Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Schuette Special Prosecutor Investigates MSU, Clinton Foundation & Detroit Land Bank Authority For Child Welfare Fraud

Well, look at what we have here!

We do not just have an historic investigation, we have ourselves a real race for Governor of Michigan.

First, Brian Calley, Michigan Lieutenant Governor and 2018 Gubernatorial Candidate comes out calling for money to make everything go away.


Then, I sat back to wait and see what Bill Schuette, Michigan Attorney General and 2018 Gubernatorial Candidate was going to do as a comeback to the weak response to Calley.

Schuette: Special prosecutor, Michigan State Police will lead investigation into Michigan State


Yes, my precious Bill did the ultimate smackdown on Brian, but he did more than that.

Bill Schuette let me know that he is all over this.

See, the State Auditor General has "Reopened" the Ricky Holland investigation by suing the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services and I just so happen to be an original source about this, so I can tell you that it is about child welfare fraud.

I am pretty sure the case is being represented by Schuette's office, or at least coordinated, because the case is in the Court of Claims.

Anyway, Schuette is using lots of special prosecutors, which is great to distance himself from any look of impropriety or political bias, because William Forsyth could be considered as a political operative for his campaign, but I really do not care at this point because Schuette is going for the glory.

Now, let us play a little game called, "Guess who did not incorporate in the State of Michigan".

If you say, "Detroit Land Bank Authority" you are absolutely correct, but there is one more organization, where the "Legal Geniuses" (trademark pending) of #perkinscoiesucks did not incorporate.

Perkins Coie did not incorporate the Clinton Global Initiative University in the State of Michigan.

So, how is it that Michigan State University joined with the Clinton Global Initiative University?

Kent County Land Bank Authority of the Michigan State University College of Agriculture & Natural Resources Land Policy Institute.

Yes, the same Kent County where William Forsyth, the special prosecutor, hails, but this might just be a good thing considering that he might just be considered a subject matter expert.

This might be the same phenomenon that happened with Matt Schneider, Schuette's former Deputy Attorney General, coming back down to Detroit as the top U.S. Attorney for Michigan Easter District Court, to continue t he Detroit public corruption investigation that put former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, et al in their proverbial proper places.

There is one more area of significance the local rags will not talk about.

Michigan State University is a major influence in child welfare policies in the State of Michigan, for quite some time.

Hillary Clinton made her claim to fame on the Adoption and Safe Families Act, which is nothing more than a child trafficking operation, where Michigan is up there in the top 3 in the nation for children trafficked through foster care and adoption.

Michigan State University has a youth mentoring program just like Penn State had, except it is part of the University called FAME.

The children who were raped in the Jerry Sandusky, Penn State incident were foster kids, and more than likely, so were some of the youth in the MSU situation.


Welcome to the family, Bill, or should I start calling you Governor Bill, because I finally figured out why you called me a public nuisance.

Love ya, too.

Call me.

MSU to join Clinton Global Initiative University

As they prepare for a Wednesday visit from former President Bill Clinton, Michigan State University will join his Global Initiative University and offer a campus-wide minor in entrepreneurship and innovation.

In doing so, MSU will be the first Michigan university to join CGIU, which was created to engage the next generation of leaders on college campuses around the world.

“Michigan State is committed to creating an entrepreneurial culture on campus and preparing our students to solve the world’s most pressing problems in innovative ways and to embark on careers that won’t resemble those of the past,” Neil Kane, MSU’s director of undergraduate entrepreneurship, said in a written statement.

Clinton will be on campus Wednesday and be the keynote speaker at the Governor Jim Blanchard Public Service Forum and first recipient of the Spartan Statesmanship Award for Distinguished Public Service.

The award and forum, announced in September, were established through a $1-million gift to MSU from Blanchard and his wife, Janet. Blanchard said the program honors distinguished leaders in politics, diplomacy, public service and journalism and gives MSU students and others “a chance to meet them and be energized by them.”

“The goal of this lecture series is to provide generations of students, faculty and people in the MSU community with the opportunity to hear and learn from national and international political leaders and others,” said Blanchard, former Michigan governor, U.S. congressman and ambassador to Canada, in a written statement. “His public service in politics, followed by his excellent work through the Clinton Foundation, is exactly the type of dedication and inspiring story we hoped to bring through the Blanchard Forum.”

The Clinton Global Initiative Network is a consortium of colleges and universities that provides support, mentoring and seed funding to student entrepreneurs. Students develop a “commitment to action” to explain how they might solve a social problem in areas such as education, the environment and public health.

Some students are chosen to attend the CGIU’s annual meeting. By joining the initiative, MSU pledges to financially support students invited to the meeting, which next takes place April 1-3 at the University of California-Berkeley.

Raeuf Roushangar, an MSU doctoral student in biochemistry, attended the CGIU at Washington University in St. Louis in April 2013. As part of his commitment to action, Roushangar formed a nonprofit organization that to date has donated more than $1 million worth of medical supplies to the developing world.

Two MSU students have applied for next year’s CGIU: a neuroscience freshman from Ghana, who is creating a mentoring program similar to Big Brothers Big Sisters, and a computer science sophomore from Ethiopia, who is working on a software application to make college more accessible to students in Ethiopia.

With the Minor in Entrepreneurship and Innovation, which starts in the spring semester of 2016, MSU establishes a way for students to develop entrepreneurial skills, whether they aspire to start a business or become more competitive candidates for traditional employers.

Required for the minor are 15 credit hours consisting of two core courses and an assortment of electives that allow students to tailor the curriculum toward their interests.
“A university is an ideal setting for students to experience the entrepreneurial journey because there is no financial or professional risk in trying,” Kane said. “Once students leave campus, the cost, which is measured many ways, goes up a lot.”

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1 comment:

BEVERLY TRAN said...

I have come to affectionately call Bill, Smooches.