One of the Most Revealing Articles I’ve Ever Found About John Moorlach – Took Campaign Personally and Tried to Defund the Police, Years Before it was a Thing

by | Feb 9, 2021 | 2021 Elections, John Moorlach | 0 comments

There is an article floating around the LA Times from 2007. It should have been a warning about who John Moorlach is. I can personally identify with some of the things in this article.

Come give me a noogie.

I am going to repost this 2007 LA Times Article in its’ entirety injecting comments in to it in italics.

John Moorlach sat on a restaurant patio last fall with a few of his staff members when a union official representing sheriff’s deputies approached the table and asked to shake his hand.

The chance encounter soon turned ugly.

Moorlach, then Orange County treasurer and the recent winner of a vitriolic campaign for county supervisor against a union-backed candidate, refused the overture. Other leaders of the union asked Moorlach to shake hands and were similarly turned down. Someone took a picture of him with his arms folded and posted it on a union blog called the Tin Star.

I can 100% relate to this, I had a similar experience with him at a CAGOP Convention.

In just one year, the new Orange County supervisor and Assn. of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs have built up an astonishing amount of bad blood. Moorlach has labeled union activists “thugs,” sought an audit of some union finances, and championed an independent review board to handle citizen complaints against law enforcement officers.

Independent review boards are a fixation of the cop-hating left. The only reason Moorlach would support these is retribution.

Union officials have blamed Moorlach for having to work for nine months without a labor agreement and sought to bar him from attending any deputies’ funerals. Even union officials from other parts of the state have joined in the fight against the supervisor, with the Los Angeles Police Protective League declaring Moorlach “an enemy to law enforcement.”

The bitter feud climbed to new levels on July 20, when Moorlach proposed that deputies’ pensions be pared back, saying the 5-year-old agreement defining benefits was unconstitutional because the sweetened retirement packages contained a retroactive clause that constituted a gift of public funds and gave extra pay for work already performed.

Note that John Moorlach has a massive pension of his own, and he took every enhancement available to him. 

The union has rejected the claim, saying the deal can’t legally be undone. The county board is scheduled to take its first vote on the matter Tuesday.

Moorlach’s proposal has reverberated across the state as politicians and government workers wait to see whether the challenge to the popular retirement packages will be successful. In recent years, more than 1,000 local and state agencies have awarded retroactive pension benefits to public employee unions, including virtually all of those representing public safety officers.

As a result, according to the conservative California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility, the state faces at least $12 billion in pension obligations that it has no money to cover.

“He’s developing a reputation as sort of a zealot on this issue,” said Dave Low, a lobbyist for the California School Employees Assn. and chairman of a group of public employee unions seeking to safeguard pension benefits.

Moorlach insists there is no personal animus to his proposal and that he wants only to restore fiscal health to the county’s pension fund, which faces a $2.3-billion deficit over the next 30 years.

Moorlach was the candidate for county treasurer in 1994 who famously warned that the county’s money was placed in high-risk investments that would implode if interest rates rose. He was dismissed as “Chicken Little,” and voters reelected incumbent Robert L. Citron. Six months later, as interest rates shot up, the county was forced to declare the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Savoring the vindication, he got a vanity license plate that read SKYFELL. He was appointed to fill the remainder of the disgraced Citron’s term and was reelected twice.

Hubiris.

As treasurer, Moorlach began criticizing the deputies’ 2001 pension agreement as fiscally irresponsible. The deal allowed deputies to retire at age 50 with 3% of their highest year of pay multiplied by their years of service. It also granted the benefit immediately to each deputy, causing a pension shortfall because the additional funds hadn’t been set aside for the veterans’ boosted retirement pay.

Moorlach’s office estimates that $70,000 is now the average annual pension for deputies who retired after 2002, and the retroactive portion of those pensions generates as much as a quarter of the pension system’s unfunded liability.

Moorlach’s is 87000 a year, for life. How nice.

When he ran for supervisor, Moorlach used the looming pension debts as a campaign issue, much as he had the county’s investments a dozen years before. He portrayed underfunded pension packages as the county’s next potential financial catastrophe.


Summary – John Moorlach attempted to defund the police before it was a thing. He also sought to install leftist review boards to constantly harass the Sheriffs and demostrated his award winning behavior doubling down on the pissing match to get even with them for opposing his election. This is very similar to the personal experiences I had where he was trying to get me fired from campaigns I was working for. It is nice to know that Moorlach is consistent – so much so that he has been trying to screw over law enforcement in Orange County for decades. The OCGOP must be proud of this guy.

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