Delaware Liberal

UPDATED: Copeland & McDowell’s “Highly Paid Hitman” Randall Speck Comes Up Short

Mascitti is currently on the hitman Randall Speck.  Now would be a good time for people to call and ask if an ETHICS complaint against McDowell and Copeland is in order at this point.  ON AIR: 302 478 9335

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McDowell & Copeland had hoped that hired gun, Randall Speck would put a bullet in the head of the Blue Water Wind project quickly and cleanly killing off this nuisance. After four hours of trying, Speck’s gun clicked a few times – but he did not turn out to be the cold-bloodedly efficient hitman that Copeland and McDowell hoped he would be.

This NJ coverage by Aaron Nathans is okay, but leaves some important questions unanswered.

1) McDowell is paying Speck, but with where is money coming from? Are my tax dollars funding his six figure hitman fee for this botched job? Is Delmarva Power funding this attempted execution?

2) Having failed to put a bullet in Arnetta McRae and the PSC’s noggin – was the four hour grilling a “plan B” attempt to create a record to be used in the pending Delmarva Power case (#07A-06004THG)? If so, why are McDowell and Copeland funding this ?

There are still a great many questions to answer about this brazen execution attempt. But one thing is beyond a doubt:

Copeland and McDowell are flat out in the employ of Delmarva Power and need to be removed from office by being voted out OR by being ejected on ethics charges.

My preference, after this turn of events, would be to see them led off in handcuffs.

Wind power contract scrutinized

Hearing puts PSC in the familiar position of defending the Bluewater Wind initiative

By AARON NATHANS, The News Journal

There was no jury, no bailiff, no hand on the Bible. But the process that led to an offshore wind power contract appeared to be on trial at Legislative Hall on Wednesday.

A Washington-based attorney spent more than two hours grilling representatives of the Public Service Commission and its staff on the path that led to an offshore wind contract.

Four state agencies, including the PSC, ordered the creation of a 25-year contract for Delmarva Power to buy offshore wind power from Bluewater Wind. The agencies were responding to a legislative directive to seek new sources of in-state generation in the wake of a 59 percent increase in the price of electricity.

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