I was entering the Albertson’s store Saturday April 30 and was
approached by a woman holding a clip board with papers. She asked
if I wanted to stop corruption and if so to sign a petition. I
further asked if the petition entailed more than just stopping
corruption and she replied it was also if one wanted recalls or
not.
Editor,
I was entering the Albertson’s store Saturday April 30 and was approached by a woman holding a clip board with papers. She asked if I wanted to stop corruption and if so to sign a petition. I further asked if the petition entailed more than just stopping corruption and she replied it was also if one wanted recalls or not. I got more interested and asked if it was a petition to recall someone? She finally said yes. Then I had to drag it out of her whose name was on the petition for recall. Well, it happened to be District Attorney John Sarsfield.
The bad part of this is not the petition; it’s hiding the fact of what the petition is actually for.
Everyone wants to stop corruption, but if those asking people to sign the petition are lying about the true intent of the petition, what else are they lying about?
How many people signed thinking they were signing a petition only against corruption without the knowledge it was actually a petition to recall District Attorney Sarsfield?
Voting people of San Benito County, be very careful of what you pen your name to. Don’t be treated as sheep by these wolves who are trying to control our county.
We now know ethics and morals take a back seat to dirty politics as proven by this sham presentation in obtaining signatures to recall District Attorney Sarsfield and is an end result of our county supervisors not forming a campaign ethics committee.
Robyn Grannis, Hollister