READERS RESPOND -- What’s in a name?
In my opinion, it looks to me as if a defeated and disgruntled
candidate spent many hours trying to get even and finally found a couple
of small indiscretions to hang on Steel.
If you run a man out of office for helping someone sign her name on
the proper line and a husband sign for his wife, then we’ll get the kind
of government we deserve. I’d be a lot richer if I had a dollar for every
person who had signed a paper for his or her spouse.
Keep Steel in office. We need honest people on the council who are
honest in their opinions whether we agree with them or not. Steel should
remain on the council and get a much lesser punishment for his
indiscretion.
PHILIP E. ARNOLD
Costa Mesa
“Oh, I am sorry, your honor. Forgetting to file my income tax is just
an oversight, not with criminal intent.”
“I drove 85 in a 55-mph zone. Just an oversight, not with criminal
intent.”
“I forgot my driver’s license at home. It’s in my other purse, and is
just an oversight, not with criminal intent.”
Gary Monahan’s comments regarding Steel’s alleged intent or that the
crime was a mere oversight would not be admitted in court.
FLO MARTIN
Costa Mesa
This charge against Chris Steel is ridiculous.
When hasn’t a husband or wife signed their spouse’s name on a document
that they knew the spouse would approve? I think I read that the district
attorney’s office spent six months investigating this.
Seems like people using false identities to get driver’s licenses to
cast votes and to ruin other people’s credit would be higher priorities.
It sounds like vindictiveness to me. I am sending Steel $100 to help in
his defense. I hope others will step up also to help him.
RICHARD T. DURKEE
Corona del Mar
I am pleased that the Daily Pilot covers the local news thoroughly,
and the story of Chris Steel has been very interesting. With my interest
in politics, I have often obtained signatures for individuals and
propositions I support.
When you carry a petition, you know it must be done with complete
honesty and care. If you are intent upon honestly following the law, you
will take the time to go back to obtain legal signatures.
I feel Steel should be prosecuted for his intentional act. It is
neither a small infraction nor one that should be overlooked. He was
wrong, and he knew it.
As a Costa Mesa resident now, I do not believe he should be making
decisions in my city.
JANIE ARNOLD
Costa Mesa
I did not vote for Chris Steel, nor do I agree with most of his
actions as a sitting council member. In my opinion, he is not the best
council member we have ever had. But a lot of people voted for him, and
Lord knows he seems to be trying hard to do his darndest. Having said
that, I strongly disagree with this misplaced effort to remove him.
Assuming Steel committed these heinous crimes, I guess I should be
thankful that someone has decided their life’s mission should be to
expose this master criminal and save the good citizens of our fair
community from further acts of deceit, debauchery and shame. But somehow
I am not thankful.
This uproar is truly much ado about nothing. Was it wrong? I suppose
so. Should it have been done? Of course not. It is difficult to imagine
such a dangerous crime. If convicted, a potential three-year prison
sentence for these dastardly deeds hardly seems an adequate safeguard for
society. I gotta believe there are more important fish to fry.
Who has not committed some little sin which would be punishable if
caught?
Have these saviors of our great city never crossed a street except in
a crosswalk? Have these ministers of justice always come to a complete
stop before turning right on a red light? Has this posse of truth always
paid their taxes, never taking a slightly questionable deduction? Have
these pillars of society, finding they weren’t charged for an item,
always returned the item to the store asking, no, not asking but
demanding to pay for it? Somehow, their righteousness has a rather hollow
sound to me.
I suggest if they are really concerned about the danger Steel
represents to our community, they could more than compensate for this by
spending the same amount of their time and effort assisting some charity
or school. This effort to get Steel on America’s Most Wanted list
represents nothing more than petty bickering seen daily on any
kindergarten playground at recess. “Teacher! Teacher! Chris is bothering
me.” “Am not.” “Are too.” “Am not.” “Are too.”
This is nothing more than an exercise in egotistical bullying and will
cost our city time, money and effort, all of which could be better spent.
It seems to me this Sherlockian effort to expose the horrendous criminal
activity really serves no greater purpose than to act as a salve upon
some personal wound completely unrelated to the issue at hand. Come on,
do something productive.
MIKE DUNN
Costa Mesa
Obtaining the few signatures required for nomination papers is little
more than a mere technicality, the purpose of which escapes me. It might
have had a purpose a century ago, but in today’s election process, it has
little meaning.
It is absolutely incredible to me that someone would be facing prison
time for making a mistake by helping a person sign her name or that a
husband signed for a wife that had no problem with his doing so. To
remove the man from office after 10,000 people voted for him is a far
greater sin.
Whatever happened to common sense?
TERRY BLACK
Newport Beach
There seems to be no question that the signature is invalid. Now, do
we disenfranchise all the voters who voted Steel in? Do we lose the
precious diversity he brings to the council? Is not Richard Noack guilty
of a crime as well.
We must punish him also if we go after Steel. It is not as if Steel
stole any votes in order to win. How about an amnesty deal here?
JIM FISLER
Costa Mesa
I was one of the candidates who ran against Chris Steel in the last
election -- and of course, I didn’t win. I think he should stay on the
council because he earned the right with the votes. He made a mistake,
but he shouldn’t be kicked off. I believe it would not be a problem to
see him fined just to make him pay better attention to what he’s doing.
It was just a technical mistake, but he should be fined so that he is
penalized so that he’ll remember next time to be more careful.
MICHAEL CLIFFORD
Costa Mesa
I’m calling to add my name to the list of people who would encourage
Steel to step down and avoid us having to have a recall election and
further embarrassment to the city of Costa Mesa. Our city needs to move
forward on many issues. He is not my representative, and I would like to
see us push him behind us.
SHARON BOUDREAU
Costa Mesa
I believe that Steel should lose his council seat. He would be a bit
of a hypocrite given all of his stated beliefs as far as illegal
immigration, illegal immigrants and his ability to speak so openly about
it.
His intolerance and his supporters, from what I believe is a very
hateful Westside group, seem to teach intolerance of any sort when
talking about following the law. I think it would be important for him to
basically practice what he preaches. Therefore, given that he did not
have enough signatures at the time, given that it was a last minute or so
before he had to turn in these papers, he basically didn’t follow the
law. If he doesn’t want to appear as hypocrite, I think he should just
step down.
RUSS RAMIREZ
Costa Mesa
Chris Steel should definitely lose his seat on the council. For
Councilman Gary Monahan to say it was an oversight is absolutely
ridiculous. When you ask Joe to sign Mary’s name, that’s not an
oversight, that’s intentional. This man knew what he was doing. He just
wanted that council seat. The people of Costa Mesa should not be
represented by a man who goes to such fraudulent lengths to get his name
on a slate. We shouldn’t wait for him to resign his seat; we should make
him do it immediately.
LYNN MERLES
Costa Mesa
The reason that we have to address it is simple; It’s the law, and we
either abide by the law or we don’t. It’s not a technicality; it’s the
way the law was written that the rest of us have to abide by.
MARSHA REBNEY
Costa Mesa
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