The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Showing posts with label The Safeway Murder Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Safeway Murder Stories. Show all posts

The Dead Shoppers at the Walnut Creek Safeway

David Bremer Walnut Creek Resident




Lived near Lincoln and Carmel




Adam Williams
Clare Orton
Jeniva Driscoll
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Damage estimated at $60 million from Safeway center fire

Damage estimated at $60 million from Safeway center fire


RICHMOND, Calif. -- Safeway Stores said a spectacular blaze at the supermarket chain's biggest distribution center caused an estimated $60 million damage -- half of it to stored groceries -- but that area food prices would not rise because of the worst fire in the city's history.
The fire started about 10 p.m. Monday, and firefighters said it was under control by 3 a.m. Tuesday, but flames could still be seen 24 hours later at the 3.5-acre complex.
At its height, flames shooting hundreds of feet in the air could be seen 15 miles away across the bay in downtown San Francisco. Fire investigators could still not get into the sprawling warehouse complex Tuesday because of the intense heat and flames, which were being allowed to burn themselves out.
The fire caused $30 million damage to the warehouse complex and another $30 million in inventory loss, but company officials said Tuesday that Safeway's prices would not be affected by the losses, even though the center distributed food to 200 stores in northern and central California.
'This will not have any impact on our stores,' Safeway spokesman Bob Bradford said Tuesday, adding that supplies would be obtained from four wholesalers in the San Francisco Bay area as well as from other Safeway depots in the West.
Scores of firefighters remained at the huge distribution center Tuesday, but Capt. Joseph Robinson said the flames were in no danger of spreading and 'We're just letting it burn itself out.'
Nearly 200 night shift workers were in the warehouse when the fire broke out, but there were no injuries. The cause of the blaze was not known.
There were reports by warehouse workers that the fire was sparked when a forklift accidentally struck a lighting fixture on the 30-foot ceiling, sending a shower of sparks down upon stacks of paper products.
The building's sprinkler system was activated, but proved no match for flames that raged through stacks of toilet paper, towels and other highly flammible products, fanned by winds coming off San Francisco Bay at better than 40 mph, firefighters said.
Flying embers started several small fires around the complex, but all were put out quickly.
Employees said the fire erupted in the paper goods section, where towels, tissues, toilet paper and other highly flammable products were stacked.
'The whole thing happened so fast you wouldn't believe it,' said Mike McDow, who was on a forklift several aisles from the fire.
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KKR Appoints Arun Sarin as Senior Advisor









KKR Appoints Arun Sarin as Senior Advisor

New York, October 7, 2009 - Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. ("KKR") today announced the appointment of Arun Sarin as a Senior Advisor to KKR. Mr. Sarin is the former Chief Executive Officer of mobile telecommunications leader Vodafone Group Plc, and had previously been a Senior Advisor to KKR.
Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, Co-Founders of KKR, said: "We are delighted to welcome Arun Sarin back to the Firm as a Senior Advisor. From our past close partnerships with Arun - starting when he became CEO of Accel-KKR Telecom almost a decade ago and then as a Senior Advisor to KKR - we know first-hand of Arun's deep knowledge, global relationships, and diversified career as a world-class executive. We look forward to leveraging his broad business acumen, 25 years of experience and leadership across a variety of management and investment initiatives."
"I am very pleased to have this opportunity to work with the KKR team once again," said Mr. Sarin. "KKR is a preeminent investment firm that has evolved over three decades and expanded its investment capabilities. I am excited to contribute my own experience to cultivating KKR's existing investments and enhancing the Firm's growth initiatives."
Mr. Sarin's career began in 1984 at Pacific Telesis Group (PTG), where he pioneered the expansion of the mobile communications industry by acquiring numerous domestic and international cellular licenses. He held several senior roles at PTG over the next decade. In 1994, he led the review and recommendation for the spinoff of the wireless businesses from PTG, which became AirTouch Communications. Subsequently, he was appointed President and COO of AirTouch in 1997.
With the 1999 merger of Vodafone and AirTouch, Mr. Sarin became CEO of Vodafone's US/Asia Pacific region. He left Vodafone in 2000 and rejoined as Chief Executive in 2003. The Group's M&A focus was originally based on opportunities in developed markets, but this shifted to incorporate emerging markets in 2006. Mr. Sarin subsequently led the company's re-entry into the Indian market in 2007, and also acquired several other mobile operators in high growth markets such as Turkey, Ghana, Romania, Czech Republic and Qatar. In his five years as CEO, Vodafone returned capital of approximately £34 billion to shareholders including dividends and buy backs. He retired from Vodafone last year.
Mr. Sarin has an MS in Engineering and an MBA from the University of California at Berkeley. He received his BS in Engineering from IIT, the Indian Institute of Technology. He is a member of the boards of directors of Cisco Systems, Inc. and Safeway Inc. He has served on numerous boards in the past, including Gap Inc. and Charles Schwab Corp., and as a non-executive director of the Court of the Bank of England.
KKR's Senior Advisors are part of the Firm's integrated model of value creation. They include current and former senior executives who bring unique leadership skills to complement the work of KKR investment professionals, the operational executives at KKR Capstone, and serve as liaisons to manage relationships with current and future investment partners.
About KKR
Established in 1976, KKR is a leading global alternative asset manager. KKR's franchise is sponsoring and managing funds that make investments in private equity, fixed income and other assets in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Throughout its history, KKR has brought a long-term investment approach, focusing on working in partnership with management teams of its portfolio companies and investing for future competitiveness and growth. KKR has $37.5 billion in private equity assets under management and $13.3 billion in credit assets under management as of June 30, 2009 through various private and publicly traded funds and separately managed accounts. KKR also carries out capital markets activities through its broker dealer subsidiaries. KKR has offices in New York, Menlo Park, San Francisco, Houston, Washington, D.C., London, Paris, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Beijing, Mumbai, Dubai and Sydney. More information about KKR is available at: www.kkr.com.
Media Contacts:
Peter McKillop or Kristi Huller
Phone: 212-750-8300
Email: media@kkr.co
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OBIT: Cynthia Kempf 1988 Ex-Cop Testifies He Watched Colleague Shoot Kidnap Victim

Cynthia was good friend worked for Steve Burd

A story today connected to the witness murder In The Matter of Bennett v. Southern Pacific, disgraced and convicted Contra Costa District Attorney

Ex-Cop Testifies He Watched Colleague Shoot Kidnap Victim

Published 4:00 am, Wednesday, March 15, 1995
A former Pittsburg police sergeant admitted in court yesterday that he took part in the abduction of a Safeway assistant manager in 1988 and watched as his cohorts, including a fellow officer, shot the woman to death.
George Elzie, testifying in Contra Costa Superior Court under a grant of immunity, said that
defendant
Eric Bergen, a former friend and colleague, fired a round from a sawed-off shotgun into the
body of
Cynthia Kempf, 28, as she lay bound and gagged in a remote field in Brentwood. Kempf had
already been shot more than a dozen times by two other men -- Mario Salguero and Bergen's
brother, Carl -- after an aborted robbery at the Pittsburg Safeway, Elzie testified. Although he had no financial problems, Elzie said, he took part in the crime out of greed -- he had been promised one-fourth, about $5,000, of the
anticipated take. In exchange for immunity from prosecution on murder charges, Elzie has agreed to plead guilty to charges of kidnapping, attempted kidnapping and of using a weapon, said his attorney, Bill Gagen. Elzie, 36, now in custody at Contra Costa County Jail in Martinez, will be sentenced to 12 years and four months in prison when Bergen's trial is over. Elzie was a popular officer who grew up in Pittsburg and was considered a role
model for youths in the community. He was fired last year after a grand jury indicted him on charges of murdering Kempf. Also indicted was Bergen, 35, who has been in state prison since 1990, when he was convicted of a Sacramento robbery.
Bergen had been a SWAT officer in Pittsburg until he resigned in June 1988 -- three months after Kempf's slaying -- amid an unrelated investigation into police brutality. Bergen, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of murder, kidnap for robbery and conspiracy, had been the target of investigators since 1988, when ballistics tests matched one of nine bullets fired into Kempf's back with a 9mm gun found in Bergen's apartment. However, prosecutors did not have enough evidence to try him until Salguero agreed last year to testify against him.
Bergen's younger brother, Carl, also agreed to testify. Elzie, wearing yellow jail clothes and guarded by a deputy sitting behind him, said yesterday that the group planned to kidnap Kempf and force her to open the safe at the Pittsburg Safeway on March 14, 1988. The plan was ditched after they saw a police car patrolling the parking lot, and the woman was driven to a field where she was killed so she could not identify them. Elzie testified that he had never told anyone, including his wife, about his role until he confessed to investigators early this year while awaiting trial. "It was very hard initially to start talking about it," he said, "That's a secret that I held for six years that nobody knew."
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