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Perhaps
you know that on April 25 the Saint Petersburg Times ran a story announcing
the upcoming party the Sembler's were planning for their big five-O wedding
anniversary at their Magic Kingdom in Rome. Well Tampa Bay's Dynamic
Duo had the "mother of all parties" on May 2 - 4, so why didn't
we hear about it from the Times? Or did we? The Oakton Institute previously
reported a story that the Times appears to have gotten a sweetheart deal
from Sembler in return for killing a damaging story about a protest at
Sembler's house. The Institute has also reported on the softening approach
that the Times, once Sembler's biggest critic, has taken with the Teflon
Ambassador since Paul Tash took control. Is it possible that the Times
is finally listening to us? Is the Times trying to put the brakes on its
spin campaign to glamorize this once controversial couple? Is the Times
afraid to report on the Roman Holiday?
Well, not exactly.
But it does look like it wants to camouflage the story? Mel and Betty
are Jewish. Menorah Manor is a Jewish home for the elderly down there
in Tampa. On Sunday May 4 Menorah Manor held its 18th Anniversary celebration
at a hotel in Saint Petersburg. Times' reporter Mary Jane Park was dispatched
to cover the story which was published on May 7 under the name, Menorah
Manor marks its 18th anniversary Series: ON THE TOWN. For seven paragraphs
Ms. Park wrote about the festivities at the Menorah Manor anniversary
party; but then, in paragraph eight, she abruptly shifted gears and started
talking about all the important Bay area citizens who could not be there
because they were in Italy attending Mel and Betty's Roman holiday.
Prominent citizens
like retired Pinellas- Pasco Circuit Judge David Seth and Joan Walker,
and retired pediatrician Bruce Epstein who stated "What impressed
me the most was the love and affection the Italians have for the Semblers.
. . . I sat next to the Italian Minister of Defense, Antonio Martino .
. . (and he) made a point of mentioning how well the Semblers represented
the United States and that we should be very proud of them." Incidentally,
Dr. Epstein is a former Straight board member as is Marilyn Benjamin,
another guest at the "Nozze d'Oro" (that's Italian for golden
anniversary).
Besides
the Italian Minister of Defense, other tablemates of Dr. Epstein's were
the Israeli ambassador to Italy and "an orthopedic surgeon who once
treated Betty." That's a mysterious way Ms. Park uses to describe
this only "unidentified" guest. I wonder. When Betty turned
70 the Times did a glowing article on her birthday party mentioning that
Judge Irene Sullivan had been there and had been asked, along with the
other guests, to donate money to the Drug Free America Foundation (formerly
Straight, Inc.) in lieu of gifts. Judge Sullivan had been one of the three
Republican candidates for judgeships whose campaign had been actively
pushed by the Pinellas County Republican Party causing great consternation
from local newspapers. Her husband Donald C. Sullivan is an orthopedic
surgeon who is being considered for the top Republican Party job in Florida.
Dr. Sullivan used to be the secretary for Straight Foundation. But in
1993, after the Times noted that a report from the IG for the state Department
of Health had concluded that Mel Sembler and unspecified state senators
had probably interfered with a state attempt in 1989 to close Straight's
flagship treatment facility in Saint Petersburg, Sullivan resigned from
Straight and successfully ran for state senator. Eventually he was appointed
to the senate committee which oversees the state Department of Health!
(When Donald Sullivan resigned from Straight Wesley Pennington, then president
of Straight, Inc., did too to run, but unsuccessfully, for the state House
Representatives.) Strange Ms. Park does not mention the "orthopedic"
surgeon's name. You know how those Israeli intelligence officers are.
They know everything. Suppose the Israeli ambassador brought up the rumors
of the dark side of Mel Sembler, rumors about Straight and child abuse,
in front of the Italian Minister of Defense. Those ministers would have
been surrounded by two American medical doctors and maybe even a judge
(provided Dr. Sullivan's wife was also there) who could have set the record
straight.
I
mean it's not like Ambassador Sembler should not worry about a scene happening
like I just described. Arnold Trebach is a professor emeritus of law at
American University who has written extensively about the abuses of Straight.
He happened to be at a dinner in Australia back when Sembler was our ambassador
to that country. Listen to what Dr. Trebach writes on his web page about
that dinner:
| While attending
a major international conference in Melbourne in 1989, I heard the
American ambassador to Australia brag that he and his wife had formed
a drug treatment organization called Straight in Florida. The ambassador
was of course Mel Sembler who had been appointed by President Reagan
and was the featured after-dinner speaker. ( I was sitting at a table
composed mostly of foreign drug officials. When my wife and I reacted
in quiet astonishment, they asked the cause of our outrage. As I started
to explain in a whisper, they looked puzzled, but then a top Dutch
drug policy official at the table offered his own explanation, Oh
yes, I know about the program, Hitler Jungen!). |
Ms. Park spends seven
paragraphs on Menorah Manor; 13 on the big L. This is beginning to sound
like journalistic buffoonery to me. I mean you title an article Menorah
Manor marks its 18th anniversary Series, perhaps hoping that Sembler's
critics won't catch it, when the real story is about the toga
party at Mel's house!
Time's story
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