Tag: mystery
wome voters

Will Older Voters Save Our Democracy By Backing Biden This Time?

The mystery of why older voters are polling strongly for Joe Biden is not a mystery at all. True, they tend to be conservative and have traditionally preferred Republican presidential candidates. White voters over 65 voted for Donald Trump in both 2016 and 2020.

The reason these conservative voters appear to be for Biden this time is simple. Biden is the conservative candidate.

Opinion polls show that the top issue for these voters is not immigration or the economy. It's preservation of the democracy. They've been raised to revere a system that respects the outcome of the vote. When their candidate loses, they expect that person to concede. When the incumbent loses, they expect a peaceful transfer of power.

The violent rampage at the Capitol, egged on by Trump, couldn't have provided a more shocking example of the country they've known coming under attack. Along with September. 11, 2001, they remember exactly what they were doing on January 6, 2021.

A Quinnipiac University poll has Biden beating Trump among voters 65 or older by 12 points. A New York Times/Siena poll gives Biden a nine-point lead among likely voters 65 and up.

Donald Trump is an anti-democratic authoritarian. He seems foreign in a country that has calmly accepted election outcomes. Trump's mantra against his 2016 opponent, "Lock her up," alarmed even voters who didn't care for Hillary Clinton. Most older white voters may have looked past such bizarre threats on a political opponent in earlier presidential contests. After Jan. 6, they could no longer.

"Democracy — we're scared to death we're going to lose it," Judy Brodd, a 78-year-old active in Door County, Wisconsin, politics, told The Wall Street Journal. "It's not because of us, but it's for our grandchildren and our children."

There are other reasons this group is moving toward Biden. Older voters are more tuned into the more traditional fact-based media. They consume more news altogether.

Actually, Biden is doing well among better informed voters of all ages. They know about his investments in chip making and infrastructure. They know that he capped the cost of insulin in Medicare at $35 a month. (Some diabetics said they were previously paying $300 a month). And that cut in price got the three leading insulin manufacturers to cap the price of insulin at $35 for younger Americans on private insurance.

Older people use a lot of medicine, and Biden has lowered other drug prices in Medicare. During Trump's presidency, there was serious talk about cutting Medicare and Social Security. After all, they account for over a third of federal spending.

Biden and fellow Democrats are determined to keep the programs going with new revenues. Biden would let Trump's 2017 tax cuts for the very wealthy expire on schedule starting in 2025 but preserve the parts covering people making less than $400,000.

Trump vows to extend all the tax cuts. That would cost $4.6 trillion over 10 years at a time of already high deficits, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Older Americans also have a more nuanced view of aging. Biden at 81 is only three years older than Trump. Biden has slowed down but is still sharp.

As Gussie Farris, an 86-year-old in Grand Rapids, Michigan, told CNN, "Because Trump is big and loud, he doesn't come off as old as maybe Biden does, but he's way less capable in the brain area."

Nick Herrick said about Biden: "He's one year older than me. And when we get done here ... I'm going to go home and water ski."

The Greatest Generation fought in World War II -- and saved the world from fascism. Its aging children now have an opportunity to do the same.

Reprinted with permission from Creators.

Lawyer With Mysterious Background Defends Behavior In Jailhouse Interview

Lawyer With Mysterious Background Defends Behavior In Jailhouse Interview

By Robert Patrick, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS — It started as a tale of intrigue. Nobody answered the phone at a small law office in St. Peters. Clients arriving for appointments in late October found an eerie scene: door unlocked, nobody there, computers running, case files on the floor.

The question of where Jeffrey M. Witt had gone was not just curiosity. People who hired him were defaulting on cases because he missed their hearings. He even had settled some clients’ cases without their knowledge and took the money.

Nobody seemed to know what had happened to the former Marine and father of five. Looming in the background was that five years before, he helped police catch an ex-client who had planted a bomb that nearly killed a man. And, earlier in 2013, he accused an employee — a disbarred attorney — of impersonating him, triggering criminal charges.

While clients were left reeling, Witt fled across four continents, living on a shoestring budget and an old friend’s largess.

And when he slipped back into the United States to visit his one-time fiancee, it was into the waiting arms of the FBI.

The final pieces are falling into place now. Witt, 39, pleaded guilty last month of bank and mail fraud and aggravated identity theft, relating to missing client money and trickery in borrowing against his mother’s house without her knowledge. Another lawyer has largely finished unraveling the abandoned clients’ cases.

In telephone and jailhouse interviews with the Post-Dispatch, Witt justified his erratic behavior as the product of violence and fear. But some around him describe an emotionally troubled man who just buckled under financial problems and a tumultuous personal life.

Some of Witt’s clients lost their houses, criminal cases, civil suits, and even custody of their children because of his disappearances, in October and earlier, according to lawyers and lawsuits.

Dawn Upton, 40, of Winfield, said she paid Witt to represent her on burglary and assault charges and that he lied in claiming he had arranged a deal with prosecutors. “I paid him $3,000 and it’s just gone,” she said.

Pearl Dotson, of St. Charles, asked Witt to look into a hit-and-run that put her in a hospital. Instead, he forged her signature and cashed a settlement check worth about $2,500, she said.

Dotson said Witt was “messed up and confused” in their last phone call. “When he fled, everybody thought he was dead.”

A close friend from high school said Witt often spoke of someone threatening him and his children. “And so when he was gone, I assumed that they had finally caught up with him.” The friend asked not to be named, fearing a link to Witt could hurt him professionally.

Witt grew up in Creve Coeur in the St. Louis area, attended several colleges, and did a stint in the Marines that was cut short by respiratory problems. “Things started going south” when Witt was 21 and his father died, the friend said.

Witt’s first marriage failed after just weeks. His second, in 2002, lasted about eight years and produced three children. He has two other children with another woman, Tiffany Smith-Miller, and lived with her.

Battling depression, Witt was hospitalized more than once for Xanax overdoses. At the time, he denied suicidal intentions. But in a recent interview, he admitted that in January 2011, “I was done.” He said, “I just took it all … everything that was in the cabinet.”

Smith-Miller said Witt frequently kicked her out of the house, became violent, and blamed her for business failures. She called their life together “the merry-go-round from hell.”

Kenneth Carp, a lawyer who spent 600 hours trying to straighten out the legal mess, said Witt long had a reputation for missing hearings. He would “champion causes” then drop the ball, Carp said. “From day one he would take people’s money and not show up.”

Early in 2011, Witt’s mental health problems forced him to close his practice for weeks.

He also was getting divorced, facing a series of bar complaints, and was under pressure because of his involvement in the bombing investigation, Smith-Miller said.

In 2013 it got even worse.

In June, Smith-Miller left with their children for Colorado.

In September, he arranged for a client to impersonate his mother to obtain a $100,000 line of credit backed by her house, and immediately took $60,000 of it. He confessed to his brother and mother that same day, then doctored documents to falsely claim the loan was canceled.

On Oct. 2, Missouri’s Office of Chief Disciplinary Counsel filed a complaint alleging Witt missed deadlines, failed to file documents, and didn’t reveal to clients that one of his employees was an ex-convict and disbarred attorney.

Two weeks later, he was arrested in the St. Louis area for DWI. Witt claimed he had been threatened earlier that day, and impaired by anti-anxiety pills.

That night, his mother went to police about the fraudulent loan.

A week after that, a St. Louis County judge entered a nearly $1 million malpractice judgment against Witt and his office.

By Oct. 24, clients found his office in disarray, and called police. Investigators located him the next day at home near Creve Coeur.

But within five more days, he was gone.

His law license was suspended Dec. 2. Authorities noted that he had 58 open cases in Missouri courts and four in federal courts. Clients had been cast adrift.

In interviews, Witt said his motive to flee was simple: 2 1/2 years of threats and beatings by a man who felt Witt had wronged his mother, a client. The lawyer said he was threatened again on Oct. 28.

“Monday I had a gun to my head,” he explained. “Tuesday, I was out of there.”

The Post-Dispatch could not reach the man Witt named.

Whatever the reason, Witt said he flew to Chicago and then the Philippines, with little more than a pair of shorts, a pair of shoes, a notebook computer, a pen, and less than $4,000.

Unhappy there, Witt soon headed for Australia. He said he obtained credit cards and has no intent to pay the roughly $20,000 he put on them.

Witt said Smith-Miller, his one-time fiancee, was the only person who knew his whereabouts until he asked a lawyer to tell a federal prosecutor he was alive. Witt then told his ex-wife, and the high school friend.

He said he flew to the United Arab Emirates for the prospect of a job but became so worried about how an American ex-Marine would be received that he never left the airport. Then came several weeks in Jordan, followed by a move to Istanbul, via Lebanon, and more job searching. Discouraged, he flew to London, with just $40 left.

In England, Witt said, he lived on proceeds from sale of his laptop computer. His high school friend sent money for several nights at a hostel after Witt said he had spent one night under a highway bridge.

After three or four weeks, he was back in Istanbul about a possible job. People in a mosque took him in; the old friend paid for a hotel.

Witt asked Smith-Miller for money to flee Turkey, which led to a plan to meet in New York for the weekend. Witt said he was unaware he had been indicted. When he arrived March 7, FBI agents were waiting.

Witt was disbarred in June. He pleaded guilty of the federal charges July 25 and faces probably four or five years in prison when he is sentenced Oct. 16.

He insisted in a jailhouse interview days before his plea that he took no clients’ money for himself: it all went to his tormentor until he finally fled.

Witt told Smith-Miller that the loss of professional stature was the primary reason he left, although he also mentioned threats.

Carp said it made no sense for Witt to stick around so long if he and his children really were threatened. “Because if you’re in that much fear, you run,” he said, adding that if the kids are in jeopardy, “take them with you.”

Photo via WikiCommons

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