Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Cocktails & Popcorn: Taylor Mayor Rick Sollars Enters Stage Left With Gabe Leland While Detroit FBI Creates More Art With Colorful Yellow Caution Tape

On this exciting adventure on Cocktails & Popcorn, MIED FBI are raiding Taylor City Hall Office of the Mayor.

The reason I use the present tense in doing my colored commentary is because I know the art in the perfection of law when I see it.

Hmmmmm.....delicious....popcorn.....

You have what I deem to be an android phone pic of the FBI exiting the building by The Detroit News photo credit of George Hunter.

So, that would mean, since the story is still less than an hour old, that George was notified of the raid, strategically positioned on the second floor, to capture this Baroquean media res image of another milestone in the construction of the path to the Quantum Renaissance.

That sounds like one of those transposable models, like the Roger Stone arrest. denoument

HOW EXACTLY DID CNN GET FOOTAGE OF ROGER STONE’S ARREST?

How exactly did The Detroit News get footage?


Perhaps, it was just serendipity, but for me, this is like being in at a live art cyber gallery event, sipping on Chardonnay eating a handful of popcorn in a napkin.


More than a dozen FBI agents searched Taylor City Hall early Tuesday in an apparent public corruption investigation, The Detroit News has learned.

The exact nature of the investigation was not immediately clear but the search comes amid a broader crackdown on corruption in Metro Detroit that has produced 17 convictions and led to federal charges against 22 contractors and public officials, including Detroit Councilman Gabe Leland.

Taylor City Hall


A team of agents arrived at city hall around 10:30 a.m., FBI Special Agent Mara Schneider told The News.

“We will be releasing a statement a little later on today,” she said.

FBI agents were spotted inside the second-floor office of Mayor Rick Sollars and blocked access to the area.

While agents busied themselves in the mayor’s office, grim-faced city employees and police officers wandered through the corridors of city hall, declining to comment.

Rick Sollars
Some employees hung around the lobby, craning their necks to try to peer into the mayor’s office, as men in suits darted in and out.

Yellow caution tape, accompanied by a sign bearing the message “under construction,” prevented curious onlookers and reporters from going onto the second floor.

City Treasurer Edward Bourassa was unsure why FBI agents were searching city hall and the mayor's office. Bourassa, who was home sick Tuesday, does not know if the search was prompted by anything related to city finances.

“I haven’t heard anything except for what’s in the media and on Facebook,” he said. “I don’t know anything that’s going on.”
Come back to www.detroitnews.com for more on this developing story.

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