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CLARIFICATION ON 03/18/08 -- A story that appeared in Monday’s Review-Journal should have made it clear that the Kessler Report, on Clark County building inspection and fire inspection practices, contained the following allegation: “A number of individuals with whom (Michael) Kessler spoke advised Kessler that some Building Division and CCFD inspectors did not want to create a hostile environment at the hotels where they were assigned to inspect complaints since it was alleged that certain inspectors received comps from the hotels including meals, show tickets, stays at other properties and branded clothing.”

Former inspector says new audit repeats old issues

Favoritism allegations made in late '90s




Clark County officials last week described an audit of the county's building and fire safety inspections as "scathing," "shocking" and "disturbing" and promised quick, decisive action to correct long-standing problems.

But county officials about 10 years ago tackled head-on some of the same concerns raised in the recent audit while prosecuting a former building inspector, who contends that he was railroaded and that other inspectors did the same things for which he was fired, indicted and taken to court.


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  • "The allegations at the time were that people were receiving preferential treatment, and now they are being accused of the same thing in the audit," said Marcus McAnally, the former inspector who has a wrongful-termination lawsuit pending against the county.

    A county grand jury indicted McAnally in 1999 on 13 felony counts of concealing or falsifying records or papers by a public official after he had altered computerized inspection records.

    But the criminal case against him was dismissed in 2002 after a judge ruled no crime had been committed, and a hearing officer in late 1999 ordered the county to rehire McAnally in another division.

    At about the same time, allegations that building inspectors inappropriately solicited donations from developers and casinos for a nonprofit trade group were referred to the state Ethics Commission. It found no wrongdoing by inspectors but issued a finding that such fundraising was inappropriate.

    Also, allegations surfaced at that time that inspectors were receiving show tickets, clothing, free meals and other gifts from the businesses they were paid to regulate, and new directives were put in place to prevent such behavior, McAnally said.

    Yet the outside audit, performed by New York-based Kessler International and released last week, said that inspectors in 2006 and 2007 gave preferential treatment to developers and casinos and that they falsified and altered records and discarded documents about building and fire code violations.

    The audit also found that the inspectors received show tickets, free meals, clothing and hotel stays in violation of state law.

    "In 1999, they (county management) said these were terrible things to do and that we must have oversight over this (conduct), and then, after eight years, they haven't done anything," McAnally said. "If they thought there needed to be a higher level of supervision over staff back then, why didn't they implement it? If anything, the oversight now seems to be less, not more, than it was back then."

    Also, McAnally said that the county installed GPS tracking devices in all inspectors' vehicles shortly after he was terminated to keep a closer eye on personnel and implement more efficient policies and practices.

    At that time, the tracking devices were to be used to examine whether an inspector spent too much or too little time on a particular job and whether inspectors were taking the best route to get to job sites, he said.

    The audit criticized the county for not using the GPS tracking devices.

    The audit said, "It has been brought to Kessler's attention that a significant tool available to Building Division management is not being utilized to its fullest potential. Kessler recommends that GPS be utilized on a regular basis to spot check an Inspector's day log against the GPS records to ascertain that what the inspector claims to be doing is reflected."

    McAnally said that he was targeted for prosecution because he had refused a request from Ron Lynn, then assistant director of the county building department, to solicit contributions for the nonprofit International Conference of Building Officials.

    His claim was partly responsible for the ethics charges against Lynn and three other high-ranking employees in the business building department.

    The ethics charges were dismissed because the Ethics Commission found such solicitation, while inappropriate, did not personally or financially benefit the officers and thus did not meet the standard required by state law as proof of an ethics violation.

    Lynn later was promoted to lead the county's development services division, which includes the building division.

    The Kessler Report was inspired partly by a Review-Journal exposé of extensive unpermitted, uninspected and sometimes dangerous construction at Las Vegas hotels, and his department's failure to meaningfully address the issues when told about them.

    Lynn will present to the Clark County Commission on Tuesday a proposed remedy, including a new 20-person investigative team, costing $4 million a year.

    First-term County Commissioner Chris Giunchigliani, who represents the district that includes most of the Strip, questioned whether county administrators took steps to correct problems and conflicts of interest that surfaced in connection with the McAnally saga.

    "It appears that we (county) found we had problems between eight and 10 years ago, and that we didn't take it seriously enough to do anything about it," Giunchigliani said. "It is our responsibility now, and I don't think there is anybody on the commission who is going to look the other way."

    Commission Chairman Rory Reid and longtime Commissioner Bruce Woodbury could not be reached for comment late Friday.

    Lynn declined to be interviewed Friday, citing his heavy workload as he finishes proposals for the commissioners.

    Contact reporter Frank Geary at fgeary @reviewjournal.com or (702) 383-0277

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    Report abuse

    denro wrote on August 19, 2009 01:18 PM: I'm amazed by the clarification of 3/18/08.

    Payoffs plain and simple.

    Greasy palms.


    Report abuse

    Fred Frazzetta wrote on March 18, 2008 07:23 AM: To All Potential Whistleblowers who are afraid of losing their jobs or afraid of retaliation - please contact me with your concerns at the following email address: harrahswhistleblower@gmail.com

    I am interested in any & all wrong doing by Government Officials, Government Agencies, including: OSHA, Labor Board, Health Department, EPA, Medical Board, NV Gaming Commission, Governor's Office, CC Commissioners, City Council, DA's office, CC Pro, CC Building Department, CC Fire Department, Contractors Board, Casino wrongdoing of any kind, business scams, medical malpractice...please feel free to add to this list as you deem necessary.

    I will answer any & all emails, and I will help you without you having to expose yourself. I believe that together we can make a difference and make both Las Vegas and the state of Nevada a better & safer place for all! I look forward to hearing from you...


    Report abuse

    Nv for Nv wrote on March 17, 2008 07:24 PM: Yes, who is covering for Mr. Lynn, he seems to be the only constant in this whole thing....


    Report abuse

    Fired Lynn! wrote on March 17, 2008 01:33 PM: If Ron Lynn can hire the 20 person investigative team, who says he cant legally pay off the team leader of this group or hire someone he knows to keep his name clean. $4 million is a lot of money to keep the "truth" from coming out. Let someone else do the hiring, someone who doesnt have a vested interest.


    Report abuse

    Who is covering for lynn wrote on March 17, 2008 12:43 PM: Who is covering for Lynn, Obviously, someone wants to keep him in his job or he would be gone. What do these commissioners do besides give zoning variances to their contributors? They act stupid every time a scandal comes up. Do they not have review boards to keep them informed. They sure like to tout their "Blue Ribbon" committees on everything else. Why isn't Virginia having departmental meetings to stay on top of departments. Because it is corruption as usual. The lame excuses don't fly anymore.


    Report abuse

    Tom Mikulski wrote on March 17, 2008 11:29 AM: Someone should look on the county HR website at the requirements for being an inspector. (See Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities). It's sad that you have inspectors paid from $48,100 to $74,500 being supervised by someone making from $103,900 to $161,000 plus benefits with oversite from the county commission and now we need $4,000,000 to hire more people to make sure they are doing their jobs. And the guy in the middle of the mess, Mr Lynn, came up with the "new" plan? Plus we now have to pay for ethics training? I know the words "ethics, responsibility, and accountability" appear on the county website somewhere. While you're on the HR site look at the requirements for Director of Developement Services- Mr. Lynns job.

    As a taxpayer I'd appreciate it if the people who are not doing their jobs were fired or jailed.(There is room). Start with the Commissioners. (See RJC, UMC, etc).With the high pay and plush benefits I'm sure there will be qualified people applying for the open jobs.They might already have ethics training.

    We just saw a report that concerns only complaints, how about one that deals with normal inspections as long as we're spending money.

    It's not just developers who shun permits. Someone might want to look at permits taken out by McCarran's Facility Department and Clark County Real Property Management Facilities Department for work done by county employees on all county buildings.


    Report abuse

    The feds have their work cut out wrote on March 17, 2008 11:12 AM: The Feds really have their work cut out for them "NEVADA". The positive is once they get past the straw men they will see it is the same circle of people over and over.

    There are 2 million people in Clark County. There is no reason we tolerate any of this.

    We have corruption from the top down. Every commission, board, council, Judicial branch etc. It is the same circle of people.


    Report abuse

    br wrote on March 17, 2008 09:33 AM: Fire Lynn immediately! Do not allow him to resign and collect a fancy pension. Hire the whistle-blower, Rezzate(?), to get the train back on it's tracks.


    Report abuse

    Las Vegas Sucks wrote on March 17, 2008 09:33 AM: Ron Lynn should be reprimanded or even fired. He falsified his resume in his first attempt to get the Director of the Bldg Dept. "Reilly was scheduled to ask the County Commission on Tuesday to approve the promotion of Building Department Assistant Director Ron Lynn to director, but canceled the request because Lynn previously misrepresented his educational achievements, Reilly said. A biography of Lynn, which appeared alongside an article he wrote for Building Standards magazine in the summer of 1998, said he earned a bachelor's degree in structural engineering and a master's degree in geochemistry that he acknowledged Thursday he never received." It seems that the BCC and other high seated employees, even the governor Gibbons, gets a slap on the wrist for wrong doings. lets set a precedent, Lets put trust in the government again... or it seems nothing has changed in the wild wild west since the 1900's, where bad men ruled the west.


    Report abuse

    br wrote on March 17, 2008 09:28 AM: Lynn is too busy doing the CYA shuffle to cover his corrupt actions. Inspectors worked for him. They could not have been getting goodies and pay for non-performance of their duties without him knowing it.

    The commissioners can not/will not clean up this or other sleazy messes. You can expect the usual phony outrage, studies, and more toothless policies until it fades from the news. Since this is what we can expect, it's time for another round of FBI Anti-Corruption investigations. Maybe that way we can get some more local and state officials a vacation at a country club prison.


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