Hunt was an applicant for the city manager position in St. Cloud,
Florida in January of 2006. Hunt was listed as one of ten candidates in
one news report, which cited negative news stories found in the Venice Gondolier that tied Hunt to the
then-ongoing EPA investigation here in Venice. The news story specifically mentioned the Venice
Gondolier. I never had any contact with St. Cloud whatsoever.
Likewise, the City of Dunedin took a pass on him due to a
double whammy: according to an online news account, Hunt didn't appear to be
standing above the pack of candidates and there
appeared to be an
internal civil war within their own city council over the possibility of promoting
their assistant city manager. Several candidates withdrew their applications and
fled, which left Hunt and three other candidates in a smoldering pile that Dunedin
officials were apparently not exactly thrilled with. It's hard to tell exactly
what was going on from the news accounts, but it is clear that the whole process
was a mess. Governmental headhunter Colin Baenziger
promised Dunedin that he would return with a better pool of applicants, Hunt
made a few snitty comments to TCPalm.com about Dunedin's unprofessional behavior
(story now offline), and that
ended that for Hunt and Dunedin. I had no contact with Dunedin.
On July 15, 2004, the St. Pete Times reported that Hunt didn't get a job in
Treasure Island due to "undesirable baggage." Just the day before,
the Times had reported how city commissioners had discovered on their own stories about
Hunt's predilection for carrying firearms into
city hall in Venice as documented in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. The St. Pete
Times specifically and repeatedly mentioned negative news stories from the
Herald-Tribune. I did call up the mayor
of Treasure Island on July 16, two days after Hunt had been turned down
for the job, to ask her if the
web played any part in the city's decision to not hire him, but she declined
to comment other than to say that Hunt seemed like a very nice man. That
conversation was chronicled in an article that
was published on July 16, 2004. But again:
my contact was after they had already hired a new city manager, and there
was no contact between myself and anyone in Treasure Island other than
that.
Fernandina Beach is the one and only city I did contact
during a job search by Hunt,
but solely for a simple public records request as background for what started
out as a story on Venice's search for a finance director but that
morphed into a
somewhat different story once I looked at what Fernandina Beach had sent me. The
Gondolier has copies of my correspondence with Fernandina Beach, as does Hunt.
All of my correspondence with Fernandina Beach (and any
correspondence that Hunt alleges that occurred between myself and other cities)
would all be public record. If I had actually done what Hunt is alleging, it
would be incredibly foolish of me to deny it when I know full well that a simple
public records request would refute my denials and forever ruin my credibility.
I don't own that much so I'd kind of like to keep my good name.
So what happened in Fernandina Beach
As to why Hunt was not hired in Fernandina Beach, the then-ongoing EPA investigation as documented in the Herald-Tribune was mentioned in
their local papers, however the Fernandina Beach officials stated that it
played very little into their decision -- reading between the lines, it
would appear that Hunt was basically outclassed by a better candidate.
According to a February, 2006 story in the Fernandina Beach News Leader,
someone had emailed an article from the Sarasota Herald-Tribune to a city
commissioner. Hunt apparently maintains that it was me.
It wasn't, nor was it anyone that I had directed or had any advance knowledge
of.
A follow-up article quoted Hunt as blaming his bad press here in Venice on
"a newspaper" that was trying to "wrestle control from a long-standing
administration." A newspaper. Not a web site. Not this web site. A newspaper.
That same article has Hunt strangely issuing a non sequitur denial that he is
not a dictator.
My co-defendant, Sylvia Parish, wanted to send such
articles to Fernandina Beach. I advised her against doing so, although I could
think of no hard line prohibition against doing so. Due to what was turning into
a financial fiasco in Barefoot Bay under Hunt's leadership, she wanted Hunt gone from
a managerial role in her community. I told her that if that was her wish, then don't interfere in
his job search. She has subsequently told me (and I just reconfirmed it this
morning with her) that she never did send anything to the City of Fernandina Beach.
So still to this day, I don't know who, if anyone, emailed
the City of Fernandina Beach with negative information about Hunt. Not relevant to my
case, but a curiosity: I'm not sure you can successfully sue somebody for that,
especially since Hunt is a political and public figure -- it would seem to be
ridiculous to claim that you are not a public figure when your job search is
chronicled in minute detail in various newspapers throughout the state. Unfortunately, I am having to
spend wild amounts of money in order to convince Hunt, and ultimately a judge, of that (that and the fact
that in typical good ol' Furious George style, if he does have a case on that matter, he
is apparently suing the wrong people).
If there are other cities that Hunt has been turned down
for jobs in, I'll find out as this lawsuit progresses.
It is not lost on me that there is a bit of irony here: I am being sued for
allegedly encouraging Parish to do something when in fact the exact opposite is
true: I actually discouraged, and thus
prevented, Parish from contacting Fernandina Beach with negative information
about Hunt.
Hunt to sue Google?
Hunt is currently the personnel director for the city of Palm Bay, Florida. In
his mind, it's probably not a step up from his glory days in Venice of meeting
with developers and watching Herb Levine get arrested at a city budget hearing.
No, this human resources gig is not what he had in mind at all.
Somebody must pay.
Hunt has arbitrarily chosen me, no doubt to send a message
to those villains at the Gondolier and the Herald-Tribune.
I would suggest that Google News may be the actual culprit
for Hunt's failure to find work more suited to his notorious brown polyester
suit. On Google News, you will find hardly any links to my stories (since this
web site is not a newspaper, Google News doesn't include it as a news site), but
you will find
a plethora of links to some very negative stories from the Sarasota Herald
Tribune, the Venice Gondolier, the St. Pete Times, and various other newspapers.
With the award of attorney's fees to the tune of $2,212.50, Hunt may very well get his wish of seeing this web site hit the
cyber-dumpster. While I'm
sure the thought of that is making Hunt sing aloud, "Oh frabjous day, calloo,
callay," the question is, how do you, the citizens of Venice, feel about that?
Do any of you really care about independent journalism and good government or is
the golf game more important?
The reason I ask that question is because I am asking for
your
HELP!!!!
I need your help. I hate asking for it, but my back is against the wall. Without
it, this web site will close. Not may. Will.
Actually, I need your money. $2,212.50 of it to be specific.
Within 30 days.
There was nothing I could do to avoid it. As the Gondolier
article notes, I repeatedly (as in more than twice) turned over the same set of
documents that Peter Baranowicz, my former attorney, asked for. For reasons that
I still cannot comprehend, Baranowicz never saw fit to turn those same documents
over to Hunt's attorney, while I was actually prohibited from turning them over
myself. The end result is that I ended up receiving the financial sanction for
my former attorney's failure to comply with a court order.
For years I have written about bad government and I've
been somewhat successful in keeping the wolves at bay, but at great personal
cost. The financial turnaround for good, solid journalism never materialized and
I have gone into debt over the years supporting a passion for good government. I
had always hoped for a turnaround, and while it appeared that was the case,
Hunt's lawsuit tore a serious hole into this web site's finances.
I even gave up driving a car and I get around now by
scooter. The upside is that I'm paying around $10 a week in gas and it's a
1950's retro cool-looking model known as
The Venice.
If I was gonna get a scooter, it'd have to be The Venice. The downside is
that... it's a scooter (although lawyers and bankers drive them en masse on the streets of London and
Rome). But damn: $10 a week on gas.
If I don't pay the money, I don't get a chance to fight
Hunt's allegations. My case will be fatally damaged, I will likely lose the
right to plea, Hunt will likely win the suit. Yes, it's all incredibly unfair --
Welcome to Venice. This probably won't help Hunt get a job,
but I don't think he's thinking much past revenge at this point.
So please. I need your help. I've put everything on the
line to try to help save this town over the years from cretins, villains, and
ne'er-do-wells, now I desperately need your help in return.