Moore: 38 Studios Investigation Shows Legislators Lack Courage

Russell J. Moore GoLocal MINDSETTER™

Moore: 38 Studios Investigation Shows Legislators Lack Courage

Nicholas Mattiello
Most of the outrage I’ve heard surrounding the fruitless investigation conducted by the Rhode Island State Police into the 38 Studios fiasco centers around the general lack of aggressiveness that permeated the investigation.

That’s a legitimate complaint for sure.

As GoLocal reported earlier last week, the state police didn’t get around to interviewing the law firms and massive international banks like Wells Fargo or Barclays, who were part and parcel to the deal and have paid more than $60 million combined to settle the civil lawsuit filed by the state.

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Further, most of the interviews conducted by the state police were done over the phone.

And when the state police Colonel conducting the interview of House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello began his questioning, he explicitly told the Speaker that neither he, nor anyone else in the state legislature, was a target of the investigation! What exactly was the point?

An unaggressive investigation 

Let’s call this investigation what it was--a complete whitewash. It’s almost as if the state police were told to look around, but make sure not to find anything.

The documents reveal more than this. What’s most surprising about the investigation is how the legislators interviewed by the state police talk about how they knew nothing about the loan program almost as if they didn’t want to know anything.

For some reason, and I’ve never understood this, the lion-share of Rhode Island’s state legislators seem to think that going along to get along is not only a good thing, it’s the right thing.

As an example, here’s what current House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello said about the loan program when he was House Majority Leader--that’s the number 2 man in the House of Representatives, for anyone who isn’t aware, when he was asked about whether he had any knowledge of the program’s purpose and intent.

"I wasn't going to question the Speaker"

"(Steven Costantino) was having his own discussions with the Speaker that I was absolutely cut off of. So I - I mean, I was the Majority Leader, I wasn't going to question the Speaker as to what he was doing, and -- I mean, if they want to have a private conversation and, and exclude me, I'm just not part of that conversation and -- and, you know that's how things work," Mattiello told the state police.

It’s easy to pick on Mattiello--let’s just leave it at that.

But what’s interesting is that although most of the other state legislators didn’t put it as starkly as Mattiello, “...I wasn’t going to question the Speaker as to what he was doing…”, despite he was the number 2 man in the House, that’s the prevailing attitude at the statehouse. The legislators, for some reason, think that they can’t, and shouldn’t question the Speaker of the House--despite the fact that doing so would be the right thing to do for the people of Rhode Island.

There’s a blind obedience to authority permeating our statehouse, and that’s a massive cause of the problems we face.

"you know how things work"

It’s the job of a legislator to ask tough questions about everything. When there’s not enough information provided, legislators should vote against the measure based on that alone. The attitude shouldn’t be ‘well the House Speaker wants this and I’ve got to know my place’.

Legislators aren’t sent up the statehouse to get along with one another and have a good time. They’re supposed to be there to do the right thing.

And when a legislator does do his job, he gets called “negative”.

That’s how Representative Samuel Azzinaro viewed House Majority Leader Bob Watson, who so presciently warned legislators against voting for the ill-fated loan guaranty that became the 38 Studios debacle.

“This is probably the scariest vote you can cast because a decade from now this could be a scandal all over The Providence Journal,” Watson warned on that fateful day in 2010.

"something didn't seem right"

Azzinaro explained to investigators why he, and i presume, most others, ignored Watson’s prophetic advice, in his interview with the state police.

"You know, the only thing that I can remember of that night really was Bob Watson who was the minority leader at the time, getting up and not mentioning 38 Studios, but just saying that something didn't seem right. And it was, you know, I used to sit behind him...and because he was negative about everything, but so, you don't -- you don't really pay too much attention to it when somebody's negative all the time,” said Azzinaro.

"But it seemed like he knew something was cooking."

If it seemed like he knew something was cooking, why didn’t Azzinaro vote against the legislation? The reason: he didn’t want to irritate House Leadership.

The time has long passed for voters to begin paying more attention to the goings on at the statehouse and demand more independence from their legislators. We need people to ask tough questions and to vote against legislation that doesn’t benefit everyone in Rhode Island.  

We need more Bob Watsons and fewer Nicholas Mattiellos.

Only that, no some reform like the master lever, or the line-item veto, is truly what will get us a better state government.

Russell Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in Rhode Island media, both for newspapers and for political campaigns. Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713.






 


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