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Talking Politics - The scandal that wasn't


Monday, March 27, 2006


The scandal that wasn't


Granted, I'm no media critic. But was yesterday's Globe story on Tom Reilly and the Big Dig baffling, or what?

At the beginning of the piece--provocatively titled "Questions shadow Reilly's Big Dig cost recovery"-- we learn that, soon after the Marie St. Fleur debacle, Reilly upped his demand for a refund from contractor Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff by $20 million. The implication, obviously, is that Reilly asked for more money to help himself recover politically. The smoking gun? Lawyers for Bechtel said so!

Um, no offense, but Bechtel's lawyers aren't exactly impartial observers here. In fact, since Bechtel and Reilly have an inherently adversarial relationship, I'd say they have close to zero credibility when it comes to parsing Reilly's motivations.

The story also asks if Reilly should have gotten involved with Big Dig cost recovery earlier, should have worked harder, etc. But the people raising these questions either seem to know nothing about the details of the case (David Luberoff, director of Harvard's Rappaport Institute, is "not familiar with the specifics of Reilly's decision") or to have as little credibility as Bechtel's lawyers (this means you, Christy Mihos!).

Weird stuff.






3/27/2006 12:11:29 PM by Adam Reilly | Comments [1] |  



Monday, March 27, 2006 2:20:51 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
One weirdness about the article was that Bechtel's lawyers are now flatly denying that they ever raised politics in discussions with the AG's office. From the article:

"Two sources in direct contact with Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff lawyers said the lawyers blamed politics for disrupting the closing days of the process, suggesting Reilly wanted a higher number to help him rebound from the St. Fleur debacle. A Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff spokesman last week denied its lawyers raised politics when presented with the $108 million demand, calling such an assertion 'bizarre.'"

Curiouser and curiouser!

By the way, your link to the article is broken.
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