing pattern of suspicious campaign contributions allegeDly orchestrateD by DeJoy. Our complaint fileD with the North Carolina State BoarD of Elections last September DiD not proviDe an in-Depth analysis of DeJoy’s state campaign contributions. AnD in your announcement in April that your office woulD not be opening up an investigation into DeJoy, you noteD that your review of state campaign finance reports “DiD not Disclose sufficient information to warrant a criminal investigation.” We request that you take another look given this new DetaileD analysis of state campaign contribution activities of DeJoy anD his former colleagues at New BreeD Logistics. Among the many finDings that stanD out in this new research are the fact that Dozens of New BreeD employees who had given little or nothing to North Carolina politicians suDDenly began making $1,000 anD larger Donations to Pat McCrory’s 2012 gubernatorial campaign; 54 executives anD three of their wives DonateD a total of $143,130. For 46 of the 54 employees, it was their first reportable contribution to a North Carolina canDiDate. As you are aware, it is against North Carolina law to funnel money into a campaign through “straw Donors” or to use company funDs to make political Donations. We believe the new evidence provided with the attacheD report is clear anD compelling anD shoulD be thoroughly investigateD. Sincerely, Bob Phillips Executive Director Common Cause North Carolina 919-836-0027 - [email protected] 1 MEMORANDUM To: Common Cause North Carolina From: Bob Hall, Voting Matters Inc. Date: June 17, 2021 Re: Louis DeJoy Campaign Finance Complaint This memo is accompanied by a two-page summary of campaign contributions and a 12-page spreadsheet listing more than 350 donations that are the basis of my findings. Recent news reports indicate the FBI is conducting an investigation into possible illegal campaign contributions that Postmaster General Louis DeJoy provided to federal political committees. David Young, a former executive at DeJoy’s High Point-based New Breed Logistics, told the Greensboro News & Record and other reporters that DeJoy gave company bonuses as repayments to employees who made campaign contributions to politicians selected by DeJoy. Based on the Washington Post’s confirmation of that allegation with other New Breed employees in a story published on September 6, 2020, Common Cause North Carolina filed a complaint with North Carolina’s State Board of Elections and asked it to conduct an investigation of possible illegal contributions by DeJoy (and his company) to non-federal NC candidates, PACs and/or political committees regulated by the State Board and state law. The State Board has not closed its review of the complaint, but it is disappointing to read that Wake County District Attorney Lorrin Freeman has decided there is no need for an investigation. An April 12, 2021, Associated Press article quotes Ms. Freeman saying, “Our review of what we believe to be pertinent, state campaign finance reports, did not disclose sufficient information to warrant a criminal investigation.” She said she made her decision around the end of 2020 and that it “does not cut off any potential federal investigation” of federal campaign contributions. Freeman’s office is responsible for prosecuting state-level campaign violations. Her decision, based only on the “information” that campaign finance reports “disclose,” appears superficial and misguided. It was apparently not based on interviews with New Breed employees and David Young, who had access to payroll records as DeJoy’s longtime director of human resources. Worse, her decision publicly undermines the value of the State Board of Elections conducting its own investigation since that agency relies on her office to pursue possible criminal violations. Furthermore, as someone who has researched campaign reports for many years, I believe a careful review of contributions by DeJoy and New Breed employees to state candidates demonstrates a compelling need for state agencies, not just the FBI, to conduct a comprehensive criminal investigation of felony campaign finance violations involving hundreds of thousands of dollars to North Carolina campaigns. I am providing this memo with the results of my research as documentation that may be useful to reaffirm the importance and urgency of the complaint filed by Common Cause North Carolina in September 2020. In a nutshell, the pattern of campaign contributions from Louis DeJoy and New Breed employees to the gubernatorial campaigns of Pat McCrory follows the same pattern of other company owners who have been found guilty in North Carolina of funneling money through their 1 employees to state candidates – for example, rest home chain owner Stephen Pierce of Kernersville and packaging company owner Rusty Carter of Wilmington, as well as video-poker operator Robert Huckabee who left the state before he could be prosecuted. In all these cases, (1) company employees or associates who had never or rarely made a state campaign contribution of over $100 suddenly made a $1,000 or larger contribution to a candidate; (2) they made the contribution on or about the same day as other employees who were also new donors; (3) they made the contribution to a candidate who also received the maximum amount from the company owner; and (4) the company owner funneled additional money to the candidate through family members, most likely using company money. Here’s how that scenario played out with Louis DeJoy, his family and 60 of his employees donating $300,000 to Pat McCrory’s campaigns, mostly in clusters of large donations, while those employees gave under $8,000 to other NC candidates or committees during 30 years. DeJoy moved to Greensboro in 1997 as New Breed expanded, and state campaign finance records show that the local employees he hired over the next decade, as well as those who transferred in from elsewhere, had virtually no interest in donating to North Carolina politicians. Only one future employee (Richard Wimmer, a CPA with Ernst & Young in 1997) had given a reportable contribution ($100 or more) to a North Carolina state candidate, PAC or party committee in the decade before 1998; Wimmer gave a total of just $425 from 1989 to 1998. From 1998 through 2007, only Wimmer and 5 other New Breed employees gave a reportable contribution in state politics – a combined total of just $1,660 over 10 years. Meanwhile, DeJoy and his wife Aldona Wos, who raised over $1 million for federal candidates Elizabeth Dole and George W. Bush in the decade after moving to North Carolina, gave a relatively modest amount to state candidates or party committees. From 1997 through 2007, records show DeJoy and Wos contributed $24,845 (about $2,000 a year) to state-regulated politics, with half of that going to local and state Republican Party committees ($13,650). See the spreadsheet for summary data from state campaign finance records. Things began to change in 2008. DeJoy and Wos each gave the maximum of $8,000 to Pat McCrory’s unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign in 2008, and DeJoy donated $34,000 to the NC Republican Party in June 2008 and another $13,500 in October, for a total of $47,500 to the NCGOP. After DeJoy and his wife gave their maximum to McCrory, 7 employees donated a combined $3,000 to the McCrory’s campaign, all on the same day – October 23, 2008. For all 7, it was their first donation to a NC candidate. Contributions from New Breed employees dramatically increased when DeJoy began raising funds for Pat McCrory’s 2012 gubernatorial bid. Wos became a co-chair of the campaign. Suddenly, dozens of employees who had given little or nothing to NC politics began making $1,000 and larger donations to the McCrory campaign. For the 2012 campaign, 54 New Breed employees (and 3 of their spouses) gave McCrory a total of $143,130. For 46 of the 54 employees, it was their first reportable contribution to a North Carolina candidate. A pattern also began in which maximum contributions were given by (or in the name of) three of DeJoy family members to Pat McCrory’s campaigns, on or about the same day, starting in 2 2011 and continuing until mid-November 2015, with each family member’s employer identified as New Breed. This pattern raises concerns about whether donations were made in the names of DeJoy family members and whether corporate funds were used to make them. A total of $39,300 went to McCrory’s 2012 and 2016 campaigns from Michael DeJoy, Frances DeJoy of Greensboro and Frances A. DeJoy of Cold Spring Harbor, NY – $13,100 from each family member in three payments of $4,000 in 2011, $4,000 in 2012 and $5,100 in 2015. In addition, Michael DeJoy and Frances DeJoy of Greensboro are listed as donating the maximum $12,600 to the federal Tillis Victory Committee on September 29, 2014, the same day that Louis DeJoy contributed the same amount. For just the 2012 McCrory campaign, Louis DeJoy, Aldona Wos and the 3 family members donated $37,717. Combined with the $143,130 from New Breed employees, the DeJoy network directly donated a total of $180,847 to Pat McCrory’s 2012 campaign, and the new governor showed his appreciation by appointing Aldona Wos secretary of the NC Department of Health and Human Services.
Recommended publications
  • The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000
    Educating for a New Economy: The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000 by William D. Goldsmith Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy MacLean, Supervisor ___________________________ Edward J. Balleisen ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith ___________________________ Gary Gereffi ___________________________ Helen Ladd Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in The Graduate School of Duke University 2018 ABSTRACT Educating for a New Economy: The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000 by William D. Goldsmith Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy MacLean, Supervisor ___________________________ Edward J. Balleisen ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith ___________________________ Gary Gereffi ___________________________ Helen Ladd An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2018 Copyright by William D. Goldsmith 2018 Abstract This dissertation shows how an array of policymakers, invested in uprooting an unequal political economy descended from the plantation system and Jim Crow, gravitated to education as a centerpiece of development strategy, and why so many are still disappointed in its outcomes. By looking at state-wide policymaking in North Carolina and policy effects in the state’s black belt counties, this study shows why the civil rights movement was vital for shifting state policy in former Jim Crow states towards greater investment in human resources. By breaking down employment barriers to African Americans and opening up the South to new people and ideas, the civil rights movement fostered a new climate for economic policymaking, and a new ecosystem of organizations flourished to promote equitable growth.
    [Show full text]
  • Lessons on Political Speech, Academic Freedom, and University Governance from the New North Carolina
    LESSONS ON POLITICAL SPEECH, ACADEMIC FREEDOM, AND UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE FROM THE NEW NORTH CAROLINA * Gene Nichol Things don’t always turn out the way we anticipate. Almost two decades ago, I came to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) after a long stint as dean of the law school in Boulder, Colorado. I was enthusiastic about UNC for two reasons. First, I’m a southerner by blood, culture, and temperament. And, for a lot of us, the state of North Carolina had long been regarded as a leading edge, perhaps the leading edge, of progressivism in the American South. To be sure, Carolina’s progressive habits were often timid and halting, and usually exceedingly modest.1 Still, the Tar Heel State was decidedly not to be confused with Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina, or my home country, Texas. Frank Porter Graham, Terry Sanford, Bill Friday, Ella Baker, and Julius Chambers had cast a long and ennobling shadow. Second, I have a thing for the University of North Carolina itself. Quite intentionally, I’ve spent my entire academic career–as student, professor, dean, and president–at public universities. I have nothing against the privates. But it has always seemed to me that the crucial democratizing aspirations of higher education in the United States are played out, almost fully, in our great and often ambitious state institutions. And though they have their challenges, the mission of public higher education is a near-perfect one: to bring the illumination and opportunity offered by the lamp of learning to all. Black and white, male and female, rich and poor, rural and urban, high and low, newly arrived and ancient pedigreed–all can, the theory goes, deploy education’s prospects to make the promises of egalitarian democracy real.
    [Show full text]
  • When African-Americans Were Republicans in North Carolina, the Target of Suppressive Laws Was Black Republicans. Now That They
    When African-Americans Were Republicans in North Carolina, The Target of Suppressive Laws Was Black Republicans. Now That They Are Democrats, The Target Is Black Democrats. The Constant Is Race. A Report for League of Women Voters v. North Carolina By J. Morgan Kousser Table of Contents Section Title Page Number I. Aims and Methods 3 II. Abstract of Findings 3 III. Credentials 6 IV. A Short History of Racial Discrimination in North Carolina Politics A. The First Disfranchisement 8 B. Election Laws and White Supremacy in the Post-Civil War South 8 C. The Legacy of White Political Supremacy Hung on Longer in North Carolina than in Other States of the “Rim South” 13 V. Democratizing North Carolina Election Law and Increasing Turnout, 1995-2009 A. What Provoked H.B. 589? The Effects of Changes in Election Laws Before 2010 17 B. The Intent and Effect of Election Laws Must Be Judged by their Context 1. The First Early Voting Bill, 1993 23 2. No-Excuse Absentee Voting, 1995-97 24 3. Early Voting Launched, 1999-2001 25 4. An Instructive Incident and Out-of-Precinct Voting, 2005 27 5. A Fair and Open Process: Same-Day Registration, 2007 30 6. Bipartisan Consensus on 16-17-Year-Old-Preregistration, 2009 33 VI. Voter ID and the Restriction of Early Voting: The Preview, 2011 A. Constraints 34 B. In the Wings 34 C. Center Stage: Voter ID 35 VII. H.B. 589 Before and After Shelby County A. Process Reveals Intention 37 B. Facts 1. The Extent of Fraud 39 2.
    [Show full text]
  • State Parks and Development of the Raleigh
    “GREEN MEANS GREEN, NOT ASPHALT-GRAY”: STATE PARKS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE RALEIGH METROPOLITAN AREA, 1936-2016 By GREGORY L. POWELL Bachelor of Arts in History Virginia Polytechnic Institute Blacksburg, Virginia 2002 Master of Arts in History Northern Arizona University Flagstaff, Arizona 2007 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May, 2017 “GREEN MEANS GREEN, NOT ASPHALT-GRAY”: STATE PARKS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE RALEIGH METROPOLITAN AREA, 1936-2016 Dissertation Approved: Dr. William S. Bryans ________________________________________________ Dissertation Adviser Dr. Michael F. Logan ________________________________________________ Dr. John Kinder ________________________________________________ Dr. Tom Wikle ________________________________________________ ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I was fortunate to receive much valuable assistance throughout the process of researching, writing, and editing this dissertation and would like to extend my appreciation to the following people. My family has been unbelievably patient over the years and I want to thank my wife, Heather, and parents, Arthur and Joy, for their unwavering support. I would also like to thank my children, Vincent and Rosalee, for providing the inspiration for the final push, though they may not understand that yet. The research benefitted from the knowledge and suggestions of archivists, librarians, and staff of several institutions. The folks at the Louis Round Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, particularly those working in the Southern Historical Collection and North Carolina Collection, the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Duke University, and the Z. Smith Reynolds Library at Wake Forest University, and the North Carolina State Archives deserve praise for their professionalism assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • NOTICE MEETING of the STATE BOARD of ELECTIONS the State
    Mailing Address: P.O. Box 27255 Raleigh, NC 27611-7255 Phone: (919) 733-7173 Fax: (919) 715-0135 NOTICE MEETING OF THE STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS The State Board of Elections will hold a public meeting by teleconference on Wednesday, February 22, 2017 at 2:15 p.m. Interested members of the public may hear proceedings by dialing (562) 247-8422 (code: 128-956-572). Materials will be available at http://go.usa.gov/x9Jas. The meeting is called pursuant to the written petition of two or more members filed under G.S. § 163-20(a). TENTATIVE AGENDA Call to order Statement regarding ethics and conflicts of interest G.S. § 138A-15(e) Discussion regarding status of Cooper v. Berger & Moore (P 17-101; 16 CVS 15636) Resources: S.L. 2016-125 Motions for Summary Judgement: Plaintiff’s Brief Defendants’ Brief Adjourn Additional Resources: Motion to Dismiss State v. NAACP et al. (filed Feb. 21) Supreme Court Docket (updated Feb. 21 at 6:30PM) Petition for Writ of Certiorari (filed Dec. 27) Letter from Legislative Leadership (dated Feb. 21) 1/384 Separator Page Statement regarding 2/384 Statement regarding ethics: GS 138-15(e) In accordance with the State Government Ethics Act, it is the duty of every Board member to avoid both conflicts of interest and appearances of conflict. Does any Board member have any known conflict of interest or appearance of conflict with respect to any matters coming before the [Board] today? If so, please identify the conflict or appearance of conflict and refrain from any undue participation in the particular matter.
    [Show full text]
  • The Deceit of Voter Fraud
    The Deceit of Voter Fraud By Bob Hall and Isela Gutierrez* This report has four sections. The first section shares Joseph Golden, a Brunswick County voter the reaction of voters harmed by the false charges of accused of double voting, felt upset and humiliated fraud generated by Gov. Pat McCrory’s 2016 re-election after seeing his name appear on the front pages of campaign and the NC Republican Party; it ends with a three area newspapers. As a newcomer to the county, call for a criminal investigation. The second section he was especially disturbed that someone on social (pages 2-4) summarizes key events after the November media called him out and wrote, “There’s a cheater 2016 election. The third section (pages 4-5) provides a amongst us.” summary of findings of wrongdoing, drawn from the Another falsely accused voter, Robert Chadwick county profiles in the fourth section (pages 5-16). of Wake County, said, “It was a total shock. It really hurt me.” Hughes, Nasir, Golden, and Chadwick are the I. VICTIMS AND CRIMINAL MISCONDUCT victims of irresponsible charges of voter fraud filed “I was shocked and horrified and furious to learn by agents of the Pat McCrory campaign and NC our name was on a list with people who were alleged Republican Party. They are the innocent casualties of to have broken a federal law,” said Anne Hughes of what happens when outrageous claims of voter fraud Moore County, North Carolina. She and her husband are used as a weapon for political gain. In truth, we William were falsely accused of voting in two states are all harmed by this strategy because it undermines by a local supporter of Gov.
    [Show full text]
  • Outraged Small Business Owners and Elected Officials Respond to DNC Email Leaks Showing Democrats and Cooper Rooting for NC to Fail
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Outraged Small Business Owners and Elected Officials Respond to DNC Email Leaks Showing Democrats and Cooper Rooting for NC to Fail Small business owners, elected officials, and activists across the state today condemned, in the strongest possible terms, the Democratic campaign operatives connected to Roy Cooper, Deborah Ross and Hillary Clinton celebrating economic hardship inflicted on innocent North Carolina citizens through the loss of hotel revenue, concerts, and growth. These small business owners and elected officials stood in reaction to the DNC email WikiLeaks which show the DNC, Hillary Clinton, and Roy Cooper sought to do harm on the state of North Carolina and our thriving economy. “This is unacceptable, but not surprising,” said NCGOP Executive Director, Dallas Woodhouse, “It was pretty obvious through Roy Cooper’s shady dealings with CEO’s like Marc Benioff that something underhanded was going on— these latest emails from the DNC prove those reasonable suspicions to be correct.” Claire Mahoney of Charlotte shared, "We don't need to connect the dots. The dots have always been there. With the leaking of these DNC emails, we now have the full picture...and it is just as bad as we had anticipated." Small business owner and President of Marrins' Mooving, Josh Oliver, relocated his entire company from Hillary Clinton’s “home” state New York because of North Carolina’s thriving business tax climate. “Quite honestly, we were struggling in New York state. The taxes were unbelievably high, the regulations were unbearable, and we simply couldn’t tread water fast enough.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report
    Annual Report “The Commission ... must stir up TROUBLE 3 and make the body POLITIC begin to itch. It must be UNAFRAID. It must take the PROBLEMS, assemble the best PEOPLE and seek the ANSWERS, whatever they might be.” ~ Terry Sanford 65th Governor of North Carolina and first chair of ECS, 1965 201 Contents 3 President’s Letter 4 Chair’s Letter 5 What is ECS? 6–7 ECS Infographic 8–9 2013 ECS Timeline 10–13 How ECS Served You in 2013 14–15 Who We Are 16 Executive and Standing Committees 17–20 ECS Commissioners 21 Partners and Funders 22 Financial Report 23–24 The Year in Pictures 2013–15 ECS Chair: Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval ECS President: Jeremy Anderson 700 Broadway, Suite 810 Denver, CO 80203-3442 303.299.3600 || 303.296.8332 fax www.ecs.org || [email protected] 2 2013 ECS ANNUAL REPORT President’s Letter Dear ECS Commissioners, education policymakers and friends of ECS, Writing about the creation of the Education Commission of the States in December 1965, former North Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford said, “We must never forget that although each of us may represent a different perspective in education, we all share the belief that we live in an explosive era when a massive effort must be made to improve the education of every American.” These words are just as true today. State leaders know they can’t improve education alone. Despite our diversity, we can share experiences and innovations across state lines to benefit every student across the country. In fact we must do so, because the explosion of the education frontier makes it almost impossible for one state to tackle the breathtaking number of education issues it faces.
    [Show full text]
  • Cementing Confederate Monuments in North Carolina's Landscape Kasi E
    NORTH CAROLINA LAW REVIEW Volume 94 | Number 6 Article 8 9-1-2016 North Carolina's Heritage Protection Act: Cementing Confederate Monuments in North Carolina's Landscape Kasi E. Wahlers Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.unc.edu/nclr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Kasi E. Wahlers, North Carolina's Heritage Protection Act: Cementing Confederate Monuments in North Carolina's Landscape, 94 N.C. L. Rev. 2176 (2016). Available at: http://scholarship.law.unc.edu/nclr/vol94/iss6/8 This Comments is brought to you for free and open access by Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in North Carolina Law Review by an authorized administrator of Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 94 N.C. L. REV. 2176 (2016) North Carolina’s Heritage Protection Act: Cementing Confederate Monuments in North Carolina’s Landscape* INTRODUCTION The North Carolina landscape is densely populated with Confederate monuments; these commemorations can be found in more than half of the state’s one hundred counties.1 The state has more monuments honoring the Civil War than any other historical event, with five Civil War monuments for every World War I monument.2 Most of these structures were erected between 1890 and 1930,3 and many are located on public property, such as in and around courthouses,4 town squares,5 graveyards,6 and university campuses.7 * © 2016 Kasi E. Wahlers. 1. See Charlie Shelton, Frank Stasio & Andrew Tie, More Than Half of North Carolina’s Counties Have Confederate Monuments, WUNC (June 26, 2015), http://wunc .org/post/more-half-north-carolinas-counties-have-confederate-monuments-0#stream/0 [http: //perma.cc/RP88-J297].
    [Show full text]
  • THE NORTH CAROLINA OFFICE of ARCHIVES and HISTORY 2012-2014 BIENNIAL REPORT OFFICE of ARCHIVES and HISTORY July 1, 2012–June 30, 2014
    FIFTY-FIFTH BIENNIAL REPORT THE NORTH CAROLINA OFFICE OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY 2012-2014 BIENNIAL REPORT OFFICE OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY July 1, 2012–June 30, 2014 FIFTY-FIFTH BIENNIAL REPORT OF THE NORTH CAROLINA OFFICE OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2014 Raleigh Office of Archives and History North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources 2015 © 2015 by the North Carolina Office of Archives and History All rights reserved NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL RESOURCES SUSAN W. KLUTTZ Secretary OFFICE OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY KEVIN CHERRY Deputy Secretary DIVISION OF HISTORICAL RESOURCES RAMONA BARTOS Director DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SARAH KOONTS Director DIVISION OF STATE HISTORIC SITES KEITH P. HARDISON Director DIVISION OF STATE HISTORY MUSEUMS KENNETH B. HOWARD Director NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL COMMISSION MILLIE M. BARBEE (2015) Chair Mary Lynn Bryan (2017) Valerie A. Johnson (2015) David C. Dennard (2015) Margaret Kluttz (2019) Samuel B. Dixon (2019) B. Perry Morrison Jr. (2017) Chris E. Fonvielle Jr. (2019) Richard Starnes (2017) William W. Ivey (2019) Harry L. Watson (2017) EMERITI: Kemp P. Burpeau, N. J. Crawford, H. G. Jones, William S. Powell, Alan D. Watson, Max R. Williams CONTENTS DeputySecretary’sReport............................1 Roanoke Island Festival Park .......................13 TryonPalace................................ 16 NorthCarolinaTransportationMuseum.................28 DivisionofHistoricalResources........................34 Education and Outreach Branch......................34
    [Show full text]
  • What's up with Education Policy in North Carolina?
    March 2, 2014 Comments welcome What’s Up with Education Policy in North Carolina? By Edward B. Fiske and Helen F. Ladd [email protected]; [email protected] Explanatory Note: The purpose of this document is to help people both outside and inside North Carolina understand what is currently happening to education policy in this state. The document is neither an academic paper nor an advocacy piece. Instead it is simply our best effort to describe and to put into context the significant policy changes affecting education in North Carolina. We write it as concerned citizens and hope it will be useful to others. We have taken care to be faithful to the facts as we understand them. Whenever possible, we have checked them against relevant documents and with knowledgeable people. We welcome corrections and comments. Please send them to [email protected] One of us, Helen Ladd, The Edgar Thomson Professor of Public Policy and professor of economics at Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy, has published many empirical studies of education in North Carolina. The other, Edward Fiske, was the education editor of the New York Times during the 1970s and 1980s and is now an education writer and consultant. Together we have written books on education policy in New Zealand and in South Africa and articles on school finance in the Netherlands. In 2012, at the bequest of William Harrison, the then Chairman of the State Board of Education, we wrote a vision statement for public education in North Carolina. ----------------- Last year, in a seven-month frenzy of legislative hyper-activity, the Republican-controlled General Assembly of North Carolina, in concert with Republican Gov.
    [Show full text]
  • Confederate Monument Catalog Campaign to Remove Confederate Monuments NC CRED
    Confederate Monument Catalog Campaign to Remove Confederate Monuments NC CRED Research adapted from Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina (https://docsouth.unc.edu/commland/); Updated as of 1/28/21 1 Table of Contents Forward by Dr. Freddie Parker 4 Alamance County 9 Alexander County 10 Anson County 12 Burke County 13 Cabarrus County 13 Caldwell County 14 Carteret County 15 Caswell County 15 Catawba County 16 Cleveland County 17 Currituck County 17 Gaston County 18 Greene County 19 Halifax County 19 Haywood County 20 Henderson County 20 Hertford County 21 Iredell County 21 Jones County 22 Lee County 22 Lincoln County 23 Research adapted from Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina (https://docsouth.unc.edu/commland/); Updated as of 1/28/21 2 Mitchell County 24 Onslow County 25 Pamlico County 25 Pasquotank County 25 Pender County 26 Perquimans County 27 Person County; 27 Randolph County 28 Robeson County 29 Rutherford County 30 Scotland County 30 Stokes County 31 Surry County 32 Tyrrell County 32 Union County 34 Wilkes County 35 Wilson County 35 Yancy County 36 Recently Removed Monuments 36 Research adapted from Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina (https://docsouth.unc.edu/commland/); Updated as of 1/28/21 3 Foreword By Dr. Freddie Parker In their quest to “venerate and vindicate” their southern brothers and sisters who were defeated in the Civil War between the North and the South – in a struggle that resulted in the ending of 200 years of black bondage – late nineteenth century white southerners designed the “Lost Cause” myth. From the ashes of war, southern whites set out to rewrite why they seceded from the Union in 1860 and 1861.
    [Show full text]