The Perjurer and the Trilogies of Tragedies
The Torres Family Tragedies or Murders
A long time ago my Spanish then was Taco, Burrito and Salsa. He said call me "Stasche" as in mustache! Read how Stasche is connected to the deadly San Bruno Explosion
Perfectly Framed
The large Torres family is suffering the loss of a family matriarch, as relatives pray that three other family members will recover rapidly from burns resulting from the blast. Elizabeth Torres, 81, who lived with her daughter Cindy and son-in-law Allen Braun in a Claremont Drive home in San Bruno, died despite Braun's attempt to rescue her by carrying her to the front porch, said one of Torres' nine children, David Wharton, 57, of Fair Oaks. "He saved my mom," Wharton said. "But a second blast" killed her. Braun is now in the hospital with 40 percent of his body burned, Wharton said. Braun's wife, Cindy, 45, and her sister Sandy Arnold, 58, are both in induced comas at St. Francis hospital. Arnold, who lives in Petaluma and works as an office clerk, has burns on 70 percent of her body. Cindy Braun, who used to be an office manager for Forbes magazine, has burns covering half her body, Wharton said. "This is monumental for us," he said. "The only reason I can talk is because I haven't accepted it yet." He said his mother worked as a nurse's aide for UC San Francisco for 27 years. In her later years, she got around in a wheelchair, even when she visited casinos, a favorite pastime. Torres was married twice and had nine children: Everett, Virginia, Sandy, David, Linda, Michael, Sharon, Gregory and Cindy.
The Contra Costa Narcotics Enforcement Taskforce
This news of the scandal broke in February 2011 when Commander Norman Wielsch and Chris Butler faces were plastered all over local media. Then a few months later Deputy Stepen Tanabe and Officer Louis Lombardi. I recognized every face immediately but by summer I was in jail, my car was totaled and to this day remain unpaid by a PG&E Vendor who brought me into their explosion cover-up.
Every conspiracy has one or more co-conspirators but this story is a conspiracy blessed with cover from the top cop down.
The PG&E Gas Can Man
This image broadcast around the world is part of why my www.pgewitness.com was launched that is spawned from my role in the San Bruno Explosion. The role that was hidden from Investigators from the NTSB, The San Mateo County District Attorney and most important the Federal case where Judge Henderson ordered PG&E to perform community service.
The worst part is my family with their lives so PG&E could hire the best lawyers.
The KinderMorgan Explosion and the Dead Witnesses
There is a most forgotten explosion story where on November 9th, 2004 five welders from Matamoras Welding were killed. This explosion occurre in the middle a project to known as the East Bay Pipeline Extension. on that day I was at the Walnut Creek Superior Court making an appearance in front Superior Court Judge Joel Golub. That was day I lost my license, the beginning of the loss of my sons, the connections to The Driscoll Family Murders where Alicia Driscoll and her daughter Gineva Driscoll found dead.
There are several stories begging to be told via the criminal case I call The Kinder Morgan Pipeline Murders of Walnut Creek CA.
Lear
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Former Seeno company president sues three family members
POSTED: 07/12/2012 05:16:57 PM PDT | UPDATED: 4 YEARS AGO
Click photo to enlarge
Seeno employees talking with a person in a white Sports Utility Vehicle are reflected in the...
In the latest flurry of Seeno-related legal troubles, a second executive from the family's failed Nevada company sued three members of the family and their associates this week, accusing them of racketeering involving such criminal activities as extortion, tax fraud, and mail and wire fraud.
Bradley Mamer, the former president and CEO of Wingfield Nevada Group, a company founded by former Nevada lobbyist Harvey Whittemore and eventually co-owned by two Seeno brothers, sued former bosses Albert Seeno Jr., Albert Seeno III, Thomas Seeno, Michael Ghiorso and Kevin McCauley on Wednesday in a Nevada federal court, asking for more than $500,000 in damages.
The lawsuit paints an unflattering portrait of Albert Seeno Jr. and Albert Seeno III -- who have operated a Concord-based group of development and contracting companies for decades -- and their actions as their Nevada business venture imploded during the housing market collapse.
Mamer makes numerous claims, including threats of violence, environmental malfeasance and federal tax violations. Many of those claims came to light in a separate Feb. 1 federal lawsuit filed by Whittemore, who accused the father-and-son Seenos of racketeering, extortion, grand larceny and making threats.
Days earlier, the Seenos had sued Whittemore, then a friend of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, alleging Whittemore embezzled and misappropriated tens of millions of dollars from their joint company.
As those two cases inch forward, the FBI -- which along with other federal agencies raided the Seeno's Concord headquarters in February 2010 -- continues to investigate potential mortgage fraud. A home sales executive has already been indicted, and prosecutors said they expect more arrests in the fall.
Calls and emails to the Mamer and Seeno attorneys were not returned Wednesday.
'LAWLESS'
Mamer, who served Wingfield and a predecessor for 17 years, claimed that once Seeno Jr. and his son came on board, the company -- which spearheaded a massive development project in the Nevada desert called Coyote Springs -- was "turned into a lawless and hostile environment by the defendants through a pattern of racketeering activity."
The first sign of trouble, Mamer said, was Feb. 19, 2010, the day after the FBI, IRS and Secret Service raided the Seenos' Concord office. Larry Gunderson, CFO for Thomas Seeno, issued an email to Wingfield's bankers, owners and executives -- including Mamer -- saying, "Albert told Tom that he thought they were investigating mortgage loans."
By April 2010, Albert Seeno Jr., became disgruntled with his Wingfield investment, and that July he and his son took over its management, Mamer said.
Among the allegations in Mamer's suit:
TAXES
In early 2011, Mamer claimed McCauley, the Seeno construction company's CFO, discussed with him taking an estimated $25 million federal tax deduction from the failed capital investment, the PGA Village at Coyote Springs.
McCauley directed Mamer to "develop a historical factual pattern that supported these deductions being shifted from tax year 2009 the year in which the PGA Licensing Agreement was terminated) to tax year 2010," the suit claims. Mamer said the shift would violate federal tax laws.
On Aug. 17, 2011, Mamer was instructed to work on a tax project related to Coyote Springs planned as a "massive fraudulent misrepresentation claim" against Whittemore, saying Seeno Jr. was not made aware that the project value was gone when he bought into Wingfield, Mamer said.
ENVIRONMENT
The Seenos, with their history of California environmental fines, skirted regulations in Nevada, too, Mamer claimed. In October 2010, Mamer said he witnessed unpermitted septic system installations at Coyote Springs and reported it to Nevada regulators, who are investigating.
The following year, Mamer said he advised the Seenos and senior Wingfield staff members of a series of Coyote Springs environmental permit violations. He estimated more than $1.3 million in fees were owed, in addition to indirect violations. Nothing was done, he said.
On June 10, 2011, Mamer alerted the Seenos to an Endangered Species Act violation related to a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit issued in regard to the desert tortoise. Compliance would have cost $125,000 and was never done, he said.
Contact Matthias Gafni at 925-952-5026. Follow him at Twitter.com/mgafni.
Who's who in Seeno scandal
As the Seeno family and current and former associates appear in more and more litigation, sorting out who's who can be difficult.
Here are those listed in Wednesday's lawsuit:
Plaintiff: Bradley Mamer, of Clark County, Nev., worked for 17 years in Wingfield Nevada Group and its predecessor company. He rose to CEO and president, and now is suing his former bosses.
Defendant: Albert Seeno Jr., 68, of Clayton, owns interests in numerous Nevada casinos and California development and construction companies. Seeno Jr., his brother and son own companies worth in excess of $4 billion and the collective net worth of the trio as individuals is between $100 million and $2 billion, according to a lawsuit.
Defendant: Albert Seeno III, 38, of Pittsburg, is the son of Albert Jr. and has pieces of companies similar to what his father owns.
Defendant: Thomas Seeno, 73, of Alamo, is the older brother of Albert Jr. and went into business with Harvey Whittemore in 2004 to become part owner of Wingfield Nevada Group.
Defendant: Michael Ghiorso, 59, of Dublin, is Wingfield Nevada Group's director of operations and in 2008 was fined $60,000 by the state insurance commissioner and denied a license, according to the suit.
Defendant: Kevin McCauley, a licensed CPA, is the CFO of Albert D. Seeno Construction.
Online
Read a copy of the lawsuit at ContraCostaTimes.com.
A lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court accuses three Seenos and their associates of racketeering, including extortion, and mail, wire and tax fraud

