E-mail alias causes ire
Jenny Marder
Residents are calling for the resignation of the second Planning
Commission chairman in eight months.
Former Chairman Randy Kokal was forced to resign in September
after he failed to follow protocol when appointing a vice chair for
the group. Now, an active group of residents want to oust Ron Davis
from the position for joining their chat group under a false name.
City Hall gadfly Mark Bixby thought it strange when a man he’d
never heard of, with an intimate knowledge of the city, began posting
e-mails on a local message board.
A member of the message group noticed that the style of Stuart
Welch’s letters was similar to that of Planning Commission Chairman
Ron Davis. Like Davis, Welch started e-mails with a name and a colon
and like Davis, he referred to people formally, with surnames.
Who is this Stuart Welch, Bixby wondered, and why is he so intent
on defending Davis and the commission?
Bixby, a computer whiz, soon discovered, by comparing the I.P.
address of Welch’s e-mails with that of Davis’, that the e-mails were
originating from the same computer.
When confronted Davis admitted to penning the e-mails under the
name of Stuart Welch.
Davis said he created the user name to respond to contentions that
he had violated the Brown Act by allowing commissioners to attend a
series of closed meetings with staff members that were neither open
to the public nor placed on the city agenda. City officials said that
informational meetings between staff members and commissioners are
frequent and permissible by law.
“I was using a disguise to get [people] to elaborate on what their
reasoning was,” Davis said.
Activists say that using a false e-mail identity on the popular
group message board is grounds to call for his resignation.
“Everybody has the freedom of speech to say what they want to
say,” Bixby said. “[But] when you get into an area of pretending to
be something you’re not and telling lies to pull off disguise, it
becomes a problem especially for officials in City Hall.”
By deceiving people, Davis has sent himself on a slippery slope,
Bixby added, referring to comments Welch made about having made a
phone call to Ron Davis.
“What he wrote included the telling of lies in order to bolster
the fake Stuart disguise,” Bixby said. Huntington Beach resident Tim
Geddes agreed that the action warrants Davis’s resignation.
“It’s a very serious ethical problem,” Geddes said. “Basically,
what you had Ron Davis doing is creating a fictitious alleged persona
to blunt criticism of himself or to represent points of view that Ron
Davis would be representing. If he admits that he did this, it needs
to have an explanation.”
Davis, a local attorney, admits to creating the false user name,
but denies that any of his actions were illegal or unethical. He
created the name, he said, to get a candid response to false
accusations that were circulating about him. He wanted to get his
message out and didn’t feel that people would take him seriously as
himself.
“What’s unethical?” Davis asks. “User names are utilized all the
time. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that at all. It’s a
technique utilized in law enforcement and everything else.”
Davis said he feared that Bixby’s investigation would deter others
from joining group message boards or speaking out in public.
“What prompted the investigation was that people didn’t like what
[Stuart Welch] was saying,” Davis said. “As a consequence of saying
something in public to someone, [they decided] we’re going to
investigate you. How many people are going to be willing to speak in
public now?”Bixby, who was already manning an environmental message
board, created H.B. Talk in January 2004 to give people a chance to
discuss city-related issues in an online format. The message board
has about 80 subscribers.
The real problem is the message board itself, not Davis’s actions,
said Councilwoman Debbie Cook, who appointed Davis to the commission.
“I think what’s unethical is that activists have created a website
where people can spread gossip and rumors unchecked,” Cook said.
“It’s such childishness. I think they did something wrong. They’ve
created an atmosphere where people feel they can’t talk “
“I think that the ethical issues would arise if he had written
something with lies. But if he wrote something as factual, I don’t
understand where the ethical argument would come in.”
Cook adds that the group often focuses more on personalities than
real city issues.
“They need to elevate the dialogue,” Cook said.
But Bixby is rally the troupes for what he sees as a city battle:
A group of people plan to call for Davis’s resignation at the City
Council meeting Monday.
“Ron’s a smart guy and I think really it would have been best if
these discussions could have been held as Ron Davis,” Bixby said. “I
don’t think it was necessary to adopt a disguise. Once you get into
deception, it generally always makes anything worse.”
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at jenny.marder@latimes. com.
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