Mr. Niemeyer said that he had checked the homeowners?’ association books and found them in good order. This should be the fact, not an opinion. Mr. Niemeyer also said that all the chat room talks of corruption were baseless and irresponsible. This could be his opinion in despite of all the evidence laying out on this Web site. If a person intentionally sticks his head in the sand and screams to the whole world that the sky was in dark brown color, there is really not much anyone can do about it.
On the other hand, I am convinced beyond any reasonable of doubt that there is more than corruption going on at CCHOA. This is not my imagination or delusion; I have rock hard evidence. And the evidence was not created by me; they were the copies of CCHOA?’s financial statements, auditors?’ reports, invoices, billings, vouchers, check stubs and other related documents.
Do you think it would be a good idea if we request Austin American-Statesman to step in and conduct an audit of CCHOA?’s books? The Board should welcome the audit if it has nothing to hide. The newspaper is a third party; it will conduct the audit in a fair way. And the result should be accepted by all of us.
I would like to contact the editors and request for an investigation in CCHOA?’s books, but I doubt they will take my solo request seriously. A lone voice won?’t move the rock no matter how loud I would scream. How about let all of us contact the editors and see whether they would do a good deed for 7,000 Circle C residents.
Mr. Niemeyer:
Would you like to participate? If the audit result proves that there was no wrongdoing committed by the Board, I would be glad to offer you a public apology for calling you a pet of the Board.
Here is the editors?’ e-mail and slow mail addresses:
editors@statesman.com
letters@statesman.com
Letters to the Editor
305 S. Congress Ave.
P.O. Box 670
Austin, TX 78767