Tampa, Fl
Tampa Bay Beat
By: Jim Bleyer
August 13, 2019 - 6:24 am
Tampa Bay Beat
By: Jim Bleyer
Seventh Avenue, Ybor City
By Jim Bleyer
The guilty pleas entered last week by former
Tallahassee Mayor Scott Maddox and a confidante is not the end of public
corruption investigations in Florida.
That’s the word from Lawrence Keefe, the U.S. Attorney for the
Northern District of Florida, and sources at the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Maddox and Paige Carter-Smith have agreed to
cooperate with law enforcement authorities about other possible misdeeds in
Tallahassee and Leon County.
A sentencing date for the pair has been set for Nov. 19. They
could receive up to 25 years in prison on fraud and income tax charges for
their role in helping ride share giant Uber get a favorable ordinance in
exchange for cash and accepting payments from a developer that turned out to be an FBI
front company.
But Keefe declared the Maddox investigation should put all Florida
public officials on notice.
“A public office is a sacred trust,” Keefe told the Tallahassee
Democrat in the wake of the Maddox and Carter-Smith plea deals.
The FBI never discusses its ongoing investigations but the agency
should look at Hillsborough County if it isn’t already.
In his 2018 re-election campaign, Hillsborough County Commissioner
Ken Hagan solicited and accepted donations from real estate interests that
stand to benefit from construction of a new stadium for the Tampa Bay Rays
in Ybor City.
St. Petersburg’s Tropicana Field, considered antiquated by 2019
standards, has been the home of the Rays since they first took the field in
1998. Despite recent success, attendance has perennially stood at
or near the bottom of the 30 major league baseball teams.
Hagan persists in promoting Rays stadium
in Ybor City.
Owner
Stuart Sternberg has maintained that a new stadium will solve the team’s
attendance woes and found a ready and more-then-willing ally in Hagan.
Talks between the Rays, Hillsborough County, and the City of Tampa
struck out last year when it was determined no public funding existed to
finance a $850 million stadium in Ybor, even with Sternberg willing to chip in
$200 million.
Ybor
City as the site for a new Rays home has always been puzzling. Low and middle
income families would be displaced. One of the country’s iconic historic
districts would be destroyed. And the rationale for any projected attendance
increase never has been documented.
But
Darryl Shaw, who acquired thousands of acres around Ybor, and Jeff Vinik, whose
Water Street Tampa project is in nearby Channelside, would reap benefits from
the increased traffic generated by a new ballpark.
Sternberg’s
latest canard—sharing the franchise with the city of Montreal—has not being
taken seriously by most observers. St. Pete Mayor Rick Kriseman did not
disguise his disdain for the scheme. His initial response:
“The
Rays cannot explore playing any Major League Baseball games in Montreal or
anywhere else for that matter prior to 2028, without reaching a formal
memorandum of understanding with the City of St. Petersburg,” Kriseman said.
“Ultimately, such a decision is up to me. And I have no intention of bringing
this latest idea to our city council to consider. In fact, I believe this is
getting a bit silly.”
The
City of St. Petersburg continues to investigate whether or not Sternberg
violated the terms of his lease agreement which decrees he must get permission
to discuss relocation with representatives of other geographical entities.
As for
Hagan, he continues to promote Ybor City for a Rays Stadium, despite the
fanciful prospect of sharing a split season with Montreal. Hagan and
Sternberg, at least publicly, are a minority of two in that respect.
Meanwhile,
in the wake of the Maddox plea deal, federal law enforcement authorities have
put Florida politicians on notice that violations of that “sacred trust” will
be prosecuted.
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