Culture at the TABC of pay-to-play and everyone at that agency is untouchable." Peña stated it's a "very difficult job to investigate your boss" over his many years in law enforcement, much of it in an internal affairs capacity.
How do you change things? You try?
Can a felon get liquor licenses?
Can drug dealers get liquor licenses?
Can doormen make a $1,000 or more in tips a night?
Can cover charges never be recorded?
Power and Money can corrupt people.
Which is wanted more by people power or money?
Which is wanted more by people power or money?
This is life. Life is not perfect. Life is not fair.
The ability of people to assume a legal duty to care for others changes the opportunity to control danger and harm to them.
We try and controlled impaired patrons behavior to save people's lives a day at time, as we try to survive, a day at time. Serving and caring for people creates the foundations of patron's respect and trust. People are not perfect but they are human with faults.
The ability of people to assume a legal duty to care for others changes the opportunity to control danger and harm to them.
We try and controlled impaired patrons behavior to save people's lives a day at time, as we try to survive, a day at time. Serving and caring for people creates the foundations of patron's respect and trust. People are not perfect but they are human with faults.
Texas:
Two more liquor regulators leaving troubled TABC
Two fresh departures from
the troubled Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, announced Thursday, bring to
five the number of high-level officials calling it quits since The Texas
Tribune began publishing a series of stories about lavish spending,
mismanagement and regulatory overreach at TABC.
Source: Texas Tribune
BY JAY ROOT
JULY 6, 2017
The Texas Alcoholic
Beverage Commission, in major clean-up mode after reports of mismanagement and
regulatory overreach, announced Thursday that two more top officials have left
the agency.
The departures this week
of the chief of enforcement, Earl Pearson, and the head of internal affairs,
Andy Peña, bring the total number of high-level departures to three this week -
and five so far since The Texas Tribune began revealing controversial spending
and regulatory practices at TABC.
In addition to the two
announced Thursday, the officers calling it quits include former Executive
Director Sherry Cook, who left in April, Commissioner Steven Weinberg, who
abruptly stepped down in May, and General Counsel Emily Helm, who resigned from
the TABC Monday.
The new chairman of the
three-person commission that oversees the agency, Houston businessman Kevin
Lilly, said Pearson and Peña "separated" from the TABC on Wednesday.
"I thank them
both their many years of service to this agency and for their work on behalf of
the people of Texas," Lilly said.
The commission is
scheduled to meet next week in executive session to interview candidates for
the executive director job and deliberate a possible selection, according to
the agenda. It will fall to the executive director to hire replacements for top
posts and lead the day-to-day operation of the agency, which oversees
regulation of the alcohol industry in Texas.
Tapped by Gov. Greg Abbott
to mop up the agency's mess, Lilly added that he looks forward "to this
new chapter in TABC's history."
The last chapter has been
a bumpy ride.
In March, The Texas
Tribune began publishing a series of stories about the TABC, including lavish
trips top officials took to out-of-state resorts, questionable use of peace
officer status by the agency brass, failures to accurately maintain records of
state-owned vehicles and heavy-handed regulatory tactics against alcohol permit
holders.
The Texas Legislature
responded by barring the agency from any non-essential out-of-state travel for
the next two fiscal years, and the state House Committee on General Investigating
and Ethics launched its own probe of the TABC. The panel's chair, Rep. Sarah
Davis, R-West University Place, said repeatedly that heads needed to roll.
When the executive
director announced her departure in April, the governor called it a "good
start" toward reforming the agency.
Both Peña and Pearson were
longtime employees of the Texas Department of Public Safety before joining the
TABC in 2007 and 2009, respectively, according to their agency bios.
Peña was no stranger to
controversy at the TABC. As head of the department of professional
responsibility, which acted as the agency's internal affairs division, Peña
investigated complaints against TABC employees.
Critics called him
"Captain Cover-Up," complaining that he used his position to protect
top honchos. Peña investigated whether TABC violated its own rules after it
failed to get an alcohol permit for an open-bar hospitality suite during a
liquor industry convention in Austin last year.
In a Jan. 5 internal
report, Peña, who reported directly to Cook, the executive director, said there
was "no merit" to the allegations.
"If it involved
management, he would cover it up," said Darryl Darnell, a former TABC
lieutenant-turned-whistleblower, who filed the permit-related complaint against
Cook.
Peña was questioned about
his approach to sensitive investigations during a confrontational April hearing
of the House General Investigating and Ethics Committee. Davis, the committee
chair, told Peña there is a "culture at the TABC of pay-to-play and ...
everyone at that agency is untouchable."
Peña acknowledged that
it's a "very difficult job to investigate your boss" but he said he
stood by his reputation and his work product over his many years in law
enforcement, much of it in an internal affairs capacity.
"I welcome
scrutiny of what I do," he told Davis.
"Well," she
responded. "You're certainly going to get it."
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