Villaraigosa TV Ad Hits Hahn on Ethics Questions
Following months of verbal attacks, the challenger's latest spot highlights probes of fundraising in Hahn's administration.
By Michael Finnegan and Jessica Garrison, Times Staff Writers
The Los Angeles mayoral race took a harsh turn Monday as
City Councilman Antonio Villaraigosa began airing a
television ad that slams incumbent James K. Hahn for a
grand jury investigation of his campaign fundraising and
alleged corruption at City Hall.
The ad echoes months of verbal assaults on Hahn's ethics by
Villaraigosa and comes after the councilman's own campaign
faltered last week when his fundraising sparked a
preliminary probe by the district attorney's office.
Villaraigosa's move ensures a searing exchange of negative
ads in the final two weeks of the race. But Hahn has not
started TV advertising â€" the main vehicle
used to reach Los Angeles voters â€" because he
lags in raising money. Hahn campaign strategist Bill
Carrick said Villaraigosa's ad shows the councilman's
campaign "is sinking like a rock."
"This is obviously in direct response to the fact that the
D.A. has opened an investigation on him," Carrick said. He
described Villaraigosa's candidacy as "built on a house of
cards," referring to his central campaign pledge to
"restore trust" in City Hall.
Villaraigosa media strategist David Doak said the
councilman's campaign team expected "a vicious campaign"
from Hahn, "and we thought that we would put this issue
front and center" before the May 17 election.
"We think that Hahn's history of corruption is a major
issue in the campaign," he said.
Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley is also investigating two
prominent Hahn supporters accused of laundering donations
to the mayor's 2001 campaign. Cooley opened the probe of
Villaraigosa's fundraising after the councilman announced
last week that he would return $47,000 in donations from
employees of two Florida companies and their family
members.
Campaign strategist Darry Sragow, who is unaligned in the
mayoral race, said it made sense for Villaraigosa to
"remind voters of the controversy" surrounding Hahn's
fundraising and administration after days of questions
about the Florida donations.
"It's a cliche, but the best defense is a good offense,"
Sragow said.
Villaraigosa's ad shows images of Hahn and an attache case
stuffed with cash.
"A federal grand jury is investigating corruption in the
Hahn administration," an announcer says amid strains of
ominous music. "Jim Hahn's personal e-mails and documents
subpoenaed. Resignations amid charges of no-bid contracts
and pay-to-play."
Prosecutors are examining whether Hahn's administration
illegally steered city contracts to campaign donors.
"Where will the investigation end?" the ad concludes. "They
say follow the money, and almost all corruption is tied to
fundraising for Hahn's campaigns. Isn't it time for a
change?"
As they each campaigned Monday at L.A. charter schools
â€" Villaraigosa in the Mid-Wilshire district
and Hahn in Pacoima â€" the candidates traded
shots over ethics and education.
Villaraigosa, accompanied by filmmaker Rob Reiner and
schools advocate Nancy Daly Riordan, read "The Rainbow
Fish" to a preschool class and vowed to expand preschool
programs, then excoriated Hahn for being "missing in
action" on education for four years.
Turning to ethics, he raised the case of Hahn donor Mark
Abrams, a Westside developer who was fined $270,000 by the
city Ethics Commission for laundering contributions to Hahn
and other candidates in the 2001 election. He said Hahn had
not returned the donations collected by Abrams and another
supporter, attorney Pierce O'Donnell, who has been charged
with laundering $25,500 in campaign contributions to
Hahn.
"He has not returned any of the money from Mr. O'Donnell
â€" any of the money that has been part of a
pattern and practice of scandal and corruption probes in
his administration," Villaraigosa said.
In Pacoima, Hahn touted his school proposals to dozens of
children from a stage decorated with tricycles, dolls and
other toys at the Vaughn Next Century Learning Center.
Surrounded afterward by a cluster of reporters and news
cameras, Hahn accused Villaraigosa of using corruption
allegations to divert attention from a lackluster education
record.
"There were complete investigations into these matters, and
the investigators demonstrated that there was no wrongdoing
on behalf of my campaign or anybody involved with my
campaign," Hahn said.
Hahn said, as he has before, that it is impossible to
return money raised by Abrams, because the accounts were
closed, and an aide said the same applied to O'Donnell. He
also called on the district attorney to conclude the
investigations into his fundraising and city
contracting.
"I'm somebody who has cooperated fully with all these
investigations, ordered all the departments to turn over
every bit of information that's requested," he said. "We've
instructed every staff member to cooperate. A year and a
half later, we're no closer to an answer than we were at
the beginning."
Earlier, the Democratic mayor pressed his effort to rally
conservatives behind his candidacy with an appearance on
the "McIntyre in the Morning" talk show on KABC-AM
(790).
Responding to questions about freeway shootings and racial
strife at Jefferson High School, Hahn criticized
Villaraigosa for opposing legal injunctions against gang
activities when he was a leader of the Southern California
chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. Villaraigosa
now supports them.
Hahn also faulted the county Board of Supervisors for
removing the gold cross that had adorned the county seal
since 1957 rather than defend it against a threatened
lawsuit by the ACLU. The decision sparked an outcry from
some conservatives.
The mayor called the cross, a symbol of the California
missions, "a nod to the heritage of how this city got
founded." "I was just mad that they knuckled under to the
ACLU without even a court fight," said Hahn, who called the
move "insane."
Hahn's father, the late county Supervisor Kenneth Hahn,
helped design the seal.
Meanwhile, reports filed with the Ethics Commission show
that independent spending on the mayoral campaign has
nearly broken the $1.5-million record set four years
ago.
Almost $982,000 has been put behind Hahn's reelection.
Another $514,000 has been spent to promote Villaraigosa. By
law, the spending, primarily by labor unions, cannot be
coordinated with either campaign.
Villaraigosa received a major financial boost Monday when
the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers in
Washington, D.C., said it would spend $200,000 on radio ads
for him.
Times staff writer Jeffrey L. Rabin contributed to this
report.
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