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UPDATED: Mike Tedesco to sue Downtown Spokane Partnership for firing him

Posted by DANIEL.WALTERS at 11:43 AM on Wed, Sep. 19, 2012

To Downtown Spokane Partnership’s now-former president Mike Tedesco, the end came suddenly. Only two days after he was told to stop researching whether state law could be changed to allow the DSP to take over downtown parking enforcement from the city, he was told to either step down or be fired.

A little over a week later, in a three-hour meeting, the Downtown Spokane Partnership board went with the second option.

“They pulled the trigger on Mike,” attorney Bob Dunn said this morning. “They put a bullet right in the middle of his employment.”

Dunn says he plans to file a breach of contract lawsuit later this afternoon. Dunn has been the attorney filing lawsuits against the termination of everyone from MAC president Forrest Rodgers, former Sterling Savings president Heidi Stanley, to a firefighter incorrectly accused of possessing child pornography.

Dunn says he was not invited to the DSP board meeting last night where the vote to fire Tedesco took place.

“This was a private lynching,” Dunn says.

UPDATE: Todd Woodard, the incoming board president, stresses that the decision was unanimous.

"That the vote was 15-0 speaks to how absolute our decision was," Woodard says. "This was a very extensive and thorough process."

Officially, Tedesco was fired "without cause," and Woodard was unwilling to discuss in more detail why, exactly, Tedesco was fired, saying he wants to protect Tedesco's right to privacy.

In the meantime, Marla Nunberg, the DSPs interim president before Tedesco was hired, will serve in that role again as the board begins discussing a new hiring process.

 
Dunn was on the side of good when he defended that firefighter. The poor guy was a victim of a malicious young woman who broke the law... but he actually had not.

The firefighter was roasted in the press and comments by the community, many of whom did not understand the law, or know the whole story. But in fact he broke no laws. She, however, was old enough to be subject to the prohibition against representing herself as being older than she was. And she had a prior history of such antics. Remember: she met him on an adult website that was legally restricted to 18 , and which required a credit card for membership. He had every reason to believe that she was over 18.

And in fact, she was over the legal age of consent. But she was just not old enough to have pictures taken. The victim in this case -- the firefighter -- could not reasonably have been expected to know.

As for the more recent cases... I don´t know enough to have an opinion. I can only hope Dunn is genuinely on the side of right, as he has been in the past.
Sep 19, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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