Quantcast
Channel: Maui Time
Viewing all 259 articles
Browse latest View live

Activists circulate petition to impeach Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa

$
0
0

A couple hours before Mayor Alan Arakawa gave his annual State of the County address, a tidy group of residents gathered at the entrance to the Maui Arts & Cultural Center. Carrying signs and upside-down Hawaii state flags, they were there to express their anger, as one demonstrator put it, at Arakawa. Their numbers swelled from about 50 at 4:30pm to nearly double that an hour later, but their message was clear: the mayor has to go.

Their signs they carried were about what you’d expect. “Respect the Culture.” “Iao is Sacred.” “County of Maui Guilty of Desecration.”

Despite the heated emotions that formed the foundation of the protest, the gathering on Thursday, Mar. 9 was chill. The group of three (sometimes four) Maui Police Officers who milled about a few dozen yards back from the protesters looked, if anything, bored. Children played on the grass. One demonstrator brought sweet potatoes from her yard for everyone. Another brought her pet pig Pua`a. Maui County Councilmember Elle Cochran walked around the demonstration at one point, chatting with the protesters. The most militant behavior I saw came from a handful of sign-carrying demonstrators who did a s-l-o-w march across the street in front of every car wanting to turn into the MACC.

As proof of their intentions, one organizer began collecting signatures on a new Petition for Impeachment of Mayor Alan Arakawa. Dated Mar. 9, the three-page petition states that Arakawa is guilty of “malfeasance, misfeasance and nonfeasance” in regards to his authorizing the removal of rocks in Iao Valley following the flash flood storm of Sept. 13, 2016.

“The Mayor worked outside the scope of his authority under the emergency proclamations to protect the public’s safety, and instead took advantage of the emergency situation to use the Iao river bed as a rock quarry for large quantities of harvested material for crushing,” states the petition. “The public’s safety was not in jeopardy from the river bed and boulders that had lived there for ages. By working outside the scope of his authority within the river bed, on mostly private land, to conduct emergency work within Iao Valley, the Mayor is guilty of illegal misappropriation of public funds.”

The removal of rocks–which many native Hawaiians consider to be sacred–from the Iao stream bed following the flood has sparked outrage from a few activists since it took place. Ironically, Arakawa himself recently poured gasoline on the fire by making outrageously condescending comments on Hawaii News Now.

“[T]here’s no such thing as sacred rocks,” Arakawa said on HNN on Feb. 17. “The monarchy, starting with Kamehameha… declared Christianity the religion of Hawaii. In Christianity, if I remember the 10 Commandments correctly, thou shall have no false god before me. There are no sacred rocks in that religion.”

It took two weeks for Arakawa to apologize for his remarks (which reportedly spurred the Office of Hawaiian Affairs to issue a statement on the considerable importance native Hawaiians place on rocks like those found in Iao), though he continued to insist that removing the rocks was necessary for public safety. He reiterated that at the conclusion of his State of the County address last night.

“Before we wrap up tonight, I would like to thank the men and women who worked tirelessly to fix Kepaniwai Park, our Flood Control along Iao and Kahoma, as well as other areas last year,” Arakawa said in the speech. “Our county crews worked fast and hard to get repairs underway, at times placing their own lives in danger. Timing was critical, because right after that flood we had another flood event on New Year’s Eve, which caused no damage due to the repairs made to our flood control. Without those repairs, flood waters could have damaged homes from Iao Parkside to Paukukalo, and businesses all along Lower Main Street.”

The impeachment petition references Section 13-13 of the County of Maui Charter. “Appointed or elected officers may be impeached for malfeasance, misfeasance or nonfeasance in office or violation of the provisions of Article 10 (Code of Ethics),” states the petition. “Such impeachment proceedings shall be commenced in the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit, State of Hawaii.”

One organizer told me they’re trying to gather 5,000 signatures, and have only just started.

When I asked County Communications Director Rod Antone if he’d like to comment on the impeachment petition, he emailed back, “Not really.”

Click here for a PDF copy of the impeachment petition.

Photo: MauiTime

The post Activists circulate petition to impeach Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa appeared first on Maui Time.


The Maui Police Dept. bought crime-fighting ice machines with asset forfeiture funds

$
0
0

Normally, hearing that the Maui Police Department recently purchased ice machines for its stations in Hana and Lanai wouldn’t inspire me to write a story. But when I heard that the department used asset forfeiture funds to buy the machines, I got to work.

Civil asset forfeiture is one of those grotesque things governments do that riles both left and libertarians–the left because it provides a cash incentive for the Drug War and mass incarceration practices that fall disproportionately on African-Americans and libertarians because it stomps on property rights–yet it’s continued with only minor reform since the federal government really got rolling on the Drug War in the 1980s. How it works is simple enough in principle: during criminal investigations, law enforcement can seize assets (cash, vehicles, etc.) and then split the loot with the state Attorney General’s office (which in Hawaii takes 50 percent) and the prosecutor’s office (which takes 25 percent).

“[C]riminals are deprived of their working capital and profits, thereby preventing them from operating even where traditional criminal sanctions have not otherwise deterred them,” states the Hawaii Attorney General’s Fiscal Year 2015-2016 Annual Report of Proceedings under the Hawaii Omnibus Criminal Forfeiture Act (the most recent one available). “A secondary benefit of forfeiture laws is that forfeited property, or the proceeds of its sale, is turned over to law enforcement and used to fight crime.”

“Used to fight crime.” As we’ll see, police departments have discovered that nearly anything can be used to fight crime.

See, asset forfeiture has turned local law enforcement into mercenaries. The Hawaii AG’s office is clearly sensitive about this, because their annual reports on asset forfeiture include this sentence: “While the purpose of forfeiture and the evaluation of a forfeiture law or program should never be based solely on the generation of revenue, it is fitting that forfeited property be used to combat those who seek to profit from crime.”

If I had a nickel for all the caveats and qualifiers in that sentence, I could buy, well, an ice machine. In fact, I wasn’t surprised to see that in 2015, the Institute for Justice–a libertarian public interest law firm based in Arlington, Virginia–graded Hawaii a D- for its asset forfeiture policies.

State law has a low standard of proof, requiring only that the government show by a preponderance of the evidence that property is tied to a crime,” states the IJ’s 2015 report Policing for Profit. “Furthermore, innocent owners bear the burden of proving that they had nothing to do with the alleged crime giving rise to the forfeiture. Most troubling, law enforcement has a large financial stake in forfeiture.”

Let’s start at the beginning. Though the AG’s office insists that asset forfeiture deprives “criminals” of the capital, it also often deprives innocent people of their property. This happens over and over, across the nation, as Michelle Alexander documented in her 2012 book The New Jim Crow.

“Neither the owner of the property nor anyone else need be charged with a crime, much less found guilty of one,” Alexander wrote. “Indeed, a person could be found innocent of any criminal conduct and the property could still be subject to forfeiture.”

Of course, anyone whose stuff is seized has the right to ask for judicial review of the seizure, but that’ll require an attorney.

“Because those who were targeted were typically poor or of moderate means, they often lacked the resources to hire an attorney or pay the considerable court costs,” Alexander wrote. “As a result, most people who had their cash or property seized did not challenge the government’s action, especially because the government could retaliate by filing criminal charges–baseless or not.”

Indeed, though the most recent asset forfeiture report from the AG’s office shows that while Hawaii’s law enforcement agencies seized more than $381,000 in cash and property in Fiscal Year 2015-2016, there were just six claims for judicial review. Of those, three were settled and three were still in litigation at the time the report came out.

What’s more, fighting to regain seized assets–even when you personally aren’t charged with a crime–is difficult for reasons beyond attorney costs. According to Alexander, the government only needs to show a “preponderance of evidence” that seized assets were used in crimes.

“Most people simply cannot afford the considerable cost of hiring an attorney,” Alexander wrote. “Even if the cost is not an issue, the incentives are all wrong. If the police seized your car worth $5,000, or took $500 cash from your home, would you be willing to pay an attorney more than your assets are worth to get them back?”

Though the AG’s annual asset forfeiture reports are pretty vague, they do show that the MPD seized not quite $91,000 in Fiscal Year 2015-2016–$84,000 in cash and $6,700 in vehicles. As for what they can do with that money, it’s pretty wide open–the AG’s insistence that it’s used “to fight crime” notwithstanding. Though there are limits, as MPD Chief Tivoli Faaumu told the Maui County Council Budget and Finance Committee on April 7, the department was still able to use the funds to buy a couple of (presumably) crime-fighting ice machines.

The revelation came during the middle of one of those long budget sessions, when department directors testify at great length about all the stuff they need in the coming fiscal year. It started when Committee Chair Riki Hokama suddenly asked Assistant Chief John Jakubczak whether the Lanai police station had a ice machine.

“That’s what we’re just purchasing with forfeiture funds at this point right now,” Jakubczak testified, according to the meeting minutes.

Hokama thanked him, then asked Faaumu for a rundown on how the MPD uses forfeiture funds.

“So what can I do with the Forfeiture Fund?” Faaumu asked rhetorically. “I know one thing that I can’t use it for is to supplant things that I’m responsible to purchase. I won’t be able to do that. I can use it for… to purchase something if we have an initiative. I’ll give you an example of what the Chair talk[s] about is the purchase of the ice machine for our Hana District and our Lanai District. We learned from the latest blackout and some of the inclement weather that our Hana District has encounter[ed], ice machine or ice is very important, especially during power outages. So the commander look[ed] at it and believe[d] that is in an initiative, something that our Department need[ed] to support the community. So we use the Forfeiture Fund for that.”

So that, boys and girls, is how the little Hana and Lanai police stations got their ice machines. Stay frosty!

Photo: Kinneck/Wikimedia Commons

The post The Maui Police Dept. bought crime-fighting ice machines with asset forfeiture funds appeared first on Maui Time.

QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about former House Speaker Joe Souki’s career?

$
0
0

1. On May 3, the state Attorney General’s office released its annual report on firearms registrations for 2016. According to the report, in 2016 what was the most common reason for firearm permits to get denied?

A. Disorderly conduct

B. Assault

C. Medical marijuana patient

D. Mental health issue/treatment

E. Abuse of family/household member

2. Maui Rep. Joe Souki resigned on May 4 after about five years as Speaker of the Hawaii House of Representatives. This marked the end of Souki’s second stint as Speaker. The first began in 1993. When did that speakership end?

A. 1997

B. 1999

C. 2001

D. 2003

E. 2005

3. On the night of May 5, the Maui PD set up multiple OUI checkpoints to combat drunk driving. On May 8, the department announced that they had arrested 18 people as a result of these checkpoints. How many of those arrested were actually for operating a car under the influence of alcohol?

A. 13

B. 14

C. 15

D. 16

E. 17

See answers below:

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

ANSWERS

1: D–Mental health issue/treatment

2: B–1999

3: A–13

Photo courtesy Joesouki.com

The post QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about former House Speaker Joe Souki’s career? appeared first on Maui Time.

MauiTime celebrates 20 years of independent journalism

$
0
0

It’s hard to believe sometimes that we’ve been around for two decades. Sure, we’ve changed a lot in that time (what hasn’t?). But in that time, we’ve brought you a lot of stories–some good, others not so much, but all with the goal of publishing interesting, readable and honest stories about what’s really going on in Maui County. That commitment remains the same today as it was back in Volume 1, Issue 1.

In the following retrospect, we recall 20 examples of what we consider great MauiTime journalism. The stories are all over the map in terms of subject matter–surf, crime, politics, music. But they’re also all unquestionably Maui stories, full of life and color that’s as vibrant as the island we call home. 

We hope you’ve enjoyed the last two decades as much as we did, because we have every intention of sticking around for more.

*

“Shaping The Future: Matt Kinoshita”

Sept. 16, 1997

By Dave Sweedler

Dave Sweedler wrote a ton of surf stories for MauiTime in the early years. Few even today are as dialed into the local surf community as Sweedler. Many of his stories were profiles like this one of local surfer and board shaper Matt Kinoshita. Even back then, Kinoshita’s Kazuma Surfboards made some of Maui’s most recognized boards.

“The positive side of surfing today is that the level of surfing has risen amongst the new generation, and it’s very exciting to see the change,” Kinoshita told Sweedler. “I think there will be a whole new push towards professionalism and a clean image for surfers in the future. I’m coaching kids with 4.0 grade point averages who totally rip in the water. There should be nothing holding back a future world champ from Maui. My life would be totally complete if a kid I coach becomes a world champion.”

That hasn’t happened yet, but given that some of Kinoshita’s students were Matt Meola, Dusty Payne and Ian Walsh, we’re thinking Kinoshita is still happy with how things turned out.

*

“Kite Surfing: A New Wind Blowing”

July 21, 1998

By Dave Sweedler

Drive by Ho`okipa or the North Kihei shoreline (depending on how the wind is blowing) and you’ll probably see a flock of giant kites in the sky. Kite surfing seems to have exploded in popularity in the last few years, but of course Sweedler told us all about it nearly two decades ago, when it was still so novel that many residents didn’t know what to make of it–so much so that sometimes hilarity ensued.

“A bizarre incident happened to professional windsurfer Sierra Emory while kite surfing at Baldwin reef,” Sweedler reported. “‘I went down and my strings became tangled. It took me half an hour to roll in my kite. As I was paddling in, I noticed police cars and fire trucks pulling in and heading in my direction. As I got out of the water they came running down to me. Apparently someone driving by thought that a parachutist had crashed in the ocean.’”

*

“Rotten To The Core”

Sept. 12, 2000

By Olivia Techoueyres

It’s hard to think of a more iconic image of Hawaii than a coconut tree, its fronds swaying in a gentle tradewind breeze. So when we discovered coconut heart rot was killing the trees on Maui, and throughout Hawaii, we set out to learn why.

“The disease, known as ‘coconut heart rot,’ is caused by the fungus Phytophthora katsurae,” wrote reporter Olivia Techoueyres. “On Maui, approximately 20 percent of the coconut trees have died… Although no one really knows how this fungus got to Hawaii, most scientists believe that it is spread by strong windblown rains, through insects, birds, and mice, or by pruning and planting infected trees.”

While we still have coconut trees on Maui today, the fungus that can kill them is also still here.

*

“Do We Really Want Captive Dolphins Here?”

Sept. 26, 2000

By Cynthia Matzke

In hindsight, it’s hard to imagine that a dolphin park was nearly built on Maui. But 17 years ago, the for-profit arm of the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation wanted to build a “Maui Nui theme park” in South Maui that would include four captive dolphins.

“As a community we must question the wisdom of draining our precious wild resources to build an artificial rainforest in Kihei,” author Cynthia Matzke wrote. “Now is the time to either speak up, or be sure to stop by the gift shop on your way out. Maui’s soul may be for sale.”

Needless to say, residents howled in protest and the plan eventually died down. In 2002, then-County Councilmember Joanne Johnson sponsored a bill, which later became law, banning dolphin captivity in Maui County.

*

“Building Barriers”

Nov. 21, 2000

By Nicole Chipman

One of the great things about the State of Hawaii is that all coastline here–all of it–is open to the public. In a place where so much of the culture and economy is based on the ocean, it’s important to ensure proper, unfettered beach access. So when gates suddenly went up at the Puamana neighborhood–one of West Maui’s prime surf spots–we spoke out.

“They try to claim the beach is their private property, but it is not. There is supposed to be a beach access road, but there is not,” says Spike, a long-time surfer of the Maui seas. “A few people blew it for everybody by playing their radios too loud or leaving empty cans around, but it is not fair that everyone should suffer for it,” he says.

The story made a big impact on readers, but even today, the gates at Puamana are still up. So it goes.

*

“Foil Boarding On Maui”

Mar. 27, 2001

By Dave Sweedler

Kai Lenny is getting a lot of attention these days for foil boarding (he even does so on a television commercial for First Hawaiian Bank), but the sport is old news for MauiTime readers. Way back in 2001, Sweedler was writing in these pages about the then-revolutionary sport being developed by such surf legends as Laird Hamilton, Dave Kalama and Rush Randle.

“It has the same feeling as when we first started towing into Pe‘ahi, the infancy stage is a very exciting period,” Kalama told Sweedler. “We call ourselves the Pelican Surf Club, because you’re riding the air current above the water, flowing in the crest of the wave like a bird. The lines you can draw are much different from surfing, you can truly ride in the crest of the wave or you can drop down, go way out in front and carve a big snowboard-like turn. You can really get the momentum going through a flat section–it’s amazing how fast you can go.”

*

“Reflections From Maui”

Sept. 25, 2001

By Travis Henderson

Learning about the four airline hijackings and subsequent attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001 while living on Maui was a surreal experience. Here we were, in the days before social media, trying to comprehend the damage and horror in an environment far removed from the East Coast. And then came the Bush Administration’s order to shut down all airline flights in the United States–for three days, no one could fly in or out of Maui (or anywhere else in the U.S. for that matter.) And when flights started up again, security procedures were up and tourism was down, which hit Hawaii hard.

As it was, an issue of MauiTime hit the streets on Sept. 11. Because of the then-biweekly nature of the paper back then, that meant that we wouldn’t be able to address the attacks until two weeks later.

“On the Saturday after the tragedy, local residents Joel Navarro, Paul Brown, and Adam Quinn organized a showing of aloha of Launiupoko Beach Park,” Travis Henderson wrote. “Sending out a message to Maui residents to bring any kind of watercraft they had along with flowers or leis, they paddled out to show unity with America as well as the rest of the world. Over 250 people, including members of the fire department, visitors, residents and children came out to show that, since we live in paradise, maybe we can send a little bit of sunshine and aloha towards the dark cloud hanging over NYC and Washington, D.C.”

*

“Who’s Pulling Molina’s Strings?”

Aug. 8, 2002

By Don Gronning

Today Mike Molina is an aide to Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa–one in a series of out-of-work politicians/former County Councilmembers who today resides in the mayor’s office. But back in 2002, he was a member of the Maui County Council representing Makawao, Haiku and Paia. And he did something we thought was rather naughty: vote to approve a big Makena development project that was quite close to land he owned.

At first, the county Ethics Board voted to prohibit Molina from voting on the project. But then a lawyer and appraiser appealed to the board, and suddenly they reversed themselves.

“Molina’s attorney, Dennis Nakamura, and an Oahu land appraisal company, said the value of the 12.9 acre parcel Molina owns a part of would not be affected if the Makena Resort rezone is approved, even though the land is located about a mile from the proposed rezone,” Don Gronning reported. But even after the reversal, one member of the Ethics Board still thought Molina should recuse himself. “If the value is so worthless, why insist on retaining interest?” Michael Inouye told Gronning. “I voted mainly for his protection. Why not have a clean slate so he can vote either way, and not have it come back to haunt him?”

*

“The Prisoner Position”

Feb. 26, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

It was while doing interviews for a story on Mana‘o Radio that Anthony Pignataro discovered that Betsy Duncombe, the wife of one of the DJs there, taught yoga classes to inmates at Maui Community Correctional Center as part of an experimental program called Free Inside that sought to lower the incredibly high recidivism rates for inmates that remain high to his day. This was too good a story to pass up, so after interviewing Duncombe, Pignataro and photographer Bron Hollingshead made an appointment to observe her at work.

“All the time I forget these are criminals,” Duncombe said in the story. “Then the guys will talk about having bullets in them. I see a lot of tears and remorse in their eyes. And a lot of wisdom. I hope they start a daily practice that they don’t forget when they’re back on the street and tempted in different ways. They put up a lot of resistance at first. There are a lot of tough guys, but also a lot of jokesters. I don’t take them very seriously. To be honest, I haven’t been concerned about my safety.”

*

“Was Rick Gregory Really A Danger?”

Apr. 15, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

This was one of the most depressing stories we ever published. A guy, Rick Gregory, shows up where a local band is practicing. At first everything’s cool but then he starts acting weird. The band members call the cops. Things go bad, the guy ends up on the floor with three MPD cops on top of him, and then he’s dead. The only way we were able to report this with any detail is because the County of Maui botched their redaction when they responded to our public records request for police Internal Affairs reports on the death (which were only available because Gregory’s family was suing them for wrongful death).

“Statements made by the three officers after the death said Gregory continued to rant and rave after they cuffed him, but also that he complained he couldn’t breathe as they attempted to restrain him,” Pignataro reported. “All three officers said they ignored Gregory’s plea, telling him that if he could talk, he could breathe.”

As often happens in these cases, a judge later threw out the Gregory family’s lawsuit.

*

“Jailbird Moms”

May 20, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

There was a lot of reporting around the county about Maui’s Drug Court in the spring of 2004, so we decided to take a look at some of the people actually in the program. Specifically, what led two mothers named Cheryl and Tania to prison, and what they were doing in anticipation of their eventual release. Part of the story involved observing them during a special Mother’s Day event at the Cameron Center, during which they got to spend two hours with their kids. It was a profoundly emotional event–especially at the end.

“Across the room, Drug Court Administrator Barbara-Ann Keller was watching one mother and daughter,” Pignataro wrote. “‘Look at that poor girl,’ she said, referring to one crying girl being comforted by her mother. ‘She’s been crying the whole time.’

“It was around five in the afternoon, shortly after the children busted open a couple pinatas, that the event came to a close. As the guitarists played ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow,’ the inmates began collecting their souvenir photos, roses and cards in preparation for getting back on the bus to MCCC. One woman cradled her baby–there were half a dozen there that day–for a few moments, then handed the child to a staffer before taking her things and leaving. In the confusion, one over-worked staffer handed Keller a crying infant.”

*

“Jazztastic!”

July 14, 2005

By Samantha Campos

Most famous for being MauiTime’s Holoholo Girl clubs columnist, Samantha Campos was also a thoughtful writer and conscientious reporter. Here, she decided to look at Maui’s jazz scene, much of which is confined to the lobbies of luxurious resorts. The result was delightful and informative, full of great quotes and history. It was exactly the kind of elevated stories MauiTime tries to bring our readers.

“The secret to playing hotel lobby jazz is to be real,” said Mark Johnstone, a keyboardist, in the story. “You just can’t be real loud. You have to find what you groove on and you have to play the room. If people are eating, you don’t wanna play some crazy Sun Ra stuff. But it’s up to the individual to offer their vision. You can use innovation when playing ‘Girl from Ipanema.’ But [in hotels and restaurants] you don’t wanna change it too much to be esoteric.

“I’ve seen how musicians justify navigating through the difficult territory of lobby jazz,” Johnstone continued. “And I’ve seen them sit there and very quietly, wail their asses off. Hotel lobby jazz tends to be creamier. But for the most part, I like chunks in my peanut butter.”

*

“Who Is Willie K?”

May 25, 2006

By Samantha Campos

Of course Samantha Campos was the natural choice to profile Willie K, Maui’s most talented and famous contemporary musician, who also has a reputation for being prickly, difficult to approach. No one else here could have written this. Drawing on her years spent making contacts in Maui’s music scene, Campos was able to get Willie K to open up like he hadn’t before. The resulting story was exemplary, delving into both the musician’s incredible musical abilities and the choices he made to maintain his personal life.

“You gotta take all the bad shit with the good,” Willie K told Campos. “I knew I was gonna have to face that when I got into it. Most local musicians aren’t prepared for that… If you take this move to being a public figure, you better be prepared for the outcome of both sides. Otherwise, it’s gonna slap you hard. Look at Tiger Woods–he can’t even go into a public bathroom. The reason I’m an ‘asshole’ is so I can go to a public restroom. People say, ‘Oh, there’s Willie K, no bother him.’”

*

“The Strange Case Of Bob Awana”

June 14, 2007

By Greg Mebel

This was, without a doubt, the weirdest story we ever ran. It concerned Bob Awana, who at the time was Governor Linda Lingle’s chief of staff–one of the most powerful officials in state government then–and a weird blackmail scheme that involved him, an Indian national and, apparently, a woman in the Philippines. Spurred on by a clipping from an Indian newspaper someone sent us anonymously, reporter Greg Mebel dug in (the old Honolulu Star-Bulletin even credited his work in an editorial).

“I was blackmailed by email,” Awana told Mebel. “I went to [then U.S. Attorney Edward] Kubo, he notified the FBI, and I cooperated with their investigation.”

What exactly happened, we’ll never know. What details did emerge were salacious. Though he insisted that he was innocent, Awana resigned as chief of staff a couple weeks after our story came out.

*

“Digging For The Camp”

Aug. 2, 2007

By Greg Mebel and Anthony Pignataro

A decade before news headlines screamed about “Muslim bans” and other pernicious, racist government crackdowns, we went in search of Maui’s Japanese camp that was set up in Haiku during the first months of World War II. It was a dark time for anyone who believes in civil rights–government imprisoned people merely for being Japanese.

“Tetsuji Hanzawa–owner of Hanzawa’s Store, which is still in Haiku–was one of the prisoners held at the Haiku camp,” Mebel and Pignataro wrote. “According to [granddaughter Sandra] Daniells, authorities took her grandfather first to the Haiku camp, and then to a more permanent facility in New Mexico. When ordered into the camp, Hanzawa’s wife and other relatives were left behind to run the business without him. In this regard, Hanzawa was lucky–after the war, he had a still-functioning business to return to.”

It’s both infuriating and pathetic that stories like this don’t lose their relevancy with the passage of time.

*

“Eddie Sees It Go”

Oct. 18, 2007

By Paul Wood

The great Hawaiian musician and filmmaker Eddie Kamae died in January of this year at the age of 89. Talented, influential, humorous, Kamae was a living treasure when Paul Wood profiled him for us a decade ago. The hook for the story was the debut of Kamae’s wonderful documentary Lahaina: Waves of Change, about the close of the Pioneer Mill in 1999. The resulting work was a joy to read.

“Pilahi [Paki] helped Eddie write the words to the song ‘Kela Mea Whiffa,’ which became a big island hit song in 1975,” Wood wrote. “Eddie told me the story, how in the early ’70s he came over to visit friends in Lahaina. His pal Louie Kalahui had picked them up at the airport. ‘So we come over and we gotta pass Launiupoko, right? So my friend [Louie], he says stop the car.’ They parked right in the center of the stench. ‘He had all the wives waiting in the car, screaming at him.’ But Louie got out of the car and took a deep breath. ‘And he salutes the area. And he calls out: ‘Aloha, kela mea whiffa!’ I say, ‘What you say, kela mea whiffa? What is it?’ He said, ‘It’s the breath of love!’”

*

“No Can Dance”

Apr. 9, 2009

By Kate Bradshaw

Through the years, MauiTime has reported a great deal on the infuriating injustices that seem endemic to the Maui County Department of the Liquor Control. By far the wildest and most ridiculous LC insult is their stubborn, patriarchal need to regulate dancing. Dancing! By 2009, reporter Kate Bradshaw was fed up with it, and wrote about the longtime efforts of two Maui residents–Ramoda Anand and Anthony Simmons, who formed Maui Dance Advocates–to get the LC to lighten up.

“If you dance naked for an audience in a bar or club you’re protected by the First Amendment,” Bradshaw wrote. “But in Maui County, you don’t have the right to dance in a liquor-selling establishment even when fully clothed–unless you’re in an area specifically designated for dancing, and only dancing.

“For Maui Dance Advocates and others who care about this issue, it goes beyond a brief, ambiguous rule in the LC’s books. Underlying this fight is a belief that without public vigilance, governments can make policies that erode the liberties we take for granted.

“‘I want people to think about their freedom,’ says Simmons.”

*

“@grandmaflorence”

Oct. 15, 2009

By Ynez Tongson

Born in Lahaina, Florence Hasegawa spent 70 years–70!–as a Maui County marriage license agent (one of the many, many couples she married was MauiTime’s own Tommy and Jen Russo). In retirement, at the age of 101, having outlived just about everyone she grew up with, she turned to Twitter and became something of a local social media star. To not have written about her would been a crime against journalism

“Florence Hasegawa sits in her chair like a life-wizened general, barking orders to family and friends,” Tongson wrote. “Like any good general, she has a lot of loyal followers–811 to be exact, as of this writing, from all corners of the globe. Those followers have found her on Twitter, the ubiquitous micro-blogging site that allows users to post short messages (140 characters or less) about whatever’s on their mind. For Grandma Florence, as she is known on Twitter, that means ruminations on everything from family to food to whether she fears death (she doesn’t).”

Hasegawa died in Lahaina in 2014, just two months shy of her 106th birthday. Maui hasn’t been the same since.

*

“The Giant”

Oct. 13, 2016

By Anthony Pignataro

The death of former Hawaii House Speaker and Maui Mayor Elmer Cravalho in June 2016, and the weak, shallow obituaries that followed spurred Editor Anthony Pignataro to spend a few months digging deep into Cravalho’s legacy. Using extensive newspaper archive research, oral histories and documents obtained from the FBI and U.S. Army through the Freedom of Information Act, he was able to produce a monster of a story–one of the longest this paper has ever run–that shows why Cravalho was Maui’s most powerful political figure in the last century.

Our research even uncovered a previously unknown fact: that U.S. Army Intelligence had kept a confidential file on Cravalho during the 1950s, because of his close ties to organized labor. Using previously unpublished oral histories on file at the University of Hawaii library, we were also able to finally provide a compelling reason as to why Cravalho suddenly resigned the mayorship in 1979 at the apparent height of his popularity.

“[H]e became kind of disgruntled,” Hannibal Tavares, who eventually became Maui Mayor in the 1980s, recalled in his 1991 oral history. “And when he told me that he was planning to resign, I didn’t believe it. I said, ‘No, you can’t do that. You have to finish your term, Elmer.’

“‘No, I’m sick and tired of taking all this crap,’ Cravalho said, according to Tavares. ‘These people simply will not follow what I’m trying to do. I’m going to resign.’”

*

“The Wave She Rode”

Feb. 9, 2017

By Lantana Hoke

MauiTime started off as a largely surf-oriented publication, and it’s fitting that we end our retrospective by highlighting a relatively recent profile Lantana Hoke did on Maui surfer Paige Alms, who became the first big-wave women’s world champion at the 2016 Peahi Challenge.

Surfing doesn’t make it into the paper much these days, but when Hoke offered to profile Alms, we jumped at it. The result was a solid portrait of a young athlete who’s somehow both famous and unknown.

“At the Women’s March on Maui on Saturday, Jan. 21, Paige Alms was moving through the crowd of thousands gathered to speak up for women’s rights and equality and against the authoritarianism of Donald Trump when she saw herself,” Hoke wrote. “It was a large photo of her surfing Jaws, posted on a sign with the words ‘Action is Power.’ Alms went up to the woman holding the sign and asked if she could take picture with her.

“‘Suuuuure…’ the woman told her, clearly not recognizing her.

“‘You have me on your sign,’ Alms responded. ‘No big deal.’”

*

Cover design (apologies to The Stranger): Darris Hurst

The post MauiTime celebrates 20 years of independent journalism appeared first on Maui Time.

U.S. Senator Brian Schatz wants to make it easier for cops to get body cameras. But will that help the public?

$
0
0

Though they’ve been studying body cameras for the last couple years, the Maui Police Department is only now equipping officers with the devices. According to Gregg Okamoto, the MPD’s public information officer, 89 patrol officers in the Lahaina, Kihei, Hana, Lanai and Molokai districts now wear body cameras.

The promise of police officers wearing forward-facing cameras is high: to both increase accountability of law enforcement and decrease incidents of violence and brutality. To that end, U.S. Senator Brian Schatz recently co-sponsored a new bill–along with Senator Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, and Rep. Steve Cohen, D–Tennessee–called the “Police Creating Accountability by Making Effective Recording Available (Police CAMERA) Act of 2017.” The bill would make it easier for local law enforcement agencies nationwide to get body cameras.

“The Police CAMERA Act of 2017 would establish a pilot grant program using existing funding to assist state, local, and tribal law enforcement agencies with the purchasing or leasing of body-worn cameras,” states a press release Schatz’s office sent out on Oct. 4. “It would also authorize an impact-study after two years. The study would assess the impact body-worn cameras have on reducing the use of excessive force by police, its effects on officer safety and public safety, and procedures to protect the privacy of individuals who are recorded.”

Kauai Police Chief Darryl Perry is already on board.

“The resulting benefits of the body-worn cameras after almost two years of usage have greatly exceeded my expectations,” said Perry in the press release. “Not only have our officers embraced this technology wholeheartedly, but our community has commended KPD for being open and transparent.”  

Perry’s statement that his department has embraced body cameras “wholeheartedly” is odd–the State of Hawaii Organization of Police Officers (SHOPO) sued the department to prevent the camera deployment. Their argument was that the chief couldn’t just start issuing body cameras without their input into how they cameras would be used. In February, an Oahu Circuit Court judge ruled in favor of the department, though SHOPO has said they’d appeal the decision.

That being said, it seems that Schatz can’t wait to get every department in the nation equipped with body cameras.

“We can’t restore trust between our communities and law enforcement without transparency and accountability,” said Schatz in the press release. “Body cameras alone won’t repair that relationship, but they have proven to be effective and can do a great deal to keep both police officers and community members safe and accountable.”

Schatz’s assertion that the cameras have “proven to be effective” is a great deal more controversial than he’s letting on. Sure, thanks to Stanford researchers, who waded through half a million recorded words of filmed interactions between Oakland, California cops and citizens, we have hard data that confirms that “officers in Oakland consistently used less respectful language when speaking with black people,” according to a June 5, 2017 TechCrunch story.

But are the cameras that have been deployed to various police departments throughout the U.S. over the last few years actually working to decrease violence? Well, yes and no.

“On the one hand, complaints dropped against police officers by around 90 per cent following the cameras’ introduction in several forces, which alone is a large enough effect to perhaps justify the costs of the cameras in the short term,” Rand Corporation researcher Alex Sutherland wrote in a Mar. 6, 2017 Rand blog post. “On the other hand, rates of assault against officers during arrest were higher on shifts when body-worn cameras were in use, compared to shifts where cameras were not present. Finally, the overall rate of use of force did not differ between shifts where officers wore cameras and those where they did not.”

What’s more, there’s considerable evidence out there that police body cameras aren’t nearly as helpful in promoting police accountability as originally hoped. That’s because of a little technological wonder known as the off-switch.

According to Okamoto, Maui PD officers with body cameras “are responsible for turning their cameras on and off.” He also said that it’s department policy that “Officers shall activate their cameras whenever responding to a call for service.” This is essentially having it both ways: cops need to have their cameras on when responding to a call, but they have the ability and discretion to the cameras off.

Given that we’re still in the early stages of figuring out exactly what these cameras will do, there’s still no consensus on the issue of continuous recording. In fact, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), sees it as a danger in terms of privacy, for the public as well as police officers.

“[C]rime victims (especially victims of rape, abuse, and other sensitive crimes), as well as witnesses who are concerned about retaliation if seen cooperating with police, may have very good reasons for not wanting police to record their interactions,” ACLU official Jay Stanley wrote back in March 2015. “Continuous recording would also mean a lot of mass surveillance of citizens’ ordinary activities… Continuous recording would also impinge on police officers when they are sitting in a station house or patrol car shooting the breeze–getting to know each other as humans, discussing precinct politics, etc.”

The problem is that giving officers control over when the camera is on basically removes the camera’s whole accountability function. Here are seven examples, most of which are quite recent, of body cameras that simply weren’t on before a police officer used force or did something highly questionable:

• In 2014, Albuquerque cops shot and killed 19-year-old Mary Hawkes, accused of stealing a truck, according to the Mar. 20, 2017 Washington Post. Though six officers were present, none of their body cameras recorded the shooting.

• “Burlington police officers powered down body cameras during a September encounter with a man in Colchester, Vermont, who was later shot by officers,” NBC 5 in Burlington, VT reported on Nov. 3, 2015.

• “On July 28 [2016], a Chicago police officer shot unarmed 18-year-old Paul O’Neal in the back, killing him,” Newsweek reported on Aug. 6, 2016. “The officer who shot O’Neal was outfitted with a body camera. Unfortunately, the camera wasn’t on during the shooting…”

• At the beginning of this year, the ACLU asked why Washington, D.C. cops were “instructed NOT to turn their body cameras on during the president’s inauguration and the following day’s ‘Million Women March.’”

• On May 15, 2017, CBS 12 in Augusta, Georgia reported that Richmond County Sheriffs Deputies Christopher Moore and Charlie Walker had racked up three violations of their department’s body camera violations. One of them involved turning off their cameras before striking a suspect with a baton.

• “Minneapolis police officer shot and killed a woman [Justine Ruszczyk] who called 911 to report an assault in an alley behind her home,” Think Progress reported on July 17, 2017. Police officials later said “officers’ body cameras were not turned on at the time and the squad camera did not capture the incidents.”

• “Baltimore police spent 30 minutes searching a car for drugs but found nothing—until they turned off their body cameras,” The Daily Beast reported on Aug. 1, 2017. “When the cameras turned back on, one cop was seen squatting next to the driver’s side where another officer immediately found drugs.”

In fact, Rand Corporation researcher Sutherland says that law enforcement agencies that give their officers discretion on turning their cameras off may actually be enabling more police brutality.

“[The] use of force was higher when officers used their discretion [to turn off cameras],” he wrote in his Mar. 6 post. “[W]e think that current evidence is clear, police officers should have cameras turned on all the time–certainly before responding to calls for service–and let the public know they are being filmed as soon as possible.”

If this is happening, if cops around the country are simply shutting off their cameras before doing something they know might turn out bad, then it’s hard to see how dumping more cameras on departments will make the streets safer for anyone. The whole purpose behind putting cameras on police officer uniforms was to make law enforcement more transparent and accountable. Simply making cameras more available around the country, without mandating additional accountability regulations and safeguards, is asking for trouble.

Click here for our 2015 primer on police body cameras.

2015 photo of Maui Police Officer Joy Medeiros courtesy Maui PD

The post U.S. Senator Brian Schatz wants to make it easier for cops to get body cameras. But will that help the public? appeared first on Maui Time.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard co-sponsors House bill that restricts asset forfeiture

$
0
0

Here’s a small bit of very encouraging news that comes from, of all places, the U.S. House of Representatives. Yesterday, the House actually approved a bi-partisan amendment to an appropriations bill that restricts Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ plans to expand the loathsome practice known as asset forfeiture. What’s more, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D–Hawaii, was one of the amendment co-sponsors.

Honestly, so much of what law enforcement agencies do is bad, but asset forfeiture has managed to infuriate both the right and left.

“Known as adoptive forfeiture, the practice allows the federal government to accept money and property that has been seized by state law enforcement agencies from people, in some cases, before individuals are formally charged or proven guilty of a crime,” states a Sept. 13 news release sent out by Gabbard’s office. “This practice creates a loophole for states that have adopted stringent, constitutionally sound asset forfeiture laws and allows them to continue practices that are otherwise deemed illegal at the state level.”

While we’ve certainly had our disagreements with Gabbard in the past, her stance on opposing asset forfeiture is (literally) right on the money.

“Attorney General Sessions’ recent announcement to expand civil asset forfeiture allows local law enforcement to bypass state laws and seize property from people with the lowest possible burden of evidence without concern for whether the person is eventually charged or convicted,” Gabbard said in the news release.

In fact, Gabbard said a lot of great things about asset forfeiture, which is often misused by law enforcement agencies all around the country (you can click here to read our May 4 story on a recent and very questionable Maui Police Department asset forfeiture purchase). Here’s the rest of Gabbard’s statement on why she co-sponsored the amendment:

While some will tell you this is necessary to go after big drug cartels, the reality is the median value of the adoptive forfeiture seizures is around $9,000. Not only is this median value not a sign of major drug trafficking operations, but seizures tend to be focused on poorer neighborhoods. Between 2012 and 2017, the median value of assets seized by Cook County police was just over $1,000; in Philadelphia in 2015, the median value was just $192.  

This policy does not discriminate between the innocent and the guilty. Rather, this policy places the responsibility on private citizens to prove their innocence rather than put the appropriate burden on law enforcement to prove guilt. All too often, innocent people without legal representation never see their money or property again, and even those who are proven innocent have no promise their property will be returned. 

The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution exists to protect the citizens of this country from being deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. In practice and in principle, adoptive forfeiture is a violation of that Fifth Amendment.

According to The Intercept, which first wrote about the anti-asset forfeiture amendment yesterday, “The amendment passed with a voice vote, meaning it had overwhelming support.”

Photo of Rep. Gabbard at the Rally for social and economic justice & equality in Washington, Nov. 2016: Lorie Shaull/Flickr

The post Rep. Tulsi Gabbard co-sponsors House bill that restricts asset forfeiture appeared first on Maui Time.

QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about the new ‘Hawaiian’ American Girl Doll?

$
0
0

1. On Aug. 21, American Girl started selling a new doll that was representative of “a Hawaiian girl growing up on the island of Oahu in 1941.” The doll’s first name is Nanea, and it retails for $115. What is the doll’s last name?

A. Yamauchi

B. Santos

C. Mendoza

D. Mitchell

E. Nawahi

2. The Aug. 22 Maui County Council agenda included a communication from the Maui Police Chief saying he will spend $7,452.03 in Federal Forfeiture Funds. What does the chief intend to buy for the department’s Wailuku patrol division?

A. Motorcycle

B. All terrain vehicle

C. Segway

D. Radio equipment

E. Ice machine

3. The 2016 State of Hawaii Data Book came out last week, and is packed with all sorts of fascinating stats about life in Hawaii. For instance, according to the book, as of 2015 18.53 percent of the U.S. population had no internet access whatsoever. What percentage of the population in Hawaii lacks internet access?

A. 14.08 percent

B. 16.38 percent

C. 18.92 percent

D. 20.42 percent

E. 22.73 percent

See answers below:

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

ANSWERS

1: D–Mitchell

2: B–All terrain vehicle

3: A–14.08 percent

Photo courtesy American Girl

 

The post QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about the new ‘Hawaiian’ American Girl Doll? appeared first on Maui Time.

Hawaii Supreme Court agrees to hear State of Hawaii v. Thomas A. Russo

$
0
0

In an effort to end the Maui County Prosecutor’s five-year campaign to bust MauiTime Publisher Tommy Russo for photographing two Maui Police Officers on a public road (the county says he was “failing to comply” with the officers, but that’s BS to mask the fact that he was photographing cops on a public road), Russo’s attorneys Ben Lowenthal and Sam MacRoberts asked the Hawaii Supreme Court to hear their case (click here for our June story on their appeal).

After all, District Court Judge Kelsey Kawano had tossed the case out in 2014 on a procedural matter and the state Legislature passed a law making clear that photographing cops in public is legal. But when the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) ruled in March of this year that Judge Kawano should not have tossed the case, it seemed like the whole travesty would go on forever.

In late June, Russo’s attorneys asked the Supremes two questions:

• “Did the Intermediate Court of Appeals gravely err by vacating the dismissal order when the record clearly established there was no probable cause to bring the charge of obedience to a police officer against Mr. Russo?

• “Did the ICA gravely err in failing to review and examine if the prosecution against Mr. Russo violated his constitutional right to record the police conducting a traffic stop before vacating and remanding the case to the lower court?

On Aug. 1, the five justices of the Hawaii Supreme Court agreed to hear the case, and will schedule oral arguments. No word yet on when that will happen, though.

Click here to read the Hawaii Supreme Court’s Aug. 1 order.

Photo: D Ramey Logan 2011/Wikipedia

The post Hawaii Supreme Court agrees to hear State of Hawaii v. Thomas A. Russo appeared first on Maui Time.


MauiTime Publisher appeals traffic stop photography arrest case to Hawaii Supreme Court

$
0
0

It’s hard to believe it’s been nearly five years since two Maui Police Officers arrested MauiTime Publisher Tommy Russo (on Nov. 20, 2012) when he was photographing them on Haleakala Highway during a traffic stop. The Prosecuting Attorney’s office charged him with failure to comply with police officers and disorderly conduct (the cops’ original charges of resisting arrest, obstruction of a government and harassment were suddenly forgotten), but that was bogus. As the video Russo showed, Russo was complying with the officers’ demands when they arrested him, and in any case the U.S. Supreme Court (just four days after Russo’s arrest) upheld an Illinois appeals court ruling that citizens have a right to photograph police officers in public.

Nearly two years later, on July 9, 2014, Maui District Court Judge Kelsey Kawano threw the whole case out, ruling that that failure to comply charge was only for motor vehicle operators. In a just world, that would have been the end of it. Hell, last year the Hawaii state Legislature even passed Act 164 (we call it “The Tommy Russo law),” inspired by Russo’s arrest that reasserts the public’s right to photograph police officers in public.

But the Maui County Prosecutor’s Office appealed the decision, saying the failure to comply charge was legit and Kawano’s ruling was wrong. On the last day of March of this year, the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) agreed, ruling that the Judge Kawano should not have thrown out the failure to comply with the officers charge (the disorderly conduct charge was okay to toss, though), and kicked the whole thing back to his court.

In a move to finally end this madness, on June 22 Russo’s attorneys filed an Application for Writ of Certiorari to affirm the District Court’s dismissal order with the Hawaii Supreme Court. The 12-page filing asks two questions of the state Supreme Court:

Did the Intermediate Court of Appeals gravely err by vacating the dismissal order when the record clearly established there was no probable cause to bring the charge of obedience to a police officer against Mr. Russo?

Did the ICA gravely err in failing to review and examine if the prosecution against Mr. Russo violated his constitutional right to record the police conducting a traffic stop before vacating and remanding the case to the lower court?

Put simply, the filing goes after the ICA ruling  for both failing on the issue of probable cause in regards to the failure to comply charge and the basic constitutional grounds that Russo had a right to photograph the officers. It also eloquently shows why the case is so important.

“Before the government infringes upon a person’s freedoms of speech and press, the government–not the individual–must show constitutionality,” states the filing. “Police have come under increasing scrutiny with the technological advancement of cameras recording their operations in public. Police misconduct from the Rodney King beating in Los Angeles to the death of Eric Garner in New York City were brought to light when members of the public exercised their right to record law enforcement officers. When the ICA was called upon to establish definitive guidelines for courts, the police, and the local media, it abdicated its duty to determine the issue.”

According to Ben Lowenthal, Russo’s attorney (along with Samuel MacRoberts), the State of Hawaii has 15 days to respond to his filing. After that, he’ll have another seven days to respond to that. Regardless of response, the Hawaii Supreme Court will have to decide whether to hear the case in 30-45 days.

Photo of Aliʻiōlani Hale, where the Hawaii State Supreme Court meets: Christo Vlahos/Wikimedia Commons

 

The post MauiTime Publisher appeals traffic stop photography arrest case to Hawaii Supreme Court appeared first on Maui Time.

MauiTime celebrates 20 years of independent journalism

$
0
0

It’s hard to believe sometimes that we’ve been around for two decades. Sure, we’ve changed a lot in that time (what hasn’t?). But in that time, we’ve brought you a lot of stories–some good, others not so much, but all with the goal of publishing interesting, readable and honest stories about what’s really going on in Maui County. That commitment remains the same today as it was back in Volume 1, Issue 1.

In the following retrospect, we recall 20 examples of what we consider great MauiTime journalism. The stories are all over the map in terms of subject matter–surf, crime, politics, music. But they’re also all unquestionably Maui stories, full of life and color that’s as vibrant as the island we call home. 

We hope you’ve enjoyed the last two decades as much as we did, because we have every intention of sticking around for more.

*

“Shaping The Future: Matt Kinoshita”

Sept. 16, 1997

By Dave Sweedler

Dave Sweedler wrote a ton of surf stories for MauiTime in the early years. Few even today are as dialed into the local surf community as Sweedler. Many of his stories were profiles like this one of local surfer and board shaper Matt Kinoshita. Even back then, Kinoshita’s Kazuma Surfboards made some of Maui’s most recognized boards.

“The positive side of surfing today is that the level of surfing has risen amongst the new generation, and it’s very exciting to see the change,” Kinoshita told Sweedler. “I think there will be a whole new push towards professionalism and a clean image for surfers in the future. I’m coaching kids with 4.0 grade point averages who totally rip in the water. There should be nothing holding back a future world champ from Maui. My life would be totally complete if a kid I coach becomes a world champion.”

That hasn’t happened yet, but given that some of Kinoshita’s students were Matt Meola, Dusty Payne and Ian Walsh, we’re thinking Kinoshita is still happy with how things turned out.

*

“Kite Surfing: A New Wind Blowing”

July 21, 1998

By Dave Sweedler

Drive by Ho`okipa or the North Kihei shoreline (depending on how the wind is blowing) and you’ll probably see a flock of giant kites in the sky. Kite surfing seems to have exploded in popularity in the last few years, but of course Sweedler told us all about it nearly two decades ago, when it was still so novel that many residents didn’t know what to make of it–so much so that sometimes hilarity ensued.

“A bizarre incident happened to professional windsurfer Sierra Emory while kite surfing at Baldwin reef,” Sweedler reported. “‘I went down and my strings became tangled. It took me half an hour to roll in my kite. As I was paddling in, I noticed police cars and fire trucks pulling in and heading in my direction. As I got out of the water they came running down to me. Apparently someone driving by thought that a parachutist had crashed in the ocean.’”

*

“Rotten To The Core”

Sept. 12, 2000

By Olivia Techoueyres

It’s hard to think of a more iconic image of Hawaii than a coconut tree, its fronds swaying in a gentle tradewind breeze. So when we discovered coconut heart rot was killing the trees on Maui, and throughout Hawaii, we set out to learn why.

“The disease, known as ‘coconut heart rot,’ is caused by the fungus Phytophthora katsurae,” wrote reporter Olivia Techoueyres. “On Maui, approximately 20 percent of the coconut trees have died… Although no one really knows how this fungus got to Hawaii, most scientists believe that it is spread by strong windblown rains, through insects, birds, and mice, or by pruning and planting infected trees.”

While we still have coconut trees on Maui today, the fungus that can kill them is also still here.

*

“Do We Really Want Captive Dolphins Here?”

Sept. 26, 2000

By Cynthia Matzke

In hindsight, it’s hard to imagine that a dolphin park was nearly built on Maui. But 17 years ago, the for-profit arm of the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation wanted to build a “Maui Nui theme park” in South Maui that would include four captive dolphins.

“As a community we must question the wisdom of draining our precious wild resources to build an artificial rainforest in Kihei,” author Cynthia Matzke wrote. “Now is the time to either speak up, or be sure to stop by the gift shop on your way out. Maui’s soul may be for sale.”

Needless to say, residents howled in protest and the plan eventually died down. In 2002, then-County Councilmember Joanne Johnson sponsored a bill, which later became law, banning dolphin captivity in Maui County.

*

“Building Barriers”

Nov. 21, 2000

By Nicole Chipman

One of the great things about the State of Hawaii is that all coastline here–all of it–is open to the public. In a place where so much of the culture and economy is based on the ocean, it’s important to ensure proper, unfettered beach access. So when gates suddenly went up at the Puamana neighborhood–one of West Maui’s prime surf spots–we spoke out.

“They try to claim the beach is their private property, but it is not. There is supposed to be a beach access road, but there is not,” says Spike, a long-time surfer of the Maui seas. “A few people blew it for everybody by playing their radios too loud or leaving empty cans around, but it is not fair that everyone should suffer for it,” he says.

The story made a big impact on readers, but even today, the gates at Puamana are still up. So it goes.

*

“Foil Boarding On Maui”

Mar. 27, 2001

By Dave Sweedler

Kai Lenny is getting a lot of attention these days for foil boarding (he even does so on a television commercial for First Hawaiian Bank), but the sport is old news for MauiTime readers. Way back in 2001, Sweedler was writing in these pages about the then-revolutionary sport being developed by such surf legends as Laird Hamilton, Dave Kalama and Rush Randle.

“It has the same feeling as when we first started towing into Pe‘ahi, the infancy stage is a very exciting period,” Kalama told Sweedler. “We call ourselves the Pelican Surf Club, because you’re riding the air current above the water, flowing in the crest of the wave like a bird. The lines you can draw are much different from surfing, you can truly ride in the crest of the wave or you can drop down, go way out in front and carve a big snowboard-like turn. You can really get the momentum going through a flat section–it’s amazing how fast you can go.”

*

“Reflections From Maui”

Sept. 25, 2001

By Travis Henderson

Learning about the four airline hijackings and subsequent attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001 while living on Maui was a surreal experience. Here we were, in the days before social media, trying to comprehend the damage and horror in an environment far removed from the East Coast. And then came the Bush Administration’s order to shut down all airline flights in the United States–for three days, no one could fly in or out of Maui (or anywhere else in the U.S. for that matter.) And when flights started up again, security procedures were up and tourism was down, which hit Hawaii hard.

As it was, an issue of MauiTime hit the streets on Sept. 11. Because of the then-biweekly nature of the paper back then, that meant that we wouldn’t be able to address the attacks until two weeks later.

“On the Saturday after the tragedy, local residents Joel Navarro, Paul Brown, and Adam Quinn organized a showing of aloha of Launiupoko Beach Park,” Travis Henderson wrote. “Sending out a message to Maui residents to bring any kind of watercraft they had along with flowers or leis, they paddled out to show unity with America as well as the rest of the world. Over 250 people, including members of the fire department, visitors, residents and children came out to show that, since we live in paradise, maybe we can send a little bit of sunshine and aloha towards the dark cloud hanging over NYC and Washington, D.C.”

*

“Who’s Pulling Molina’s Strings?”

Aug. 8, 2002

By Don Gronning

Today Mike Molina is an aide to Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa–one in a series of out-of-work politicians/former County Councilmembers who today resides in the mayor’s office. But back in 2002, he was a member of the Maui County Council representing Makawao, Haiku and Paia. And he did something we thought was rather naughty: vote to approve a big Makena development project that was quite close to land he owned.

At first, the county Ethics Board voted to prohibit Molina from voting on the project. But then a lawyer and appraiser appealed to the board, and suddenly they reversed themselves.

“Molina’s attorney, Dennis Nakamura, and an Oahu land appraisal company, said the value of the 12.9 acre parcel Molina owns a part of would not be affected if the Makena Resort rezone is approved, even though the land is located about a mile from the proposed rezone,” Don Gronning reported. But even after the reversal, one member of the Ethics Board still thought Molina should recuse himself. “If the value is so worthless, why insist on retaining interest?” Michael Inouye told Gronning. “I voted mainly for his protection. Why not have a clean slate so he can vote either way, and not have it come back to haunt him?”

*

“The Prisoner Position”

Feb. 26, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

It was while doing interviews for a story on Mana‘o Radio that Anthony Pignataro discovered that Betsy Duncombe, the wife of one of the DJs there, taught yoga classes to inmates at Maui Community Correctional Center as part of an experimental program called Free Inside that sought to lower the incredibly high recidivism rates for inmates that remain high to his day. This was too good a story to pass up, so after interviewing Duncombe, Pignataro and photographer Bron Hollingshead made an appointment to observe her at work.

“All the time I forget these are criminals,” Duncombe said in the story. “Then the guys will talk about having bullets in them. I see a lot of tears and remorse in their eyes. And a lot of wisdom. I hope they start a daily practice that they don’t forget when they’re back on the street and tempted in different ways. They put up a lot of resistance at first. There are a lot of tough guys, but also a lot of jokesters. I don’t take them very seriously. To be honest, I haven’t been concerned about my safety.”

*

“Was Rick Gregory Really A Danger?”

Apr. 15, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

This was one of the most depressing stories we ever published. A guy, Rick Gregory, shows up where a local band is practicing. At first everything’s cool but then he starts acting weird. The band members call the cops. Things go bad, the guy ends up on the floor with three MPD cops on top of him, and then he’s dead. The only way we were able to report this with any detail is because the County of Maui botched their redaction when they responded to our public records request for police Internal Affairs reports on the death (which were only available because Gregory’s family was suing them for wrongful death).

“Statements made by the three officers after the death said Gregory continued to rant and rave after they cuffed him, but also that he complained he couldn’t breathe as they attempted to restrain him,” Pignataro reported. “All three officers said they ignored Gregory’s plea, telling him that if he could talk, he could breathe.”

As often happens in these cases, a judge later threw out the Gregory family’s lawsuit.

*

“Jailbird Moms”

May 20, 2004

By Anthony Pignataro

There was a lot of reporting around the county about Maui’s Drug Court in the spring of 2004, so we decided to take a look at some of the people actually in the program. Specifically, what led two mothers named Cheryl and Tania to prison, and what they were doing in anticipation of their eventual release. Part of the story involved observing them during a special Mother’s Day event at the Cameron Center, during which they got to spend two hours with their kids. It was a profoundly emotional event–especially at the end.

“Across the room, Drug Court Administrator Barbara-Ann Keller was watching one mother and daughter,” Pignataro wrote. “‘Look at that poor girl,’ she said, referring to one crying girl being comforted by her mother. ‘She’s been crying the whole time.’

“It was around five in the afternoon, shortly after the children busted open a couple pinatas, that the event came to a close. As the guitarists played ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow,’ the inmates began collecting their souvenir photos, roses and cards in preparation for getting back on the bus to MCCC. One woman cradled her baby–there were half a dozen there that day–for a few moments, then handed the child to a staffer before taking her things and leaving. In the confusion, one over-worked staffer handed Keller a crying infant.”

*

“Jazztastic!”

July 14, 2005

By Samantha Campos

Most famous for being MauiTime’s Holoholo Girl clubs columnist, Samantha Campos was also a thoughtful writer and conscientious reporter. Here, she decided to look at Maui’s jazz scene, much of which is confined to the lobbies of luxurious resorts. The result was delightful and informative, full of great quotes and history. It was exactly the kind of elevated stories MauiTime tries to bring our readers.

“The secret to playing hotel lobby jazz is to be real,” said Mark Johnstone, a keyboardist, in the story. “You just can’t be real loud. You have to find what you groove on and you have to play the room. If people are eating, you don’t wanna play some crazy Sun Ra stuff. But it’s up to the individual to offer their vision. You can use innovation when playing ‘Girl from Ipanema.’ But [in hotels and restaurants] you don’t wanna change it too much to be esoteric.

“I’ve seen how musicians justify navigating through the difficult territory of lobby jazz,” Johnstone continued. “And I’ve seen them sit there and very quietly, wail their asses off. Hotel lobby jazz tends to be creamier. But for the most part, I like chunks in my peanut butter.”

*

“Who Is Willie K?”

May 25, 2006

By Samantha Campos

Of course Samantha Campos was the natural choice to profile Willie K, Maui’s most talented and famous contemporary musician, who also has a reputation for being prickly, difficult to approach. No one else here could have written this. Drawing on her years spent making contacts in Maui’s music scene, Campos was able to get Willie K to open up like he hadn’t before. The resulting story was exemplary, delving into both the musician’s incredible musical abilities and the choices he made to maintain his personal life.

“You gotta take all the bad shit with the good,” Willie K told Campos. “I knew I was gonna have to face that when I got into it. Most local musicians aren’t prepared for that… If you take this move to being a public figure, you better be prepared for the outcome of both sides. Otherwise, it’s gonna slap you hard. Look at Tiger Woods–he can’t even go into a public bathroom. The reason I’m an ‘asshole’ is so I can go to a public restroom. People say, ‘Oh, there’s Willie K, no bother him.’”

*

“The Strange Case Of Bob Awana”

June 14, 2007

By Greg Mebel

This was, without a doubt, the weirdest story we ever ran. It concerned Bob Awana, who at the time was Governor Linda Lingle’s chief of staff–one of the most powerful officials in state government then–and a weird blackmail scheme that involved him, an Indian national and, apparently, a woman in the Philippines. Spurred on by a clipping from an Indian newspaper someone sent us anonymously, reporter Greg Mebel dug in (the old Honolulu Star-Bulletin even credited his work in an editorial).

“I was blackmailed by email,” Awana told Mebel. “I went to [then U.S. Attorney Edward] Kubo, he notified the FBI, and I cooperated with their investigation.”

What exactly happened, we’ll never know. What details did emerge were salacious. Though he insisted that he was innocent, Awana resigned as chief of staff a couple weeks after our story came out.

*

“Digging For The Camp”

Aug. 2, 2007

By Greg Mebel and Anthony Pignataro

A decade before news headlines screamed about “Muslim bans” and other pernicious, racist government crackdowns, we went in search of Maui’s Japanese camp that was set up in Haiku during the first months of World War II. It was a dark time for anyone who believes in civil rights–government imprisoned people merely for being Japanese.

“Tetsuji Hanzawa–owner of Hanzawa’s Store, which is still in Haiku–was one of the prisoners held at the Haiku camp,” Mebel and Pignataro wrote. “According to [granddaughter Sandra] Daniells, authorities took her grandfather first to the Haiku camp, and then to a more permanent facility in New Mexico. When ordered into the camp, Hanzawa’s wife and other relatives were left behind to run the business without him. In this regard, Hanzawa was lucky–after the war, he had a still-functioning business to return to.”

It’s both infuriating and pathetic that stories like this don’t lose their relevancy with the passage of time.

*

“Eddie Sees It Go”

Oct. 18, 2007

By Paul Wood

The great Hawaiian musician and filmmaker Eddie Kamae died in January of this year at the age of 89. Talented, influential, humorous, Kamae was a living treasure when Paul Wood profiled him for us a decade ago. The hook for the story was the debut of Kamae’s wonderful documentary Lahaina: Waves of Change, about the close of the Pioneer Mill in 1999. The resulting work was a joy to read.

“Pilahi [Paki] helped Eddie write the words to the song ‘Kela Mea Whiffa,’ which became a big island hit song in 1975,” Wood wrote. “Eddie told me the story, how in the early ’70s he came over to visit friends in Lahaina. His pal Louie Kalahui had picked them up at the airport. ‘So we come over and we gotta pass Launiupoko, right? So my friend [Louie], he says stop the car.’ They parked right in the center of the stench. ‘He had all the wives waiting in the car, screaming at him.’ But Louie got out of the car and took a deep breath. ‘And he salutes the area. And he calls out: ‘Aloha, kela mea whiffa!’ I say, ‘What you say, kela mea whiffa? What is it?’ He said, ‘It’s the breath of love!’”

*

“No Can Dance”

Apr. 9, 2009

By Kate Bradshaw

Through the years, MauiTime has reported a great deal on the infuriating injustices that seem endemic to the Maui County Department of the Liquor Control. By far the wildest and most ridiculous LC insult is their stubborn, patriarchal need to regulate dancing. Dancing! By 2009, reporter Kate Bradshaw was fed up with it, and wrote about the longtime efforts of two Maui residents–Ramoda Anand and Anthony Simmons, who formed Maui Dance Advocates–to get the LC to lighten up.

“If you dance naked for an audience in a bar or club you’re protected by the First Amendment,” Bradshaw wrote. “But in Maui County, you don’t have the right to dance in a liquor-selling establishment even when fully clothed–unless you’re in an area specifically designated for dancing, and only dancing.

“For Maui Dance Advocates and others who care about this issue, it goes beyond a brief, ambiguous rule in the LC’s books. Underlying this fight is a belief that without public vigilance, governments can make policies that erode the liberties we take for granted.

“‘I want people to think about their freedom,’ says Simmons.”

*

“@grandmaflorence”

Oct. 15, 2009

By Ynez Tongson

Born in Lahaina, Florence Hasegawa spent 70 years–70!–as a Maui County marriage license agent (one of the many, many couples she married was MauiTime’s own Tommy and Jen Russo). In retirement, at the age of 101, having outlived just about everyone she grew up with, she turned to Twitter and became something of a local social media star. To not have written about her would been a crime against journalism

“Florence Hasegawa sits in her chair like a life-wizened general, barking orders to family and friends,” Tongson wrote. “Like any good general, she has a lot of loyal followers–811 to be exact, as of this writing, from all corners of the globe. Those followers have found her on Twitter, the ubiquitous micro-blogging site that allows users to post short messages (140 characters or less) about whatever’s on their mind. For Grandma Florence, as she is known on Twitter, that means ruminations on everything from family to food to whether she fears death (she doesn’t).”

Hasegawa died in Lahaina in 2014, just two months shy of her 106th birthday. Maui hasn’t been the same since.

*

“The Giant”

Oct. 13, 2016

By Anthony Pignataro

The death of former Hawaii House Speaker and Maui Mayor Elmer Cravalho in June 2016, and the weak, shallow obituaries that followed spurred Editor Anthony Pignataro to spend a few months digging deep into Cravalho’s legacy. Using extensive newspaper archive research, oral histories and documents obtained from the FBI and U.S. Army through the Freedom of Information Act, he was able to produce a monster of a story–one of the longest this paper has ever run–that shows why Cravalho was Maui’s most powerful political figure in the last century.

Our research even uncovered a previously unknown fact: that U.S. Army Intelligence had kept a confidential file on Cravalho during the 1950s, because of his close ties to organized labor. Using previously unpublished oral histories on file at the University of Hawaii library, we were also able to finally provide a compelling reason as to why Cravalho suddenly resigned the mayorship in 1979 at the apparent height of his popularity.

“[H]e became kind of disgruntled,” Hannibal Tavares, who eventually became Maui Mayor in the 1980s, recalled in his 1991 oral history. “And when he told me that he was planning to resign, I didn’t believe it. I said, ‘No, you can’t do that. You have to finish your term, Elmer.’

“‘No, I’m sick and tired of taking all this crap,’ Cravalho said, according to Tavares. ‘These people simply will not follow what I’m trying to do. I’m going to resign.’”

*

“The Wave She Rode”

Feb. 9, 2017

By Lantana Hoke

MauiTime started off as a largely surf-oriented publication, and it’s fitting that we end our retrospective by highlighting a relatively recent profile Lantana Hoke did on Maui surfer Paige Alms, who became the first big-wave women’s world champion at the 2016 Peahi Challenge.

Surfing doesn’t make it into the paper much these days, but when Hoke offered to profile Alms, we jumped at it. The result was a solid portrait of a young athlete who’s somehow both famous and unknown.

“At the Women’s March on Maui on Saturday, Jan. 21, Paige Alms was moving through the crowd of thousands gathered to speak up for women’s rights and equality and against the authoritarianism of Donald Trump when she saw herself,” Hoke wrote. “It was a large photo of her surfing Jaws, posted on a sign with the words ‘Action is Power.’ Alms went up to the woman holding the sign and asked if she could take picture with her.

“‘Suuuuure…’ the woman told her, clearly not recognizing her.

“‘You have me on your sign,’ Alms responded. ‘No big deal.’”

*

Cover design (apologies to The Stranger): Darris Hurst

The post MauiTime celebrates 20 years of independent journalism appeared first on Maui Time.

QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about former House Speaker Joe Souki’s career?

$
0
0

1. On May 3, the state Attorney General’s office released its annual report on firearms registrations for 2016. According to the report, in 2016 what was the most common reason for firearm permits to get denied?

A. Disorderly conduct

B. Assault

C. Medical marijuana patient

D. Mental health issue/treatment

E. Abuse of family/household member

2. Maui Rep. Joe Souki resigned on May 4 after about five years as Speaker of the Hawaii House of Representatives. This marked the end of Souki’s second stint as Speaker. The first began in 1993. When did that speakership end?

A. 1997

B. 1999

C. 2001

D. 2003

E. 2005

3. On the night of May 5, the Maui PD set up multiple OUI checkpoints to combat drunk driving. On May 8, the department announced that they had arrested 18 people as a result of these checkpoints. How many of those arrested were actually for operating a car under the influence of alcohol?

A. 13

B. 14

C. 15

D. 16

E. 17

See answers below:

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

ANSWERS

1: D–Mental health issue/treatment

2: B–1999

3: A–13

Photo courtesy Joesouki.com

The post QuizUnderstood: How much do you know about former House Speaker Joe Souki’s career? appeared first on Maui Time.

The Maui Police Dept. bought crime-fighting ice machines with asset forfeiture funds

$
0
0

Normally, hearing that the Maui Police Department recently purchased ice machines for its stations in Hana and Lanai wouldn’t inspire me to write a story. But when I heard that the department used asset forfeiture funds to buy the machines, I got to work.

Civil asset forfeiture is one of those grotesque things governments do that riles both left and libertarians–the left because it provides a cash incentive for the Drug War and mass incarceration practices that fall disproportionately on African-Americans and libertarians because it stomps on property rights–yet it’s continued with only minor reform since the federal government really got rolling on the Drug War in the 1980s. How it works is simple enough in principle: during criminal investigations, law enforcement can seize assets (cash, vehicles, etc.) and then split the loot with the state Attorney General’s office (which in Hawaii takes 50 percent) and the prosecutor’s office (which takes 25 percent).

“[C]riminals are deprived of their working capital and profits, thereby preventing them from operating even where traditional criminal sanctions have not otherwise deterred them,” states the Hawaii Attorney General’s Fiscal Year 2015-2016 Annual Report of Proceedings under the Hawaii Omnibus Criminal Forfeiture Act (the most recent one available). “A secondary benefit of forfeiture laws is that forfeited property, or the proceeds of its sale, is turned over to law enforcement and used to fight crime.”

“Used to fight crime.” As we’ll see, police departments have discovered that nearly anything can be used to fight crime.

See, asset forfeiture has turned local law enforcement into mercenaries. The Hawaii AG’s office is clearly sensitive about this, because their annual reports on asset forfeiture include this sentence: “While the purpose of forfeiture and the evaluation of a forfeiture law or program should never be based solely on the generation of revenue, it is fitting that forfeited property be used to combat those who seek to profit from crime.”

If I had a nickel for all the caveats and qualifiers in that sentence, I could buy, well, an ice machine. In fact, I wasn’t surprised to see that in 2015, the Institute for Justice–a libertarian public interest law firm based in Arlington, Virginia–graded Hawaii a D- for its asset forfeiture policies.

State law has a low standard of proof, requiring only that the government show by a preponderance of the evidence that property is tied to a crime,” states the IJ’s 2015 report Policing for Profit. “Furthermore, innocent owners bear the burden of proving that they had nothing to do with the alleged crime giving rise to the forfeiture. Most troubling, law enforcement has a large financial stake in forfeiture.”

Let’s start at the beginning. Though the AG’s office insists that asset forfeiture deprives “criminals” of the capital, it also often deprives innocent people of their property. This happens over and over, across the nation, as Michelle Alexander documented in her 2012 book The New Jim Crow.

“Neither the owner of the property nor anyone else need be charged with a crime, much less found guilty of one,” Alexander wrote. “Indeed, a person could be found innocent of any criminal conduct and the property could still be subject to forfeiture.”

Of course, anyone whose stuff is seized has the right to ask for judicial review of the seizure, but that’ll require an attorney.

“Because those who were targeted were typically poor or of moderate means, they often lacked the resources to hire an attorney or pay the considerable court costs,” Alexander wrote. “As a result, most people who had their cash or property seized did not challenge the government’s action, especially because the government could retaliate by filing criminal charges–baseless or not.”

Indeed, though the most recent asset forfeiture report from the AG’s office shows that while Hawaii’s law enforcement agencies seized more than $381,000 in cash and property in Fiscal Year 2015-2016, there were just six claims for judicial review. Of those, three were settled and three were still in litigation at the time the report came out.

What’s more, fighting to regain seized assets–even when you personally aren’t charged with a crime–is difficult for reasons beyond attorney costs. According to Alexander, the government only needs to show a “preponderance of evidence” that seized assets were used in crimes.

“Most people simply cannot afford the considerable cost of hiring an attorney,” Alexander wrote. “Even if the cost is not an issue, the incentives are all wrong. If the police seized your car worth $5,000, or took $500 cash from your home, would you be willing to pay an attorney more than your assets are worth to get them back?”

Though the AG’s annual asset forfeiture reports are pretty vague, they do show that the MPD seized not quite $91,000 in Fiscal Year 2015-2016–$84,000 in cash and $6,700 in vehicles. As for what they can do with that money, it’s pretty wide open–the AG’s insistence that it’s used “to fight crime” notwithstanding. Though there are limits, as MPD Chief Tivoli Faaumu told the Maui County Council Budget and Finance Committee on April 7, the department was still able to use the funds to buy a couple of (presumably) crime-fighting ice machines.

The revelation came during the middle of one of those long budget sessions, when department directors testify at great length about all the stuff they need in the coming fiscal year. It started when Committee Chair Riki Hokama suddenly asked Assistant Chief John Jakubczak whether the Lanai police station had a ice machine.

“That’s what we’re just purchasing with forfeiture funds at this point right now,” Jakubczak testified, according to the meeting minutes.

Hokama thanked him, then asked Faaumu for a rundown on how the MPD uses forfeiture funds.

“So what can I do with the Forfeiture Fund?” Faaumu asked rhetorically. “I know one thing that I can’t use it for is to supplant things that I’m responsible to purchase. I won’t be able to do that. I can use it for… to purchase something if we have an initiative. I’ll give you an example of what the Chair talk[s] about is the purchase of the ice machine for our Hana District and our Lanai District. We learned from the latest blackout and some of the inclement weather that our Hana District has encounter[ed], ice machine or ice is very important, especially during power outages. So the commander look[ed] at it and believe[d] that is in an initiative, something that our Department need[ed] to support the community. So we use the Forfeiture Fund for that.”

So that, boys and girls, is how the little Hana and Lanai police stations got their ice machines. Stay frosty!

Photo: Kinneck/Wikimedia Commons

The post The Maui Police Dept. bought crime-fighting ice machines with asset forfeiture funds appeared first on Maui Time.

Activists circulate petition to impeach Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa

$
0
0

A couple hours before Mayor Alan Arakawa gave his annual State of the County address, a tidy group of residents gathered at the entrance to the Maui Arts & Cultural Center. Carrying signs and upside-down Hawaii state flags, they were there to express their anger, as one demonstrator put it, at Arakawa. Their numbers swelled from about 50 at 4:30pm to nearly double that an hour later, but their message was clear: the mayor has to go.

Their signs they carried were about what you’d expect. “Respect the Culture.” “Iao is Sacred.” “County of Maui Guilty of Desecration.”

Despite the heated emotions that formed the foundation of the protest, the gathering on Thursday, Mar. 9 was chill. The group of three (sometimes four) Maui Police Officers who milled about a few dozen yards back from the protesters looked, if anything, bored. Children played on the grass. One demonstrator brought sweet potatoes from her yard for everyone. Another brought her pet pig Pua`a. Maui County Councilmember Elle Cochran walked around the demonstration at one point, chatting with the protesters. The most militant behavior I saw came from a handful of sign-carrying demonstrators who did a s-l-o-w march across the street in front of every car wanting to turn into the MACC.

As proof of their intentions, one organizer began collecting signatures on a new Petition for Impeachment of Mayor Alan Arakawa. Dated Mar. 9, the three-page petition states that Arakawa is guilty of “malfeasance, misfeasance and nonfeasance” in regards to his authorizing the removal of rocks in Iao Valley following the flash flood storm of Sept. 13, 2016.

“The Mayor worked outside the scope of his authority under the emergency proclamations to protect the public’s safety, and instead took advantage of the emergency situation to use the Iao river bed as a rock quarry for large quantities of harvested material for crushing,” states the petition. “The public’s safety was not in jeopardy from the river bed and boulders that had lived there for ages. By working outside the scope of his authority within the river bed, on mostly private land, to conduct emergency work within Iao Valley, the Mayor is guilty of illegal misappropriation of public funds.”

The removal of rocks–which many native Hawaiians consider to be sacred–from the Iao stream bed following the flood has sparked outrage from a few activists since it took place. Ironically, Arakawa himself recently poured gasoline on the fire by making outrageously condescending comments on Hawaii News Now.

“[T]here’s no such thing as sacred rocks,” Arakawa said on HNN on Feb. 17. “The monarchy, starting with Kamehameha… declared Christianity the religion of Hawaii. In Christianity, if I remember the 10 Commandments correctly, thou shall have no false god before me. There are no sacred rocks in that religion.”

It took two weeks for Arakawa to apologize for his remarks (which reportedly spurred the Office of Hawaiian Affairs to issue a statement on the considerable importance native Hawaiians place on rocks like those found in Iao), though he continued to insist that removing the rocks was necessary for public safety. He reiterated that at the conclusion of his State of the County address last night.

“Before we wrap up tonight, I would like to thank the men and women who worked tirelessly to fix Kepaniwai Park, our Flood Control along Iao and Kahoma, as well as other areas last year,” Arakawa said in the speech. “Our county crews worked fast and hard to get repairs underway, at times placing their own lives in danger. Timing was critical, because right after that flood we had another flood event on New Year’s Eve, which caused no damage due to the repairs made to our flood control. Without those repairs, flood waters could have damaged homes from Iao Parkside to Paukukalo, and businesses all along Lower Main Street.”

The impeachment petition references Section 13-13 of the County of Maui Charter. “Appointed or elected officers may be impeached for malfeasance, misfeasance or nonfeasance in office or violation of the provisions of Article 10 (Code of Ethics),” states the petition. “Such impeachment proceedings shall be commenced in the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit, State of Hawaii.”

One organizer told me they’re trying to gather 5,000 signatures, and have only just started.

When I asked County Communications Director Rod Antone if he’d like to comment on the impeachment petition, he emailed back, “Not really.”

Click here for a PDF copy of the impeachment petition.

Photo: MauiTime

The post Activists circulate petition to impeach Maui Mayor Alan Arakawa appeared first on Maui Time.

Quizunderstood: How much do you know about Hawaiian Airlines’ return to Kapalua Airport?

$
0
0

1. On Mar. 2, the Maui Police Department announced that they had a new scent-tracking dog. According to the news release, the dog is a Labrador. What is the dog’s name?

A. Jim

B. John

C. Jack

D. Joe

E. Jake

2. On Mar. 3, the Hawaii House of Representatives passed 137 bills. One of them was HB451 HD1. What does it do?

A. Establishes the invasive species rapid response special fund within DLNR.

B. Reduces the minimum Hawaiian blood quantum requirement of certain successors to lessees of Hawaiian home lands from one-quarter to one thirty-second.

C. Replaces the state vehicle weight tax with a tax based on the assessed value of a vehicle.

D. Requires UH to conduct a study on the effects of sunscreen on Hawaii’s coral reefs and report to the Legislature.

E. Allows the Department of Human Services to establish puuhonua safe zones where homeless persons may reside.

3. On Mar. 1, Hawaiian Airlines resumed service at Kapalua Airport. In what year did the airline stop service there?

A. 1989

B. 1990

C. 1991

D. 1992

E. 1993

See answers below:

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

ANSWERS

1: C–Jack

2: B–Reduces the minimum Hawaiian blood quantum requirement of certain successors to lessees of Hawaiian home lands from one-quarter to one thirty-second.

3: E–1993

Photo courtesy Hawaiian Airlines

The post Quizunderstood: How much do you know about Hawaiian Airlines’ return to Kapalua Airport? appeared first on Maui Time.

We talk story with ACLU Hawaii Legal Director Mateo Caballero about Trump’s assault on civil liberties

$
0
0

If you exhibit any empathy at all, reading the news these days is a terrible depressing experience. Every day it seems, the President “Baby” Donald Trump and Republican-controlled Legislatures across the country sign executive orders or introduce legislation designed to curb someone’s civil liberties–voting rights, trans rights, protester rights, even the rights of documented immigrants who were born in a non-white majority nation. As if it we didn’t get enough warnings during the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump clearly defines his oft-repeated slogan “Make America Great Again” as returning the nation to a time when white male supremacy reigned supreme.

To find out how these assaults on civil liberties affects us in Hawaii, I spoke with Mateo Caballero, the legal director for the ACLU of Hawaii.

MAUITIME: What’s the most important issue your office is facing?

MATEO CABALLERO: That’s harder to answer than you might think. We have a few priorities. Even before the election, we filed a complaint with the Department of Justice asking for an investigation into conditions of confinement with Hawaii prisons. People have been sleeping on the floor, there’s vermin–that’s a priority for us. We get a lot of letters from inmates.

Since the election, our biggest issue has been immigration. It started with Trump’s executive order issuing the travel ban. There were people locally who had family who was abroad when it happened and they were worried about getting back here. We’re still learning more and more of what’s going on. The courts have stopped the executive order, but there’s still a lot of fear.

A bigger issue in terms of the number of people who are affected in Hawaii is increasing enforcement–immigration and customs enforcement. The Obama Administration set up priorities on undocumented immigrants: if you were a recent arrival or had committed a serious crime, then you were a candidate for deportation. But recently the Trump Administration has done away with those priorities. There’s a lot of fear and concern that there will be increased enforcement.

And we have to be ready for whatever else comes. There have been a number of campaign promises from Trump that concern the ACLU.

MT: Such as?

MC: Essentially there are five areas we identified that we’re concerned about. There’s immigration. Then there’s access to abortion–going after women who exercise their right to an abortion. The Supreme Court could substantially curtail that right. Then there was his promise to go back to post-9/11 days on torture–the idea that “anything goes.” Even though it has been shown that torture doesn’t work, is a great terrorist recruiting tool and is completely illegal and unconstitutional. Then there was his travel ban, which was worse than we thought, targeting mainly majority Muslim immigrants. And then first amendment rights. Trump essentially said he would sue The New York Times. There’s a lot of rhetoric against the press, and he is the head of the U.S. government. We are very concerned about the threat this administration poses to the press as well as other rights under the first amendment.

MT: Let’s return to the subject of prisons. What exactly are the problems you’re finding?

MC: There are 11 correctional facilities that house Hawaii prisoners–one is in Arizona. Of those, there are nine jails operated by the State of Hawaii. Of those nine, seven are grossly overcrowded. The most overcrowded is Maui Community Correctional Center (MCCC). It’s housing double the number of inmates that it was designed to house. We’ve received a large number of complaints about it.

MT: I read that recently. What about Oahu Community Correctional Center (OCCC)?

MC: OCCC as well. The state is planning on replacing it because the cells designed to house two inmates are now housing three, four or five. People are sleeping next to toilets. And medical and mental healthcare seems virtually non-existent. It’s very difficult to see a doctor. You can see a nurse, but seeing a doctor is difficult. People keep getting worse, then end up having to see a doctor. It’s even worse for psychiatric care. Also, the state is not considering what changes it could make so we’re not in the same situation five to 10 years from now.

MT: Doesn’t sound good for those who view prison as a way to rehabilitate criminals.

MC: When people get out, they are completely unprepared. Many times they’re more of a danger than when they went in. The recidivism rate is very high in Hawaii–above 50 percent.

MT: I’m sorry–did you say it’s more than 50 percent?

MC: Yes. But it doesn’t have to be that way. We can reduce the numbers of prisoners without compromising public safety. Most states are modernizing their correctional systems.

MT: How so?

MC: Over 50 percent of people at OCCC are there because they couldn’t afford bail. Essentially, that is criminalizing poverty. Sometimes in Hawaii it can take a while to get to trial. Other states are finding alternatives to bail. New Jersey recently passed a no cash bail system. How dangerous is this person? How likely are they to flee? If not, they don’t have to post cash. Cash, many studies have shown, doesn’t make you show up and doesn’t deter you from committing another crime. We’re behind the curve, and these are the types of reforms we’d like to see.

MT: Let’s shift gears and talk about trans rights, which made headlines recently with the Justice Department’s decision to stop protecting the rights of transgender students. What’s the impact of this in Hawaii?

MC: We of course are very supportive of trans rights. We have been working for years to see that the state doesn’t discriminate against trans students and can use the bathroom for whichever gender they identify with. The state does this, and it’s working well. But the Department of Justice recently changed their guidelines and said it was no longer sex-based discrimination. Currently the ACLU has a case on this before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Hawaii is a little ahead of the curve. It’s now up to all states to stand up and defend their own.

MT: What about immigrant rights? The Trump Administration has been brutal in that regard.

MC: On immigration, one concern the ACLU has is the federal government deputizing local law enforcement. That’s a terrible practice and opens up the county to litigation. But they break rules when they detain folks. More importantly, communities will feel unsafe going to the police when an actual crime happens.

During the Obama Administration, if police picked up someone with a criminal record, they might report them [to ICE].

MT: Are local police here asking people they stop about their immigration status?

MC: There is something of that history on Maui. In 2009, at Maui police checkpoints for drunk driving, they were asking for ID and Social Security numbers and immigration status. It was very troubling. The ACLU sent letters to the Maui PD and Corporation Counsel. I’m told that this is no longer their policy. [On this matter, Maui Police public information officer Lt. Gregg Okamoto told me, “We do not train our officers to do this nor do we have a policy that mandates this.”]

MT: For my last question, it was reported that at the end of January, shortly after Trump took office, the ACLU received record donations–more than $24 million in one weekend alone. How has that helped out your office?

MC: I can’t speak to the money, but in terms of volunteers, attorneys, designers, organizers, we have seen so many people who want to work with us. This is a long-term situation–not just a few months. We expect this administration to really challenge civil rights for the next four years.

For more information on the ACLU of Hawaii, go to ACLUHawaii.org.

Cover design: Darris Hurst

The post We talk story with ACLU Hawaii Legal Director Mateo Caballero about Trump’s assault on civil liberties appeared first on Maui Time.


Libertarian author Steven Greenhut talks public employees at Maui County Club

$
0
0

In case you were wondering, some of Maui’s richest and most powerful landowners and developers had lunch together on the afternoon of Friday, Feb. 24. Peter Martin, Charlie Jencks, Everett Dowling–they were all there at the Maui Country Club in Spreckelsville, eating turkey and ham sandwiches with green salad and listening with rapt attention to one of my former editors denounce public employee salaries and pensions.

Flown out by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, writer and columnist Steven Greenhut gave the few dozen people in the room a lunch they’ll remember.

“County public employees in the state of Hawaii make among the highest wages in the nation, even after adjusted for Hawaii’s high cost of living,” stated the notice announcing the talk. “Steven Greenhut is the author of Plunder! How public employee unions are raiding treasuries, controlling our lives and bankrupting the nation. He will open the books on police and fire departments across the country, and show that the problems of pension spiking, overtime, and Cadillac benefits are also happening in Hawaii.”

Greenhut is the Western Region Director for the R Street Institute, a columnist for the Orange County Register and a true libertarian. In 2010, he was editor of CalWatchdog, a nonprofit journalism project in Sacramento where I worked as an investigative reporter. He opposes public employee unions, big public pensions, eminent domain (which he also wrote a book about), civil asset forfeiture, the drug war, militarized law enforcement and interventionist wars of all types, shapes and sizes.

At the Maui Country Club, he mostly spoke about California’s experience with public employee pensions and benefits (a subject he’s written about for some years) but did sprinkle a few items in about Hawaii. Unlike Republicans, who freely denounce unions that represent workers in education, healthcare and the service industry but give fire and police whatever their unions ask for, libertarians like Greenhut go after all organized labor.

“I love public employees,” Greenhut said at the start of his talk. “But it’s a question of balance, affordability and fairness.”

In terms of average salaries, it’s important to remember that all public employees aren’t created equal. At the top of the pyramid sit firefighters and police officers. According to Keli‘i Akina, Ph.D–the president and CEO of the Grassroot Institute, who introduced Greenhut–the average firefighter salary in Maui County is $85,000/year, while the average Maui Police officer salary tops $72,000/year. These number stand in stark contrast to the average Maui County public employee salary, which is $46,000/year (to say nothing of the average private sector salary in Maui County, which is a mere $35,000/year). These numbers attest to the power of organized labor for fire and law enforcement–easily the most powerful unions in a state that’s already more than friendly to organized labor.

“We can’t reform anything because of union power,” Greenhut told the crowd. “Unions also make it impossible to get rid of bad actors.”

To the delight of the crowd, Greenhut also told a favorite story of mine. Years ago, Greenhut had written a column denouncing firefighters for getting paid “to sleep” on the job. Soon after, a fire union official called up Greenhut and demanded a correction, saying firefighters were paid “while sleeping,” not “to sleep.” Greenhut said he happily complied.

Photo of Steven Greenhut courtesy Grassroot Institute

The post Libertarian author Steven Greenhut talks public employees at Maui County Club appeared first on Maui Time.

The challenges the topless activists of Free The Nipple face on Maui

$
0
0

20-30-free-the-nipple-maui-by-darris-hurst

For more than two years, Maui’s branch of the Free The Nipple organization has been strutting their topless selves at Rainbow Park and down Baldwin Avenue in Paia Town. This past August, they walked down towards the Cove at Baldwin Beach, and many onlookers might have been wondering, “Who are these topless hippies? And, why are they cruising through Paia with their boobs out?”

Although some might have taken offense to titties on display in public, many more (women and men) found themselves a bit envious and suddenly transformed into a cartoon character afflicted by an eye pop sub-trope. Awooooooooo-gah!

Free The Nipple is a global nonprofit organization that peacefully protests for “equality, empowerment and freedom for all human beings,” as they put it. Free The Nipple promotes international Go Topless Day every Aug. 20, which is when you’ll see the Maui Free The Nipple crew bare breasts in unison. The organization has become the foremost voice for raising awareness of how the public sees gender equality and social justice. Look up the Twitter hashtag #freethenipple and you’ll see the viral impact they’ve had in individual state legislatures.

The organization got a big promotional boost in 2012 when they released the documentary film Free The Nipple. The film follows a group of women (the founders of Free The Nipple) as they try to bring about change through various communities in the world through peaceful, topless protests and social service. The Free The Nipple film has been a leading force in building awareness about their mission and values (it’s currently streaming on Amazon). I watched the documentary and loved it. In fact, I think all women young and old should watch it, even though the organization is still battling an NC-17 rating for the film.

When organizing for a cause, the most successful groups are those that raise attention quickly. Going bare-chested in public is most definitely a way to get people to take notice fast.

When I spoke to the lead organizer for the Maui Free The Nipple chapter (who I’ll call Topless Theresa to respect her privacy), I asked her many questions about their cause. She’s clearly passionate about gender equality rights and what it means to her. Listening to her stories, and being in her company, got me thinking about my own relationship to my breasts and how social conditioning has affected me. While it’s highly unlikely I’ll go topless in public on Maui, I also don’t care what other people do. Seeing women topless in public doesn’t concern me one bit. These women are awesome and gutsy, and I respect their mission.

“I feel like we’re taking our boobs back,” said Topless Theresa. “Society wants to sell boobs. But guess what, I can wear mine for free.”

*

The act of exposing breasts to the public while walking in a unified group of both women and men is a powerful message. While gender equality is the leading message, it’s not the only one that the mainstream needs to accept. Political feminism is also a huge message that’s spread by this group. After all, men don’t encounter issues for being topless in public. The women in the organization are fighting for the freedom to breastfeed in public without scrutinization, challenging the inherent sexualization of breasts and calling for the removal of bans on natural, female anatomical imagery in the U.S.

As a woman in the United States, and with President-Elect Donald Trump taking office soon, I’m actually horrified. The fact that the American public has voted in an ignorant, foul-mouthed, bullying, male chauvinist pig as our next Commander-in-Chief is frightening. After decades of protesting for the women’s right to vote and make decisions regarding our own bodies, there’s an overwhelming sense of fear that many, many women are feeling regarding gender equality in our future government.

What does this mean for all of the progress we’ve made with Women’s Suffrage, the 19th Amendment and our rights in regards to our bodies? I asked Topless Theresa how this affects her opinion regarding Free the Nipple’s mission. “With so much uncertainty hanging in the air for the upcoming years, we must face the fear of it and stand our ground,” she said. “If this election has taught me anything, it’s that we have run out of time to be complacent. I feel more empowered now than ever to be a human rights activist.”

Protesting for the right to expose one’s bare breasts is not a new fight. We don’t often think of it now, but men fought this fight, too. Once upon a time, it was illegal in the U.S. for men to bare their chests and nipples. In the first decades of the 20th century, men in the U.S. had to cover their nipples in public, most notably at public swimming pools and Coney Island beaches. It wasn’t until the 1930s, when male protesters–and Hollywood celebrities like Clark Gable and Rudolph Valentino–began baring their chests, and that’s when male undershirt sales began to drop. In 1937, a New York judge overturned the male shirtless ban in that state, and eventually the bans were overturned on a national scale.

So, you can see why the Free The Nipple organization continues to challenge the mainstream and individual state legislatures for the freedom for both sexes to be able to flaunt their tatas in public. If men can do it, why can’t women?

Breasts come in all shapes and sizes, but for women in the United States, there’s a sense of universal insecurity that’s attached to having breasts. Big ones, small ones, old ones, young ones, droopy ones, fake ones, perfect ones–our boobs are part of our female identity, and we seem to hide their imperfections and natural state as if that’s the normal thing to do.

From a young age, we’re taught to cover them, wear a training bra so teenage nipples don’t show through a t-shirt, and otherwise keep them under lock and key. Through conditioning, we’re taught that respectful ladies do not show their breasts in public. As for those women who do show their breasts in public, society is quick to judge them as exhibitionists, whores or even Europeans.

“I have never felt better about my breasts in my life until I started going topless,” said Topless Theresa. But there are social challenges to being topless in public. She told me the harshest public reaction she gets actually comes from other women. In fact, one female scrutinizer threatened to throw a rock at her head at Hana’s Wainapanapa State Park.

*

Female breasts aren’t just beautiful muscles that separate women from men, they’re also what gives life. Breast feeding babies is natural. It’s what all mammals do to feed their young, and as humans this is how we give life.

Historically, ample-bodied women with large breasts and large hips have always been seen as desirable, fruitful and life-giving. If you’ve ever studied art history, then you’d be familiar with the “Venus of Willendorf,” and other prehistoric Venus figurines. The figurines are typically engraved calcite or limestone reliefs that depict women with large breasts, wide hips and exaggerated abdomens. These historical pieces are believed to express the importance of matriarchs in the family; their ultimate purpose of being the procreators of the human race. Venus figurines are some of the oldest relics in human history, dating from as far back as the Gravettian Period (26,000-21,000 years ago).

Topless and ample bodied Venus images symbolize femininity, strength and power. Just like the women in the Free The Nipple troops.

Maui residents know where to find local nude beaches: Makena’s Little Beach, the stretch of sand between Paia Bay and Baldwin Cove, and other little pockets of nakedness. But going topless at a beach is not the same thing as being nude. Breasts are not considered primary genitals (reproductive or external sex organs). For that reason, going topless at any beach in the State of Hawaii at large is perfectly legal.

If you see women topless sunbathing in their own private peace and glory at a non-nude beach or public place, it’s perfectly fine for them to do so. It’s best for you to just allow them to sit happily in their topless rights. If you feel uncomfortable seeing a woman topless on the beach, move. If you don’t feel comfortable with your kids seeing a woman topless on the beach, that’s your own issue. Accosting or otherwise attempting to intimidate a woman who’s sunbathing topless is harassment, which is illegal. Before creating an uncomfortable and possibly illegal confrontation, you may also want to consider what kind of example you’re setting for your kids and social circles. You might even want to ask yourself, “Do I have nipple envy?”

When Maui’s Free The Nipple crew organizes in topless protest, they come prepared with a flyer printed with the words “Hawaiian Law” across it, noting the specific Hawaii Revised Statutes that support their mission. When they’re out, they hand this flyer to anyone who takes offense or is confused about what they’re doing.

There are two relevant state laws. The first, Hawaii Revised Statutes 707-734, states that “A person commits the offense of indecent exposure if the person intentionally exposes the person’s genitals to a person to whom the person is not married under circumstances in which the actor’s conduct is likely to cause affront.” The second, Hawaii Revised Statutes 712-1217, states that “ A person commits the offense of open lewdness if in a public place the person does and lewd act which is likely to be observed by others who would be affronted or alarmed.”

Neither of these two laws mention exposing breasts in public. Sunbathing and being topless in public does not constitute lewdness, but throwing your genitals in someone’s face would definitely be considered “lewd.”

So if you want to sunbathe topless on Maui, go for it! Just don’t obscenely shake what your mama gave you in a stranger’s personal space.

*

Topless Theresa told me that one of her biggest challenges when being topless is the public’s lack of knowledge. She said this even extends to the Maui Police Department. She said she’s been verbally accosted by MPD officers who threatened to arrest her on charges of disorderly conduct and indecent exposure. But the problem isn’t just about police officers intimidating an American citizen lawfully exercising her rights–it’s also that too many people simply don’t know Hawaii’s laws. An arrest for disorderly conduct due to topless sunbathing or driving around on your moped topless wouldn’t stick in Hawaii’s court of law. It doesn’t fit the statutes and there are not constitutional issues involved.

Hawaii is one of just five states in the U.S where it’s legal to be topless in public. “No shirts, no shoes, no problems,” Topless Theresa reminded me.

Of course, if you’re at a restaurant that requires shirts and shoes, this applies to both sexes. And, every business has a right to refuse service to anyone they don’t see fit in their establishment. If you’re cruising a taco truck near South Maui beaches and you see a man order a plate in just board shorts (no shirt, no slippahs), it’s okay for women to do that, too. But it probably won’t work out very well for you if you walk into Flatbread Co. on a Friday night with your boobies swingin’ out.

Truth is, there’s a fine line between peaceful activism and exhibitionism. If you feel passionate about creating awareness about women’s rights and gender equality, remember that you’re setting an example to the public. The best way to support Free the Nipple’s mission is by creating awareness for some very serious issues in our world: women’s rights and gender equality.

While Maui’s Free The Nipple chapter isn’t actively recruiting new members, they’ll certain welcome like-minded folks with open arms. And yes, the chapter does much more than topless protesting on the annual Go Topless Day. They also participate in statewide events like the Pride March in Honolulu and various Breast Cancer awareness projects. Maui Free The Nipple is even planning an upcoming Topless Car Wash in order to raise funds for future events.

For more information about Maui’s Free The Nipple chapter, you can reach Topless Theresa at GoToplessMaui@gmail.com, or at Facebook.com/FreeTheNipMaui. If you’d like to learn more about the overall mission and goals of Free The Nipple, visit FreeTheNipple.com.

Cover design: Darris Hurst

The post The challenges the topless activists of Free The Nipple face on Maui appeared first on Maui Time.

Republican 10th District Candidate Chayne Marten arrested on sex assault charges

$
0
0

20-19-coconut-chayne-martin-booking-photo-maui-police

The 10th District state House race (which spans from West Maui to North Kihei) got a whole lot more complicated with the Oct. 11 arrest of Republican Chayne Marten, who is once again challenging incumbent Democrat Angus McKelvey. After he was booked, The Maui News reported on Oct. 14, Marten pleaded not guilty to “five charges of first-degree sexual assault, three charges of third-degree sexual assault and one charge of endangering the welfare of a minor.” Bail was set at $650,000, according to the paper.

Prosecutors detailed some pretty heinous charges at an Oct. 14 hearing, according to The Maui News. “The alleged sexual assaults occurred between Dec. 6, 2007, and Dec. 6, 2010, Deputy Prosecutor Annalisa Bernard said,” according to the paper’s Oct. 15 follow-up. “She said that Marten ‘engaged in sexual contact and sexual penetration both digital and penile’ on the girl, who was between the ages of 7 and 10 at the time of the alleged assaults.”

While Marten never responded to our 2016 election candidate questionnaire that we emailed to all Maui candidates earlier this year, he did talk to the Hononlulu Star-Advertiser for a Sept. 23 story on the 10th District race. Ironically, his biggest issue in the campaign is “public safety.”

“I believe legislators have failed to make public safety a priority,” Marten told the Star-Advertiser. The paper added that “Initially, Marten said, he became a candidate as a means to obtain a platform to speak about public safety issues. Over the years, he said, his platform has broadened to include an emphasis on reducing waste in the construction of schools and increasing support and salaries for teachers.”

Of course, even without the arrest, Marten faced an uphill battle in the race. He previously ran for the 10th District seat in 2014 and 2012. According to the Hawaii Office of Elections, in neither race did Marten win even 30 percent of the vote.

Chayne Marten booking photo courtesy Maui Police Department

The post Republican 10th District Candidate Chayne Marten arrested on sex assault charges appeared first on Maui Time.

Using newly declassified documents, we examine the legacy of Elmer Cravalho, Maui County’s most important political leader.

$
0
0

20-18-cover-elmer-cravalho-darris-hurst-design

Elmer Cravalho was a rare individual who made a mark on both Maui and Hawaii history. A man of considerable intelligence and energy, he wielded tremendous power on state and county stages for 25 years.

But in the days following his death on June 27 at the age of 90, the obituaries for Cravalho that appeared in The Maui News and Honolulu Star-Advertiser amounted to thin hagiography. They lacked both context and color, though both publications possessed decades worth of archives they could have mined for expansive obituaries that explored Cravalho’s achievements and controversies–both of which were plentiful in his life.

A Speaker of both the Territorial and State House of Representatives in the 1950s and 1960s, Cravalho eventually became Maui County’s first mayor. Though a powerful lifelong Democrat, one of his closest friends through the years was Hannibal Tavares, a committed Republican and giant in his own right.

“He was brilliant at managing people and money,” Dick Mayer, who had been appointed to the Maui Planning Commission by Cravalho, said shortly after Cravalho’s death. In his 1991 oral history that’s archived at the University of Hawaii, former Maui County Supervisor and Councilman Richard Caldito called Cravalho “the greatest leadership that Maui ever had.” Howard Nakamura, who served as Cravalho’s planning director in the early 1970s, echoed that point. “There’s no question he’s the single most important person in the history of Maui County,” he told me.

Though Cravalho entered politics opposing Big Business, he was also a builder. Go to the Kalana O Maui building that houses the highest offices of county government today and look at the dedication plaque: of all the names listed, Cravalho’s dwarfs them all.

In their 1985 book Land and Power in Hawaii, George Cooper and Gavan Daws explained why Cravalho was so unique–a reason that resonates with us to this day: “Of all mayors in the history of contemporary Hawaii, Cravalho was among the most insistent on large landowners and developers providing substantial community benefits as a price of getting county support for their projects.”

But Cravalho could also be temperamental, ruthless, even vindictive. “Elmer… hurt a lot of people, too,” Caldito recalled in his oral history. “I don’t want to use the word ‘hate,’ but the thing that people do not like [about] Elmer is that if you do not favor him or work for him, he will never appoint you to anything or never do you any more favors after that. There are a lot of politicians that forget about things like that after the election, but not Elmer.”

Now, using extensive newspaper, oral history and library research, as well as newly declassified documents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and U.S. Army obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, I’ll attempt to provide a more thorough look at Cravalho’s tremendous impact on Maui and Hawaii history. It’s a story of high and low drama, full of anti-communist paranoia, incredible ambition and vicious extortion. While this doesn’t come close to a full biography of Cravalho, virtually none of what you’re about to read appeared in any of his obituaries.

Be warned: this story raises questions we may never answer. Political pollster and columnist Daniel W. Tuttle anticipated this in his oral history, which he recorded back in 1990.

“He deserves his place in history,” Tuttle said. “He’s a giant… [but] Elmer’s well known for keeping his cards very close to his chest.”

Theresa Browning, Cravalho’s only surviving sibling, chose not to comment for this story. “Enough has been said after his passing,” she said. “He was very private. He would not want any more articles written about him.”

I: GETTING ORGANIZED

Elmer Franklin Cravalho was born in Paia on Feb. 19, 1926. He attended Keokea School, Maui High and the University of Hawaii, though he never got a college degree.

Like many of the Hawaii Democrats who went on to shape state history in the latter half of the 20th century, Cravalho entered politics in 1954. Though he was a school teacher by trade (he taught 7th and 8th grade in Kula, Paia and then Haiku), he was also ambitious, as longtime Democratic Party figure Masaru “Pundy” Yokouchi made clear in his 1989 oral history.

“In fact, Najo [Nadao Yoshinaga, another powerful Maui Democratic Party official who eventually got elected to the state Senate] called us one night, told us about this young, promising guy Upcountry, that he was very impressed with,” Yokouchi recalled. “And in order to give him some exposure, because he wasn’t well known on Maui, he said, ‘Let’s make him party chairman.’ So, in 1954, they named Elmer Cravalho, who was a real freshman in politics, as a party chairman. And ever since then, you know, Elmer led the ticket.”

In his oral history, Yokouchi was very careful to avoid saying that Yoshinaga had “recruited” Cravalho. “But I’m sure he played a role in encouraging them, like Elmer Cravalho, for instance,” Yokouchi said. “Elmer [had] the ambition. And Elmer Cravalho, nobody recruits him. Elmer Cravalho is Elmer Cravalho. So, Najo recognized his talents right away. And that’s how he asked the people to support him for party chairmanship.”

Cravalho got himself elected to the Territorial House of Representatives that year. He wouldn’t lose another election for nearly 40 years.

That year, 1954, was a landslide, shifting power in the state away from the Republicans–a defeat from which they’ve never recovered. Cravalho was out front from almost the beginning, due to his intelligence, ambition and ties to the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU). These days, we think of the ILWU as any other union in Hawaii, but in the early 1950s, many in the U.S.–including those who ran law enforcement agencies like the FBI–considered the union to be a front for Joseph Stalin and the Soviet Union. Maintaining close ties to the ILWU carried some element of risk.

“Elmer was beholden to the ILWU,” former Lieutenant Governor and territorial and state Representative Thomas Gill recalled in his 1988 oral history. “They used to scare the hell out of him, and in fact, he mentioned that a couple of times. So he went where the [power] was.”

Thomas Gill (Wikipedia)

Thomas Gill (Wikipedia)

The Cold War paranoia at the time was excessive, even by the standards of the time (click here to read more on how Hollywood portrayed the fight against communists in Hawaii). Proof of that arrived in the form of a two-page document, released as part of a Freedom of Information Act request I sent to the FBI immediately following news of Cravalho’s death. The very existence of this document is an affront to anyone who cares about civil liberties (scroll down to the bottom of the page to see the documents or click here for a PDF of them).

Created on March 1, 1959 and classified CONFIDENTIAL (meaning the Army considered the release of the document to the public could reasonably be expected to harm national security), the document is a “Domestic Intelligence Summary” written and distributed by an intelligence unit within the U.S. Army’s 25th Infantry Division. The document summarizes Cravalho’s ties to the ILWU, which apparently the U.S. Army considered a potential threat to national security.

In 1972, the U.S. Senate’s Judiciary Committee strongly criticized the U.S. Army for spying on civilians–an outrageous and dangerous violation of its charter. “Individuals described in these files have, at least until January of 1971, included some public officials, including Congressmen and Governors,” states the committee’s 104-page Army Surveillance of Civilians report. ““[T]he size of the files confirms other reports that the surveillance dates back not to the Newark and Detroit riots of 1967, but to the reestablishment of Army counterintelligence on the eve of the Second World War… “[I]t appears that the vacuum-cleaner approach of collecting all possible information resulted in great masses of data on individuals which was valuable for no legitimate (or even illegitimate) military purpose.”

Though the political witch hunts of Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy had long ended by 1959, Cold War fear of communism was still spurring federal and military surveillance of potential subversives–especially those in organized labor.

“CRAVALHO has actively supported measures favorable to the ILWU,” states the intelligence summary. “On 18 April 1957, CRAVALHO, [name redacted] and Nadao Yoshinaga, all Democratic representatives from Maui, introduced House Bill 754. This bill was intended to repeal the Dock Seizure Law, which allows government seizure of waterfront facilities in the event of a crippling dock strike. House Bill 754 was a key objective in the 1956-1957 legislative program. In point of fact, the repeal bill was defeated, and the Dock Seizure Law is still in effect.”

Let’s unpack this. It was during World War II that the ILWU first presented serious challenges to the big plantations that ran Hawaii. “[B]asically between 1944 and 1947, the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union (ILWU) successfully organized the Hawaii sugar and pineapple plantations industry-wide, as well as the waterfront,” states Land and Power in Hawaii. “The result was momentous. From then on, big business in the Islands had big labor to contend with, in the form of an organization that was Hawaii’s first multi-racial union, Marxist-oriented, tightly organized, led by men who were highly motivated, capable and militant, with a membership that grew to a peak of 37,000.”

In 1949, the ILWU led a massive strike on the Honolulu docks. Longshoremen, long infuriated at the fact that their West Coast counterparts were making far more money than they were, finally walked off the job on May 1. Though workers promised to continue to unload relief ships, they didn’t extend their good grace to liners like the SS Lurline, which docked at Pier 11 in Honolulu on May 9, according to historian Sanford Zalburg’s 1979 book A Spark Is Struck! The ship would remain there for 157 days.

“The 1949 Longshore Strike that lasted six months and crippled the Territory’s economy was the greatest single battle in that campaign,” states an essay on labor history produced by the University of Hawaii’s Center for Labor Education and Research. “The employers and their spokesmen in the media seized upon the popular fears of the day and tried to portray the unionists as communists.”

By Aug. 6, 1949, the Territorial Legislature had enough and passed the Dock Seizure Act. Two years later, the FBI arrested ILWU leader Jack Hall, as well as six other union officials, for the crime of allegedly advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government. A federal court eventually convicted Hall, but an appellate court later threw out the conviction.

This was the environment Cravalho–as close an ally to the “working man” Maui has ever seen–stepped into when he rode the ILWU’s coattails into the Territorial House of Representatives during the 1954 revolution. Though there is no evidence in the files released to MauiTime that surveillance from the Army ever harmed Cravalho, its very existence infringed on his civil rights. We can only speculate on how many others seeking social and economic justice were under similar surveillance by the army.

II: SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE

Cravalho moved up fast in the Territorial House, though he quickly found that he had to scramble when the Legislature wasn’t in session. “[B]etween sessions I worked as a janitor,” Cravalho recalled in his own oral history, which he recorded in 1977, while he was still Mayor of Maui County. “Got $50 a month. That paid for my water, electricity, rice, bare essentials. Raised my vegetables in the backyard.” During his second term, he got a job as officer manager at Mutual of Omaha making $225 a month.

In any case, Cravalho got himself chosen to be Vice Speaker of the House in just two years, then Finance Committee Chairman in 1957. Then in 1958, Cravalho managed to win the speakership, through a complex maneuver that involved building a coalition of Republicans to topple then-Speaker O. Vincent Esposito–an event discussed in some detail in the confidential 1959 Army intelligence summary on Cravalho.

“In December 1958, CRAVALHO was one of the so-called [Jack] “Burns/ILWU” faction of the Democratic Party of Hawaii who bolted the party caucus,” states the report. “CRAVALHO, together with 14 colleagues, rebelled when it became apparent to them that the majority group of O. Vincent Esposito intended to omit their faction, as well as the Republican minority, from important committee positions. As a result, CRAVALHO and [name redacted] negotiated with the Republican Party of Hawaii and formed a coalition out of which CRAVALHO emerged as Speaker of the House.”

It was a brazen, risky move. But it also worked. Cravalho would hold the speakership for eight years. His time in office bridged Hawaii’s transition to statehood–indeed, it was Cravalho who took the famous call from then-Representative Jack Burns in Washington on Aug. 21, 1959 and then announced to his House colleagues that Hawaii was now the 50th state in the union.

According to the late political analyst and columnist Daniel Tuttle (he died in 2006), Governor Jack Burns–and really, the whole state–owed Cravalho a great deal. In fact, Tuttle even described Cravalho as having been a “tower of strength” for Burns.

“He contributed a great deal to Burns’ career,” Tuttle told his oral history interviewers in 1990. “He supplied the New Hawaii Program for Jack Burns. When Jack Burns’ administration, ‘63, ‘64, ‘65 period, was faltering, Elmer stepped in with a legislative program. Jack Burns would get up and address the legislature in his state of the state address, talk only about destiny and dreams, but have nothing practical. So, who had to pull a Democratic program together again, a Ia ‘54? This was, see, a decade later after the ‘54 period, so he [Cravalho] had to pull together a program for Democrats, which he duly labeled–he owes me a little debt ‘cause he picked up a phrase out of one of my columns–the New Hawaii Program. He sold it as such, and Jack Burns adopted it, and pretty soon Jack Burns was talking about the New Hawaii Program. (As a result), in 1966 [election], and again in 1970 [election], Jack Burns still had things to talk about.”

Adam “Bud” Smyser, another longtime newspaper columnist, talked about Cravalho in his 1990 oral history. According to Smyser, Cravalho was all-powerful in the House.

“Elmer Cravalho is a name to be reckoned with,” Smyser said. “He simply ran the House so efficiently that if he sat across from you, as I’m sitting across from you, and said, ‘The House will pass that bill,” that was as good as a vote on the vote.”

But such power came at a price. Indeed, Tuttle described Cravalho’s vote-wrangling methods as near Lyndon Johnson in both their effectiveness and brutality.

“His method was quite effective, and also-I thought we talked about this before–it was almost ruthless,” Tuttle recalled. “He’s a single (unmarried) person. He didn’t waste any of his time. He didn’t go out to all the night spots. The other members of the house did. He knew where people were, what ‘crimes’ they had committed–I’d put that crimes in quotes–in other words, he maintained his control, in large part, ‘cause he had a ‘little something’ on practically every member of the house. If they’d get out of line, (he could say), ‘Hey, buddy, if you don’t want this to be known, you’re going to come along with me.’ In other words, Elmer was not above using a little bit of intimidation or a little bit of threats.”

In his 1977 oral history, the writer Daniel Boylan asked Cravalho about something that Pundy Yokouchi had told him–that Cravalho was like a “stiletto” who “played violent politics.”

“I would say that we played to win,” Cravalho said. “Not to lose. And once a decision is made–I’m speaking about myself–I pursue it. And I do not get derailed or detracted… The storm may come and I plant my feet firmly and I sway, and the leaves may get torn off and some limbs may break but the root system is still there.” Cravalho was clearly being modest, because a few minutes later, he bragged to Boylan about how he’d once punished former legislator Frank Loo (“He was always the person that you couldn’t trust”) by eliminating his district from that year’s Capital Improvement Budget.

Cravalho told Boylan that his strengths in the House were “listening and tight organization.” He said he read every bill that came out of committee–“I didn’t trust staff alone,” he said. I read it to see if there was anything there [that] was going to ruffle anybody.” He also said he never lost a vote.

“Never lost a vote?” Boylan asked.

“Never lost [a] vote on anything that I wanted,” Cravalho said.

“In eight years?”

“In eight years,” Cravalho said. “On anything that I really want, I never lost a vote. Because I would never put anything on the floor that I wasn’t sure of.”

While Rep. Gill’s earlier description of Cravalho as “beholden” to the ILWU was mostly true, Cravalho grew so powerful that he did challenge the union on one memorable occasion that dealt directly with Maui politics.

In 1961, “Speaker Cravalho ordered a House Select Committee to investigate a report of undue ILWU pressure exerted on Maui officials,” Sanford Zalburg wrote in his biography of Jack Hall. “The incident, which touched off the investigation, was the delay in the award of a contract to build the Wailuku War Memorial-Convention Hall.”

Cravalho could easily have chosen to ignore the matter. But instead, he put the ILWU in the spotlight. According to Zalburg, the Select Committee held four hearings on the contract. Among the witnesses called were Tom Yagi, the ILWU’s top man on Maui, and Maui County Chairman Eddie Tam. The committee discovered clear evidence that the ILWU was going out of its way to steer county supervisors away from the lowest bidder.

In fact, as Zalburg wrote, on Feb. 16, 1961, “Yagi and other ILWU officials met with the Maui Board of Supervisors at the ILWU Hall on Lower Main Street in Wailuku and urged the Supervisors to award the contract to Tanaka [the second low bidder].” Five days later, ILWU officials called Tam at his home and urged the same thing. But in the end, the supervisors voted 4-3 to award the contract to F & M Contractors, the low bidder.

As it turned out, War Memorial had been a battlefield in an inter-union war, as the Select Committee eventually concluded. “Your Committee believes that one of the purposes of the ILWU is to win out in an organizational battle with AF of L-CIO for the right to represent employers of the construction trades on Maui,” the Select Committee eventually reported. “Such a victory would be enhanced if F & M Contractors Inc., one of the largest construction firms on the island, could be deprived of this contract. The inter-union battle is a matter of common knowledge on Maui.”

From the Territorial (and later State) House of Representatives, Maui must have seem very far off to Cravalho. In fact, even at the time his own Select Committee was exposing his union benefactor’s heavy-handed tactics in Wailuku, Cravalho was plotting to return to the Valley Isle.

III: MAUI’S FIRST MAYOR

Though Cravalho served as Speaker of the House until Eddie Tam’s death in 1966, he started planning his return to Maui as far back as 1959.

As Zalburg recounted in his book on Jack Hall, in 1959, Cravalho, Tom Yagi (the ILWU official from Maui) and Hall met at the Wagon Wheel Restaurant on Kalakaua Ave. in Waikiki (Tiffany & Co. is near there now). Cravalho said he wanted to return to Maui and run against Eddie Tam for Board of Supervisors chairman. According to Cravalho, Hall wasn’t happy, but he remained calm. “He went through all the factors and the needs of the community and where he needed strong leadership, at least in one level of the Legislature. He said, ‘We prefer–if we had our druthers.’ It was not abrupt, nothing like that.”

But according to Yagi, Hall was furious. “Yagi said Hall looked at Cravalho coldly,” Zalburg wrote. “‘I don’t want you to run against Tam,’ he said. ‘I want you to stay on as Speaker of the House. You have a big job ahead of you. You run for chairman [of the Maui County Board of Supervisors] –over my dead body!’” According to Yagi, Hall then walked out.

Needless to say, Cravalho didn’t return to Maui in 1959. But Tam’s death in 1966, and the need for a special election to fill in the remainder of his term, was too much for Cravalho to pass by. He resigned from the House a few weeks after the end of that year’s legislative session. Cravalho narrowly won the special election, squeaking by Manuel Molina with just 139 votes to spare to become Maui County’s Chairman.

Cravalho’s more than a decade as Mayor (changes to the county charter in 1968 reordered local government and created the Maui County Council and office of the Mayor) saw some of the biggest growth in island history. In his 1984 book Kalai‘aina: County of Maui, Wailuku historian Antonio Ramil noted that the year Cravalho returned to Maui, the island had 1,456 hotel and condo rooms. About 189,000 tourists visiting the county that year. A decade later, the number of hotel and condo rooms had multiplied to more than 7,000, with more than a million visitors streaming into Maui.

“Palm trees, kiawe trees and old wooden homes on once sleepy beachfront lands in Lahaina, Kaanapali, Napili and Kapalua on West Maui, and in Kihei, Wailea, and Makena on the South Shore, many of which used to be havens for weekend or holiday fishing trips or outings by local residents, gave way to concrete, imposing hotel or condominium buildings,” Ramil wrote. “Lands which used to sell for 25 cents per square foot went up as much as $25 per square foot. It became difficult to find a condominium unit for less than $100,000. Some were selling for as much as half a million dollars.”

Cravalho’s time in the Maui Mayor’s office was marked with great contrasts. On the one hand, someone like Hannibal Tavares–a lifelong friend and power-broker who served as Maui’s Mayor in the 1980s–could point out how rude Cravalho could be to Alexander & Baldwin (A&B) executives. In 1972, Tavares went to work for A&B as their Maui lobbyist, and he took a few of his bosses with him when he visited his old friend Cravalho to tell him the news.

Hannibal Tavares (John Hills/Wikipedia)

Hannibal Tavares (John Hills/Wikipedia)

Tavares and Cravalho went way back. Both had been teachers on Maui. They were friends, even though Tavares was a Republican who lobbied for big business (before he went to work for A&B, Tavares had lobbied on behalf of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters Association). But as Tavares recounted in his oral history, Mayor Cravalho was furious at his friend’s new job.

“He looked at me and looked at [then President Allen] Wilcox, and said, ‘Well, all I can say is that it’s a very good deal for A&B. I don’t know whether it’s a good deal for Hannibal,’” Tavares said. After ushering the A&B execs out of his office, Cravalho then took Tavares aside. “I know they need you,” Tavares said Cravalho told him, “but you don’t realize you’re working for a bunch of people that I don’t have a lot of respect for. These guys are double dealers. You can’t take them at their word; they’re not honest…”

Though Cravalho seemed “angry and adamant,” Tavares said he defused it by playing to the Maui roots they shared: “When he got through, I said, ‘Well, Elmer, I look at it this way. If us two Pordagees can’t work this out, neither of us is worth a damn.’ And that just hit his funny bone. He just roared–I thought he was going to fall off his chair. He just laughed, and laughed, and laughed.”

Apparently they did work it all out, because A&B started building the massive South Maui development we now know as Wailea during Cravalho’s time in office. Granted, what eventually went in was a fraction of the massive town originally set to house 50,000 residents that A&B initially promised, but it was built, and Maui’s never been the same since. Indeed, Wailea would never have been built in the first place were it not for Cravalho arranging for the construction of a massive pipeline to carry fresh water from the Iao Aquifer to South Maui–an achievement that did make his obituaries.

Cravalho may not have liked A&B’s executives, but they shared a goal: build up Maui’s tourist industry. And build it they did, creating conditions for an entire service industry to bloom, and eventually supersede Maui’s still largely agrarian economy.

“The things he accomplished,” said Howard Nakamura, his former planning director. “Economic development, infrastructure development, expanded our economic base, affordable housing. He was mayor when all of the county’s affordable housing projects were implemented. He had tremendous vision, and a great love for Maui County.”

Of course, you can’t have this much social change without stirring up controversy–especially when the guy at the top is as liberal and outspoken as Cravalho. And in the spring of 1972, Cravalho found himself the target of a series of vicious attacks by a tiny upstart newspaper run by two guys who had recently moved to Maui. Though The Maui News largely ignored the attacks, the big Honolulu dailies covered it extensively–and that attracted the attention of the FBI.

I know this because shortly after I heard about Cravalho’s death, I mailed a copy of his obituary to the FBI, along with a written request under the Freedom of Information Act for any and all records they might have on him. It’s a common request journalists make when someone of note dies (at which time, the privacy restriction on any FBI files on them gets lifted). In response to my request, the FBI said they had discovered 24 pages of records on Cravalho, of which they sent me 22 (they withheld the remaining two for a variety of reasons, mostly dealing with law enforcement methods; they also forwarded my request to the Department of the Army, which declassified and released the intelligence summary I discussed earlier in this story). The files the FBI sent me were entirely press clippings–Honolulu Advertiser, Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Maui News. The released files included nothing actually generated by the FBI on the 1972 incident, or any other incident, for that matter.

In any case, the controversy all started on April 6, 1972, at a Maui County Civil Service hearing. There, a private investigator named Roger Marcotte got on the stand and made a sensational claim: that two years prior, he had met with Cravalho and told him that if he didn’t assist two Maui Police officers with their employment troubles, he would “expose him as a homosexual,” according to a partial transcript the hearing later obtained and published by a Honolulu paper (which was included in Cravalho’s FBI file, but the clipping contained no identifying mark as to which paper published it).

The hearing transcript should have been secret, but somehow an upstart little publication called A New Newspaper? obtained it, then published it (along with Cravalho’s statement that Marcotte was a “damned liar”). The paper was the work of two men: James Franklin and Jack Stephens, who had recently moved to Maui and decided to start a paper attacking Cravalho. Franklin especially became the subject of newspaper stories at the time (which, again, were included in the FBI file).

By itself, the story in A New Newspaper? probably wouldn’t have gotten as much play as it did in Honolulu. But on May 10, 1972, Maui County Attorney (the precursor to today’s Corporation Counsel) Arthur T. Ueoka did something stupid: he wrote a letter to A New Newspaper? Publisher Jack Stephens warning him not to publish the Marcotte transcript, saying it would only “serve to do substantial irreparable harm and injury to Mayor Cravalho’s character and integrity” (the Honolulu Star-Bulletin later reprinted the letter in its entirety).

Cravalho denied asking Ueoka to write the letter. He also denied asking Maui Police officers to remove copies of A New Newspaper? from newsstand racks, though that too apparently happened on at least two occasions. But the damage was done.

“The administration’s overreaction to the New Newspaper is indicative of the Mayor’s growing frustration over a rash of criticism he has encountered in recent months,” Honolulu Star-Bulletin writer Dave Shapiro wrote in a June 9, 1972 story. “Cravalho, a statewide political power, sees all the criticism as a conspiracy to stop him from becoming governor in 1974.”

According to Hannibal Tavares’ oral history, Cravalho was in fact considering a run for the governor’s office in 1974. He certainly had the experience and name-recognition. Why he ultimately stayed out of the race isn’t something Cravalho ever explained publicly.

IV: ‘I’M GOING TO RESIGN’

In 1978, Cravalho was at the height of his power. And he was a long way from having to work as a janitor. In the oral history he recorded a year prior, Cravalho talked with great satisfaction of the controlling interest he held in one of the island’s largest cattle ranches. “We have, I’d say about 20,000 acres of land under lease,” he said in his oral history. “And we run about 4,000 head of cattle. And we make money.”

Undated Elmer Cravalho photo (Maui Historical Society)

Undated Elmer Cravalho photo (Maui Historical Society)

Cravalho had an interest in so much land that in 1969 a U.S. Navy aircraft on its way to Kaho‘olawe accidentally dropped a 500-pound bomb on some of Cravalho’s land. The bomb didn’t detonate, but the incident infuriated Cravalho, who had already opposed the Navy’s use of the island as a target range.

In any case, by 1978 the sleazy A New Newspaper? stories were six years in the past. County Attorney Ueoka’s warning to Jack Stephens back in 1972 had proven groundless–Cravalho’s reputation on Maui was solid. In 1978, Cravalho easily and overwhelmingly won re-election, beating his opponent–Al Rodrigues–by more than 12,000 votes. He was effective, popular and in charge.

“Cravalho had entrenched himself as the undisputed political leader in the County of Maui,” Ramil wrote in Kalai‘aina. “There were occasions when he would humor his listeners at gatherings by observing that in the County some people thought that ‘god’ was spelled ‘E-L-M-E-R.’”

Or so he thought. Just seven months after his re-election, Cravalho shocked the county by announcing that he was quitting. He gave no reason, but made clear that there was no turning back. Accounts of Cravalho’s resignation announcement made for dramatic reading in The Maui News.

“Saying in a quaking voice that there would be ‘no changes, no second thoughts, no regrets,’ Mayor Elmer Cravalho announced Tuesday that he would quit his office Sept. 11,” The Maui News reported on June 20, 1979.

“Each success, each achievement… left me with less time to be where I wanted to be, doing what I wanted to do,” Cravalho said during the 2pm press conference he’d held on June 19, 1979, according to The Maui News. “I know that many will question my motives… and advance many reasons for my action which are not contained in this message. But there are none… ”

According to The Maui News, Cravalho gave no explanation for his sudden and surprising resignation, then ended his press conference without taking questions from reporters.

“The mayor was emotional throughout the speech,” The Maui News reported. “The usually feisty, confident mayor held a tight grip on the podium in front of him, his voice nearly cracking with emotion during certain parts of his speech.”

Cravalho had often threatened to walk away before, but as Ramil pointed out in his book, he always came back, ran for reelection and won. One time in 1971, he’d even apparently vanished from the island itself–with no explanation.

“Mayor Elmer F. Cravalho has been ordered to rest by a doctor and will be ‘unavailable for at least the rest of the week,’ according to Acting Mayor Shigeto (Mustard) Murayama,” The Maui News reported on Aug. 26, 1971. “Cravalho has not been at his office since last Thursday [Aug. 19, 1971]. He is believed to be off the island but his exact whereabouts is not known.”

Cravalho never publicly explained where he was that week, and The Maui News published no follow-up that we could find. Instead, the incident just passed into local lore, an example of Cravalho’s sometimes mercurial temperament.

It was the same for Cravalho’s 1979 decision to leave politics. Cravalho never publicly gave a reason for his sudden exit (and his obituaries made no attempt to explain his sudden exit from office). For many years, it was Maui County’s greatest political mystery. But in his 1991 oral history, Hannibal Tavares offered a compelling explanation of Cravalho’s exit–one that’s still surprising, even to this day, though it is in line with Cravalho’s personality.

“He put up some trial balloons for governor [in both 1974 and 1978],” Tavares told his interviewers. “And that didn’t pan out the way he wanted it to be. He didn’t have enough assurance. Then he started having trouble with the council.”

According to Tavares, Cravalho had enjoyed an easy time with the Maui County Council for much of his tenure as mayor. But by the time of the negotiations over the fiscal year 1977-’78 budget, that was no longer true. At the time he announced his resignation, Cravalho told The Maui News that recent problems with the council over his budget played no role in his decision to resign. But to paraphrase Tavares, the council was no longer so keen on spelling god “E-L-M-E-R.”

“They [the council] had changed it drastically,” Tavares recalled. “And the changes they made angered him quite a bit. When it came back to him, he did a whole number of item vetoes, with a veto message that went back to the council. The council overrode every one of this vetoes, and that was the first time that he had ever had something like that happen to him. And that annoyed him to no end. He could not believe that the council would not follow his leadership, especially in budget, because he was very good at that. He was very good at finance.”

Add to that trouble from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over the building of the Lahaina Sewage Treatment Plant, which wasn’t going well. According to Ramil’s book, the EPA “had threatened to withdraw all or a part of a $10 million grant for the construction of the Lahaina sewage treatment plant, which was behind construction schedule by two years.” Indeed, just four days after Cravalho announced his resignation as mayor, The Maui News reported that county sewer head Kenneth Y. S. Kong was “suspended,” though Public Works director Wayne Uemae “denied that the suspension came about as a result of the county’s problems with the Lahaina Sewage Treatment Plant.”

It was all a big headache to Cravalho, according to Tavares. “[H]e became kind of disgruntled,” Tavares said in his 1991 oral history. “And when he told me that he was planning to resign, I didn’t believe it. I said, ‘No, you can’t do that. You have to finish your term, Elmer.’”

“No, I’m sick and tired of taking all this crap,” Cravalho said, according to Tavares. “These people simply will not follow what I’m trying to do. I’m going to resign.”

Tavares then said that Cravalho told him to “get ready.”

“What do you mean?” Tavares said he asked Cravalho.

“Well, if I resign, I think you’d be the logical guy to take my place,” Cravalho said, according to Tavares’ oral history.

“Well, I haven’t given it any thought at all,” Tavares said.

“Well, start thinking about it, because I think that’s going to happen,” Cravalho said.

Though Cravalho said he’d quit on Sept. 11, 1979, he actually left office much earlier, on July 24.

“He said he looked forward to relationships with his friends and neighbors that would ‘no longer depend on the presence or absence of a title,’” according to The Maui News story that ran the day after Cravalho left his office for the last time. “There is no anger, no animosity, no hard feelings, no nothing,” Cravalho said, according to the paper.

He was 53 years old, still relatively young for a politician, but Cravalho would never hold elected office again.

V. THE LATER YEARS

Cravalho’s exit handed the mayorship to Managing Director Claro Capili. But he merely kept the office occupied for Tavares, who easily won the special mayoral election later that year. “[H]is 14,110 votes exceeded the combined total votes of the other 17 candidates,” Ramil wrote in Kalai‘aina. Tavares would hold the office for 11 years–the longest time in office of any Maui County mayor.

Tavares chose not to run for reelection in 1990. Instead, Cravalho saw an opportunity for a comeback and offered himself as a candidate. Running under the slogan “A mayor for all the people,” he won endorsements from the United Public Workers union and SHOPO. He also turned on his old friend Hannibal Tavares.

“I had a lot of trouble with Elmer because he decided, for whatever reason, to zero in on my administration and was very critical of my administration,” Tavares said in his 1991 oral history. “And I thought, hey, I’m not his opponent. That’s a mistake. And I told him so. But by that time, I guess too much had happened.”

Of course, Tavares had fired his own shots at Cravalho. He publicly blamed him for leaving a big mess at the Lahaina Sewage Treatment Plant that he had to clean up and even released a letter from the EPA to the press that contradicted Cravalho’s claim that the federal government had exonerated his administration of wrongdoing.

Cravalho’s campaign raised more than $206,000 that year, and spent nearly $145,000 of it. By contrast, Maui County Councilmember Linda Lingle, his leading opponent, raised $207,000, but only spent $80,000 or so. In the end, Lingle beat him by seven percentage points. Immediately after the election, her campaign attributed her victory in part to voters’ queasiness over Cravalho’s final months in office as Mayor.

“Lingle felt a big gap existed in the information that had been given to the voters regarding Cravalho, [campaign manager Sheri] Lowsan said, in areas that included the questions surrounding his resignation from office in 1979 and his record of managing construction of the Lahaina Sewage Treatment Plant,” The Maui News reported on Nov. 4, 1990.

Though that was Elmer Cravalho’s last election, he didn’t stay out of the public eye. He spent his last decades running the Kula Credit Union–which he’d help start back in the early 1950s. There, he held court for the next generation of Maui public officials who sought his advice and insight.

He also found himself back in politics. In the early 1990s, he chaired the Upcountry Community Plan. Then, after Lingle got herself elected Hawaii’s first Republican Governor since William Quinn’s 1959 victory, Mayor James “Kimo” Apana appointed Cravalho to the Maui County Board of Water Supply. He was still progressive, but in 2000 Cravalho found himself in the curious spot of not only defending a county Memorandum of Understanding with Alexander & Baldwin over its water rights, but getting it approved and signed by the board before the public had a chance to comment on it. When resident Mark Sheehan (who would later help found the SHAKA Movement), attempted to testify against the MOU, Cravalho ruled him “out of order,” according to a story that ran in the July 2000 issue of Environment Hawaii.

“You wish to express thoughts on the agreement?” Cravalho, then the Board Chairman, asked Sheehan, according to the Environment Hawaii story. After Sheehan said yes, Cravalho told him no. “The chair will have to deny your request,” Cravalho said, according to the story. “The reason for that is that it’s taken out of order. Your opportunity to express yourself will be given immediately after the signing of the agreement.”

He was Elmer Cravalho, a living legend on Maui, telling Sheehan that he could only comment on an agreement after the Board had taken action on it–an insult to the democratic principles that Cravalho had championed his entire adult life. Once a dedicated, energetic enemy of Big Business he had become in his final years a staunch defender of the status quo. Once considered so “beholden” to the “communist” ILWU that the U.S. Army had kept a file on him, Cravalho was now swatting away citizen complaints against a county deal with mighty Alexander & Baldwin.

It’s certainly possible that Cravalho’s views on companies like A&B had mellowed by this time; indeed, this might be the fate of everyone who spends a lifetime in politics. The revolutionary who wins must inevitably become the ruler, and that means compromising. There are ways to do it that don’t trample civil rights, of course, but in the end, no one in charge in a democracy gets everything he or she believes in.

Looking over his two dozen years as an elected official, it’s clear that Cravalho fought a lot, and won a lot. We all may not agree with his ideological evolution, but we can’t deny that his actions changed Maui and Hawaii. Whether that change, on balance, made us better is a question that remains very much open.

AUTHOR’S NOTE

I could not have done this story without the treasure known as found at UH Manoa’s Center for Oral History. Many of their oral histories, recorded by some of the most important and powerful figures of Hawaii history in the 20th century and containing much valuable information I haven’t seen published elsewhere, are online and free to access (Elmer Cravalho’s oral history is sadly not online, but is accessible at UH Manoa’s Hamilton Library). For more information, go to Oralhistory.hawaii.edu.

Research provided by Deborah Caulfield Rybak

us-army-confidential-report-1959-elmer-cravalho-1

us-army-confidential-report-1959-elmer-cravalho-2

Cover photo courtesy Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Cover design: Darris Hurst

The post Using newly declassified documents, we examine the legacy of Elmer Cravalho, Maui County’s most important political leader. appeared first on Maui Time.

The Maui Police Department wants you to have coffee with a cop

$
0
0

lego_town_-_set_540_police_units_8028921281-insapphowetrust-wikimedia

Yeah, this week the Maui Police Department will take part in what’s billed as the “first annual Coffee with a Cop Day.” The phrase “first annual” always struck me as a bit optimistic, but who knows. Anyway, here’s your big chance to talk story with an MPD cop over a cup of joe.

“On Friday, October 7, 2016, the Maui Police Department will be joining the U.S. Department of Justice and police agencies across the United States for the First Annual Coffee with a Cop Day,” states a County of Maui news release sent out today. “Coffee with a Cop is a program intended to bring police officers and community members together to discuss issues and learn more about each other. There will be no agenda or speeches. It is an opportunity for citizens to ask questions, voice concerns and get to know your officers in an informal and relaxed setting.”

If you go but can’t think of anything to talk about, allow us to suggest a few topics:

• The MPD’s ongoing tests with body-worn cameras

• The MPD’s robot, which can be equipped with explosives (just like the Dallas PD used recently to kill a suspected sniper)

• The MPD’s failure to share its policies on how it would use said robot with the general public

• What MPD beat cops think of the still ongoing case of two MPD cops accused of bribery and hindering an investigation (which is now being handled by the FBI)

• Why the MPD refuses to release the names of officers who’ve used deadly force

• Why the MPD believes that the state law prohibiting the department from making public the names of active officers who’ve been punished by Internal Affairs is so necessary

Anyway, the thing will take place at the Kehalani Starbucks (located at the corner of Waiale Road and Kuikahi Drive in Wailuku), between 10am and noon.

Photo: InSapphoWeTrust/Flickr

The post The Maui Police Department wants you to have coffee with a cop appeared first on Maui Time.

Viewing all 259 articles
Browse latest View live