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Alabama A&M President Daniel Wims Has Forgiven a $527-million Debt the State Owes His School, and FORMER Governor Bob Riley Has His Eye on the Prize

Posted on the 16 November 2023 by Rogershuler @RogerShuler

Alabama A&M President Daniel Wims has forgiven a $527-million debt the state owes his school, and FORMER governor Bob Riley has his eye on the prize

Daniel Wims and Gov. Kay Ivey

 

Alabama A&M University has forgiven the $527-million debt the state of Alabama owes it due to chronic underfunding of the historically Black land-grant institution. But that is not the only oddity in this story. According to a report today at donaldwatkins.com., funny business apparently is going on at the governor's office in Montgomery -- and Alabama A&M's money might wind up being used to benefit FORMER Gov. Bob Riley, perhaps his family, and a client of his. Does that give off a foul odor to you? It sure does to us, and we will have more on it in a moment.

But first, we have more from the A&M campus in Huntsville. Watkins, a longtime Alabama attorney who has become a leading voice in online investigative journalism, reports under the headline "Alabama A&M Forgives $527,280,064 Debt Owed to the University by the State of Alabama." Writes Watkins:

Alabama A&M University has effectively forgiven the $527,280,064 debt owed to the school by the state of Alabama.  The debt was calculated by the federal government and memorialized in a September 18, 2023, letter from the U.S. Departments of Education and Agriculture to Alabama governor Kay Ivey.

Alabama A&M President Daniel K. Wims promptly notified Gov. Ivey that the university had no intention of taking any steps to collect this debt.  Additionally, the university has avoided making any public statement acknowledging the validity of this debt since it was announced by the federal government on September 18th.

President Wims tasked Huntsville attorney Rod Steakley, with coming up with a plausible excuse for not collecting the debt.   Steakley is a political conservative who serves as a director on the controversial Alabama Policy Institute. The Institute is a Birmingham-based think tank that donated $1,077,500 in 2021 to convicted cocaine drug trafficker, serial motor vehicle thief, and attempted murderer Kenneth Bryan Dawson to start, run, and oversee the operations of 1819 News.

Rod Steakley and President Wims have convinced the university’s board of trustees that the $527,280,064 is not really owed to Alabama A&M because the university received whatever equity funding it was owed from the state in a 2005 settlement of the long-running Knight v. Alabama higher-education desgregation case. Both men are dead wrong on this point, but it does not matter.  They have successfully gaslighted the university's notoriously weak and compromised board of trustees.

Steakley's legal advice provides President Wims with a "fig leaf" to cover for Wims’ failure to pursue debt-collection measures, due to cowardice. Wims has privately told a couple of colleagues that he does not want to make Gov. Ivey angry at him by attempting to collect this debt.

Alabama A&M President Daniel Wims has forgiven a $527-million debt the state owes his school, and FORMER governor Bob Riley has his eye on the prize

Rod Steakley

Rod Steakley’s advice is in sync with a September 28, 2023, letter from Gov. Ivey to the Secretaries of Education and Agriculture where she disputed the debt and threatened the basic right of Alabama A&M to exist under the Morrill Act of 1890.  Ivey claims the Act is “unconstitutional.”

Gov. Kay Ivey rewarded President Wims for his cowardice by proclaiming October to be "HBCU Month." This proclamation was a symbolic gesture that had no monetary value attached to it. Like a puppy getting a pat of the head, Dr. Wims was ecstatic.

By the way, is Gov. Ivey an expert on constitutional law? I doubt it. Is it part of her duties to determine what is and is not constitutional on matters related to Alabama? I doubt it. Her official biography makes no mention of any legal training in her background. Still, that Alabama A&M would not even attempt to collect on a $527-million debt it clearly is owed -- in an amount that would transform the university far into the future -- is stunning. Some might call it administrative malpractice on the part of President Wims and the board of trustees. Writes Watkins:

Rod Steakley ignored a request by one Alabama A&M trustee to place a resolution on the board of trustees’ October 27, 2023, meeting agenda to authorize the university to begin debt-collection actions. Steakley simply refused to prepare the resolution.

Board chairman Roderick D. Watts, who supports the university’s de facto forgiveness of this $527,280,064 debt, is a Wims' stooge. Community and civic leaders in Watts' hometown of Gadsden view him as a Clarence Thomas-style "Uncle Tom."

Instead of pursuing debt-collection activities at the October board meeting, President Wims authorized a surreptitious “dirty tricks” operation that targeted me. The operation used washed-up Alabama-based political operative, domestic-violence arrestee, and freelance “media whore” Steve Flowers to spread character-assassination information about me with news-media organizations within his syndication network.

Earlier this year, Flowers was successful in getting one of these outlets -- the Tuscaloosa News -- to publish a “character assassination” article against me that he was paid to write in March during one of his periods of sobriety. 

For the right price, the Tuscaloosa News will trash anybody.  For example, in 2017, the Tuscaloosa News trashed University of Alabama honors student Megan Rondini in her rape-suicide case.  The News prostituted itself for money by publishing a full-page ad that trashed and bashed a deceased Megan Rondini and her grieving family.

Last week, one statewide media organization confirmed to us that they flatly rejected Steve Flowers' latest character assassination article that targeted me. They also confirmed that Flowers had been hired by Alabama A&M to write and publish the article.

Meanwhile, President Wims, who is an alleged sexual predator of men and women, is reportedly exploring counseling for his alleged sexual addiction.  However, Wims has taken no action to get professional help for the flock of alleged sexual predators and deadbeats he brought to Alabama A&M's campus while serving as provost and president.

At the moment, Wims does not appear to even be serving as president of Alabama A&M, Instead, a White Republican seems to be filling that roll, That must thrill many A&M students, faculty, alumni, and supporters, as they watch their school flounder in a state of disarray. Writes Watkins:

Rod Steakley, a Trojan Horse for Alabama's right-wing political agenda, is effectively running Alabama A&M from his general counsel’s platform.  While Steakley comes to the table with his own baggage, he knows all of Wims' weaknesses and inferiority complexes when dealing with white authority, and dark secrets. Steakley effectively uses this information and Wims' weaknesses to the advantage of the Alabama Policy Institute and other right-wing groups in Alabama.

Alabama A&M trustees are completely disengaged from their oversight role. They are merely play-acting in the role of trustees. What is more, trustees Roderick D. Watts (chairman of the board), Kevin Ball, Tiffany Johnson Cole, Richard Crunkleton, Scherrie Banks Pickett, John Hackett, Jr., and Elizabeth B. Richardson have formed a human shield of sorts around Wims. Yet, not one of these trustees has lifted a finger to help the identified male and female victims of President Wims' alleged sexual abuse.

One of these trustees has a close personal relationship with President Wims.

Gov. Kay Ivey is happy that Alabama A&M has walked away from the $527,280,064 debt the state owes to the university, without a fight. Ivey and her staff were amazed at how easy it was to rip off educated Black folks at Alabama A&M for $527,280,064.

Interestingly, no state legislator or any other candidate who is running for Congress in Alabama has said a word about collecting this $527,280,064 and delivering it to Alabama A&M. They, too, are sleep-walking their way through this costly and embarrassing failure of leadership.

Speaking of White Republicans, that brings us back to Bob Riley -- the FORMER governor of Alabama (2003-2011). Writes Watkins:

Former governor Bob Riley is extremely happy with Alabama A&M University's de facto forgiveness of this $527,280,064 debt because he will be able to use this money for a project that benefits one of his lobbying firm’s clients.  Even though Kay Ivey holds the title of governor, it's an open secret in Montgomery that Bob Riley still runs the office.

Finally, Alabama A&M is back to its traditional role of begging alumni for money, squeezing former students with aggressive debt-collection tactics, and hustling "guilt trip" donations from the heads of major corporations. The university's president is most comfortable on his knees.

The highlighted paragraph immediately above is a shocker and should set off alarms for Alabamians of all political persuasions. The notion that Bob Riley, who last was elected governor in 2006, could be serving as de facto governor and planning to use Alabama A&M's money to benefit one of his personal clients is outrageous, even by Alabama standards. The scenario raises so many disturbing questions it boggles the mind. Here are just a few:

* Constitutional Amendment 282 allows a governor to succeed himself or herself once. Riley already has succeeded himself once, so how could be serving lawfully again?

* Under the Alabama Constitution, the lieutenant governor takes over if the governor dies or becomes ineligible to serve. Does that make Will Ainsworth the lawful governor of Alabama?

* If Bob Riley is acting as Alabama's "de facto governor," how many laws is he breaking? Could he expose the state to massive civil liability?

* Is Rob Riley, the governor's oily son and a Birmingham-area attorney, involved in such a scam. Bob and Rob Riley have a history of locking arms in their political pursuits, so it's hard to imagine Rob Riley not being involved in any variety of governorship his father might be serving.  

We will examine these questions, and more, in upcoming posts.


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