My Fair Lady

Don Perata helped raise Sandra Polka from debt and into a position of wealth and power. The big question is why? Campaigning the Perata Way: Second of two parts

May 30, 2007

Don Perata just wanted his gal to get paid. Early in 2006, the state senate leader sent word to Tom Umberg, a three-term Southern California assemblyman who was running for the Senate: Hire Sandi Polka as a campaign consultant and you'll breeze through the June primary. But Umberg declined the offer and it cost him, according to two knowledgeable Sacramento sources. A year later, he was out of politics.

Ariel Shepard
Perata just wanted his gal to get paid.
More on Sandra Polka:

Free Associating
In some races, Polka's involvement is the Perata connection.

On the Record
Polka's mediocre performance in state legislative campaigns.

Documents raise new questions about the conduct of Senator Don Perata. Plus, the effects of an indictment on Sacramento and Oakland.
Sources say the feds likely will file charges against the state Senate boss.
Feds ask for reporters' notes in the public corruption investigation. Also, the senator is accused of violating state election law.
In some races, Polka's involvement is the Perata connection.
How state Senator Don Perata uses campaign cash to finance his lavish lifestyle. First of two parts.
Is a media fat cat using a connected local firm as bait to ...
After running the state legislature and making Arnold play ball, the Don really ...
The FBI probes links between state Senator Don Perata and a $40 million roadway project designed to enrich Alameda developer Ron Cowan.
Who's who in the FBI's investigation?
How a vengeful ex-lover set the FBI on Don Perata.
How Don Perata became the politician he is today.
Inquiry focuses on alleged influence peddling by powerful state senator.
Federal probe into lobbyist reportedly targets Perata.
Article Tools

Rather than support Umberg, Perata secretly backed Lou Correa, an Orange County supervisor. Sandra Polka did the dirty work. She was hired by the innocuous-sounding political action committee Californians United — which is funded heavily by Perata's top campaign contributors — and proceeded to engineer vicious attack ads targeting Umberg. These included two mailers exploiting an extramarital affair the assemblyman had admitted to. The hit pieces, one titled "A Cruel Man," lifted quotes from distraught e-mails Umberg's wife had sent just after she learned of his infidelity.

Umberg claims that Perata asked him to drop out of the race after the mailers were sent. But the former federal prosecutor again refused. So, over the next few months, Californians United and two other PACs associated with Perata spent more than half a million dollars to defeat Umberg in the primary. Correa won in a landslide, and then took the 34th Senate District seat last November.

Over the last year, Perata has quietly involved himself in a number of electoral campaigns in which he seemed to have no political stake — indeed, races in which the outcome appeared irrelevant. Why did Perata get involved in the campaign against Umberg? The official reason, according to Perata's supporters, was that Umberg's affair and his liberal politics made him unelectable in conservative Orange County. They also claimed that, if elected, Umberg had planned to back a more liberal senator to unseat the moderate Perata as Senate president pro tem.

But two knowledgeable Sacramento sources claim that Perata had another reason for running his own candidate in the race. It evidently wasn't Umberg's politics or his affair. Instead, they said, the senator's overriding concern was to make sure campaign money was flowing Polka's way. "He sent a message that Umberg should fire Richie Ross," one of the sources said. "And he should hire someone more amenable to him ... such as Sandi Polka."

Perata has issued similar ultimatums to other Democratic legislators, according to two sources unfamiliar with the details of the Perata-Umberg dispute. If the candidate refused to hire Polka, or worked with people Perata didn't approve of, the senator would no longer side with them. Just ask Correa; earlier this year, Perata locked the freshman senator out of his own capitol office because Correa had attended a fund-raiser the boss hadn't authorized.

The common thread uniting most of these cases appears to be Perata's desire to secure consulting business for Sandra Polka. Public records show that political committees associated with the senator paid her $302,379 last year for work on four such legislative primaries, three of which she lost.

Those defeats don't seem to have affected Polka's business. In fact, she has emerged over the past two years as one of the state's highest-paid political consultants, charging some PACs $16,000 a month just to keep her on retainer. In all, campaigns controlled by or associated with Don Perata have paid her at least $1.41 million over the past three years.

Polka and Perata, meanwhile, have become inseparable. Sacramento sources say she won't take a client without the senator's blessing, and that it's common for him to stroll into her office across from the capitol dome two or three times a day. Since the FBI began a federal corruption probe of Perata's financial and professional relationships with his best friend, Tim Staples, and his son, Nick Perata, Sandi Polka has replaced those two men as the senator's main beneficiary. "They're attached at the hip," one knowledgeable source said. "You don't get much tighter than they are."

But the relationship is mysterious: Why would the state's most accomplished backroom politician, a power player who plays to win, cozy up to a small-time political operative with a mediocre track record? And why is he so keen to steer business her way? Neither Polka nor Perata would comment for this story, but this much is certain: Polka owes everything to the senator. It was he, after all, who helped lift the intensely secretive, fiercely loyal sixty-year-old woman out of debt and into a position of wealth and power.


When Sandi Met 'Tony'

Six years ago, when Don Perata first took Sandra Lynn Polka under his wing, she was bankrupt and married to an out-of-work janitor. During the 1990s, according to public records, she and her husband, John Barr, ran up a mountain of debt and fell so far behind on their taxes that in 1995 the IRS placed two liens on their home, totaling more than $47,000. Two years later, a bank sued them for running up their credit card and not paying the bill. In August 1997, they filed for bankruptcy, listing debts of nearly $153,000.

Full text

Read Comments

YOUR COMMENT


RECENT ARTICLES BY ROBERT GAMMON

Cisco DeVries, who came up with the innovative financing plan, is trying to convince cities nationwide to join the solar revolution.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Emeryville's Ken Bukowski disagrees with a city tax and is behind on property taxes. And that's just part of his problems.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
An environmental group convinces San Francisco to stop its water grab. But not everyone is happy.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008

ARCHIVE SEARCH

Select One or More Criteria

NEWS BLOGS

92510

9:16 am, Friday November 21
9:06 am, Friday November 21
8:52 am, Friday November 21

THIS WEEK IN NEWS

D'Wayne Wiggins and homecoming queen Lizzie Ray.
Cisco DeVries, who came up with the innovative financing plan, is trying to convince cities nationwide to join the solar revolution.
How Berkeley's Mayer Laboratories won the battle of the thin condoms.
Emeryville's Ken Bukowski disagrees with a city tax and is behind on property taxes. And that's just part of his problems.
Readers sound off on Merritt College, bingo, and positive articles.
Good thing people are donating to Cal, because the endowment has fallen off a cliff.
Which condom will come out on top in our controlled bathtub testing?
The events in Berkeley.

MOST POPULAR NEWS STORIES

VIEWED E-MAILED COMMENTED
How a Berkeley scholar's groundbreaking research sparked one of the nastier academic debates in recent memory.
How Berkeley's Mayer Laboratories won the battle of the thin condoms.
Detailed listings of fitness centers in Alameda, Berkeley, Oakland, and beyond.
Cal Professor John Ogbu thinks he knows why rich black kids are failing in school. Nobody wants to hear it.
How the culture of Ecstasy has changed as the drug moved from raves to hip-hop.

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE


Don Perata helped raise Sandra Polka from debt and into a position of wealth and power. The big question is why? Campaigning the Perata Way: Second of two parts

SPECIAL REPORTS

A collection of video reports from the East Bay Express.
A collection of 30th-anniversary highlights.
The definitive guide to the East Bay.

RECENT ISSUES


Nov 19, 2008

Nov 12, 2008

Nov 5, 2008

Oct 29, 2008

Oct 22, 2008

Oct 15, 2008