Ten Biggest Fabrications Told in Rhode Island

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Ten Biggest Fabrications Told in Rhode Island

While NBC news anchor Brian Williams is under fire for comments made about being shot down in Iraq, it is hardly the first time a public figure has been caught in a half-truth, or outright lie -- and Rhode Islanders are no exception.  

Whether in media, politics, or business, the capacity to embellish the truth -- or concoct an entirely false story -- has been the downfall of a number of prominent figures in the state.  

SLIDES: 10 Biggest Fabrications in Rhode Island BELOW

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Historian H. Philip West Jr, the former Executive Director of Common Cause Rhode Island and author of Secrets and Scandals: Reforming Rhode Island, 1986-2006, spoke to what he saw as some of the biggest fabrications -- and outright lies -- in political history in the state.

"The first deception-based scandal that comes to mind is RISDIC's claim that deposit security was "carved in stone" when their board knew they lacked resources," said West.  "That led to the closing of the credit unions on January 1, 1991. The irony was that the House Finance Committee had killed legislation by Rep. Frank Gaschen years earlier that could have averted the disaster. Gov. DiPrete had received five credible warnings but was taking boatloads of campaign money from RISDIC players, and so he did nothing."

"Another would be former Sen. President William V. Irons, who always portrayed himself as an ardent reformer, often using the cry of ethics reform to attack others," said West.  "Once in power, Irons (1) kept killing "pharmacy freedom-of-choice" legislation when he was head of the Senate Corporations Committee, (2) failed to disclose the insurance commissions he was collecting from CVS and Blue Cross, (3) spent three years trying to negotiate his way out of a finding of probable cause by the Ethics Commission, (4) went to court claiming "speech-in-debate" immunity from prosecution by the Ethics Commission, (5) won a badly flawed Supreme court ruling in his favor that ended the Ethics Commission's jurisdiction over legislative conflicts of interest, and (6) has left current Senate leaders five years to stonewall letting voters amend the state Constitution to bring them back under the commission's jurisdiction, like all the other public officials in Rhode Island. The three-justice majority (Williams, Flaherty, Robinson) built their decision on a false premise. In dissent, Justice Suttell got it right. 

"In my view, the biggest deception [has been] the General Assembly's endless rationalizations aimed at blocking separation of powers," said West. 
 


Rhode Island's Ten Biggest Fabrications Ever Told

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