Wayne Barrett seems to have uncovered who built Sarah Palin's $552,000 dollar house: the same bozos who redid Senator Stevens' VECO-funded digs.
Now, there's nothing untoward about this odd association, until you start looking under the covers. Todd Palin "and a few friends who were contractors" built this magnificent edifice.
The Palins' main residence, a large two-story house on Lake Lucille in Wasilla, draws much of its value from its prime position along a paved road and float-plane accessible lake, said Darcie Salmon, a local real estate agent. He said lakefront land is plentiful in Alaska, but lakefront land along paved roads isn't.The Palins' four-bedroom, four-bath house, nearly 3,500 square feet, sits on just over two acres behind a tall wood-plank privacy fence that runs along one side of the property. It's one of the newest homes in the Snider subdivision lining Lake Lucille and is assessed at $552,000 -- more than twice the value of a neighboring two-acre lot with a much smaller, older wood-frame home.
Todd Palin built the house with friends who were contractors, he said in a recent television interview.
Curiously, right down the road, the much-vaunted Wasilla Sports Complex was being built at the same time, by large contributors to the Palin gubernatorial campaign.
A list of subcontractors on the job, obtained by the Voice, includes many with Palin ties. One was Spenard Builders Supply, the state's leading supplier of wood, floor, roof, and other "pre-engineered components." In addition to being a sponsor of Todd Palin's snow-machine team that has earned tens of thousands for the Palin family, Spenard hired Sarah Palin to do a statewide television commercial in 2004. When the Palins began building a new family home off Lake Lucille in 2002—at the same time that Palin was running for lieutenant governor and in her final months as mayor—Spenard supplied the materials, according to Antoine Bricks, who works in its Wasilla office. Spenard actually filed a notice "of its right to assert a lien" on the deed for the Palin property after contracting for labor and materials for the site. Spenard's name has popped up in the trial of Senator Stevens—it worked on the house that is at the center of the VECO scandal as well.Todd Palin told Fox News that he built the two-story, 3,450-square-foot, four-bedroom, four-bath, wood house himself, with the help of contractors he described as "buddies." As mayor, Sarah Palin blocked an effort to require the filing of building permits in the wide-open city, and there is no public record of who the "buddies" were. The house was built very near the complex, on a site whose city purchase led to years of unsuccessful litigation and, now, $1.3 million in additional costs, with a law firm that's also donated to Palin collecting costly fees from the city.
Dorwin and Joanne Smith, the principals of complex subcontractor DJ Excavation & Development, have donated $7,100 to Palin and her allied candidate Charlie Fannon (Joanne is a Palin appointee on the state Board of Nursing). Sheldon Ewing, who owns another complex subcontractor, Weld Air, has donated $1,300, and PN&D, an engineering firm on the complex, has contributed $699.
Ewing was one of the few sports-complex contractors, aside from Spenard, willing to address the question of whether he worked on the house as well, but he had little to say: "I doubt that it occurred, but if it did indirectly, how would I know anyhow?" The odd timing of Palin's house construction—it was completed two months before she left City Hall and while she and Todd Palin were campaigning statewide for the first time—raises questions, especially considering its synergy with the complex.
Salon's David Talbot recently visited the complex, which, he said, resembled "a huge airplane hangar" so far away from the city's center that kids can't bike or walk there. It's adorned by a plaque commemorating Palin. Even as a governor, she is still such a champion of the complex—which loses money every year—that she just steered state funding for a new kitchen to it.
Now, I shouldn't complain too much about useless sports complexes: the City of Elgin erected just such a monolithic money-loser, but our mayor feels our fair city must keep up with Schaumburg in the matter of squandered revenues. We also erected a library along the banks of the mighty Fox River, which isn't much larger than the one it replaced, but we needed the space that library occupied for parking for yet another metropolitan boondoggle: the Hemmens Auditorium. Ah, the march of progress.
But were our mayor to get his Buddies to help him erect a half million dollar house without a building permit, I think there might be a bit of ruckus in the City Council.
We were treated to the Rezko story, the tarbrush whereby Obama got some property via a scurrilous little felon who developed a taste for kickbacks. Senator Ted Stevens is already being slowly fed into the mills of the gods which grind slow but oh so exceeding fine. If it emerges that Sarah Palin's house was built with kickback labor, she's going down the same chute. If there's an ounce of validity to this, the Trooper scandal will Pale-In comparison. Sorry, I just couldn't resist the pun.


Since you didn't describe the Stevens' house for comparison,
(#129163)I can only assume your intention here was to smear Palin by insinuation. The only commonality you cited was the same building supplier, which happens to be the largest building supplier in the state.
If you don't have any fresh ideas, then you use stale tactics to scare the voters.--Barack Obama, 2008
um.... dealt with in the second sentence of the diary
(#129171)you could comment on the substance of the diary in response.
from your comment title, i take it that you didn't understand that this diary's title was meant in the sense of "Did Palin get a house like (in the same way that) Sen Stevens?"
I think the diary offers strong circumstantial evidence towards that assertion.
of course the weakness of any circumstantial case is that it can easily be disproved with appropriate exculpatory direct evidence. do you have any?
“The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”
-George Bernard Shaw
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parentWrong sentence
(#129489)What's under the covers are vague allegations based on tenuous connections, which was sort of my point. The Stevens commonality regarding Spenard's Building Supply is sort of like saying, "Ah ha! Todd Palin bought lumber at Home Depot, and so did Ted Stevens!" There are no other facts except Blaise's smeary insinuations, aided and abetted by the smeary insinuations in the Village Voice hit piece.
If you don't have any fresh ideas, then you use stale tactics to scare the voters.--Barack Obama, 2008
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parentSo what you're saying,
(#129506)is that this is the rough equivalent of the 500 Bill Ayers diaries posted on this site. Noted.
It's impossible to debate if people simply hold beliefs that have no grounding in reality.
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parentNo such evidence can be proffered: no construction permit.
(#129236)We'll never know who was involved, or their roles, or how they were compensated. Todd Palin was making lots of friends up on the Wasilla Sports Complex building site, it seems, when he wasn't making irate phone calls to get his ex-brother in law fired.
The whole thing stinks to high heaven. Repairing a snowmobile, yes, I can see Toddy-boy out there in the garage, working on mighty sled. But putting up a half-million dollar house, just him and his Contractor Friends? I don't think his cherry picker will put a roof truss on top of his house, no I don't.
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parentSo you have no facts
(#129490)Thank you.
If you don't have any fresh ideas, then you use stale tactics to scare the voters.--Barack Obama, 2008
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parentProduce the Palins "Owners Sworn Statement"
(#129511)and maybe this issue goes away.
Examples of public "servants" receiving free home improvements as a quid pro quo for a government funded construction project are too numerous for an innocent until proven guilty stance in the political arena.
In a criminal courtroom? Yes, the Palins are innocent until proven guilty.
In the political arena, politicians need to prove they did not receive kick backs in the form of free labor and materials for their home.
The proper balance between defense and welfare are the tectonic plates that lie beneath our political discourse.
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parent"its prime position along a paved road"
(#128983)huh? is Alaska a magical land where time is somehow half a century behind everyone else?
Not "magical"
(#128990)- necessarily: just underdeveloped.
Alaska, remember, is just slightly smaller than France (and vastly more rugged): and only has 7/8 as many people in it as Marseilles. It's no surprise that paved roads are scarce.
And even less of a surprise that one should just coincidentally run past the Governor's house. Just by chance. You betcha.
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parentEven Texas still has a lot
(#128991)Even Texas still has a lot of unpaved road once you get away from the larger cities.
Steven Palmer Peterson
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parentOregon, Too
(#128992)As my thoroughly rattled teeth can testify to after some inspection trips to the outskirts of Portland and beyond.
The universe may well have been created without a point--that doesn't imply that we can't give it one.
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parentOTOH, Brooklyn just has
(#128993)OTOH, Brooklyn just has roads that feel like they're unpaved!
Steven Palmer Peterson
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parentAnd floatplane access, too.
(#128988)The combination of road and floatplane access is wonderful, even by Alaska standards. I'm beginning to wonder if the Wasilla Sports Complex wasn't built exclusively for the Palin children. I mean, really, a child named "Track" ?
It's not so much that Alaska's half a century behind, but that it's so vast and remote. There are many gravel roads in Alaska, but it's nearly impossible to pave over permafrost. You might as well pave the road in Betty Crocker cake frosting.
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parentPlease, Please . . .
(#128950)let it be so.
That's how it is on this bitch of an earth.
I doubt it will matter
(#128953)her supporters seem remarkably resistant to facts. It will just be another example of the liberal media trying to destroy a Republican because she's not an east coast elitist.
I blame it all on the Internet
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parentHer Supporters Don't Matter
(#128957)I will rest easy (or somewhat less uneasy) only when every reasonably-intelligent-and-above citizen in this great (okay, average) nation of ours comes to see her as the utter freaking abomination she is. I wake up every morning wondering how in the hell that woman can possibly be where she is, and why people aren't rioting in the streets. And I'm a Republican.
That's how it is on this bitch of an earth.
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parentThat's a bit strong
(#128964)she's just another populist, it's not like she's the only one we've ever seen in our political history. We just don't have the luxury of indulging our emotions by electing one right now.
Also, dude, waking up every morning and thinking about politics is not good for your health. I'd recommend something a bit less aggravating, like IP disputes between multinationals.
I blame it all on the Internet
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parentSure, There Have Been
(#128970)other populists around, but I think, insofar as she combines total intellectual insipidity with a wink-at-the-screen baseness with a willingness (knowingly or not, but if it's unknowing it's all the more gross) to appeal to lowest elements of our national character -- all on the highest possible national stage -- she is of a completely different order. I don't think we've ever seen anyone as bad as she is in this prominent a role.
That's how it is on this bitch of an earth.
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parentI agree, it likely will not matter before
(#128956)November 4th (unless even more purple state GOP candidates get queasy) however her GOP enemies in the Alaska legislature could take her down with this, if McCain-Palin lose next month.
The proper balance between defense and welfare are the tectonic plates that lie beneath our political discourse.
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parentI don't know enough about AK politics
(#128965)to know if this is a unusual event or the normal way of doing business up there.
I blame it all on the Internet
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parentHank, you lackwit, facts have a well-known Liberal Bias :D
(#128954)n/t
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parentHow could it be otherwise?
(#128951)The battle shall concern what constitutes "proof"
= = =
That said, production of the typical financial documents used in home construction such as
"Owners Sworn Statement"
and
"General Contractor's Sworn Statement to Owner"
are what can diffuse this.
Without the release of those documents and the back-up documentation required by just about every title insurance company in America, the Palins deserve no benefit of the doubt in any political arena even as they deserve every benefit of the doubt in a criminal courtroom.
= = =
A Ticor Title Insurance Company sample form snagged at random -- I am not at my office.
Later I will look into what Alaskan title insurers usually require.
The proper balance between defense and welfare are the tectonic plates that lie beneath our political discourse.
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parentBeyond the Pale-in!
(#128947)She's the gift that keeps on giving.
“Two clichés make us laugh but a hundred clichés move us, because we sense dimly that the clichés are talking among themselves, celebrating a reunion." - Umberto Eco
But what about their countertops?
(#128942)Granite? Tile? Polished moose-antler? Isn't that the sine qua non these days of
intrusiveincisive house "investigations"?Probably the same stuff down at the Sports Complex kitchen
(#128945)if my guess is correct.
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parent