Another morning, another front page embarrassment for Oblinger, NC State

It’s another morning in the Carolinas, so that can only mean that there is another development in the “NC State-Mary Easley case.”

Today’s front page story – Feds probe Easley hiring – is particularly damning because it represents an inquiry directly into ‘official’ dealings between the University.

Federal prosecutors Tuesday ordered the chancellor and provost at N.C. State University to appear before a grand jury this week, making it clear that investigators have opened a wide-ranging criminal probe of dealings surrounding former Gov. Mike Easley.

The FBI served subpoenas to Chancellor James Oblinger on Tuesday afternoon as he left the main administration building, Holladay Hall, to appear at an event across campus.

“This university will do everything to cooperate fully,” Oblinger said.

Investigators want to talk with Oblinger and Provost Larry Nielsen about the hiring, promotion and salary of former first lady Mary Easley, according to the court documents.

Sheesh. How embarrassing can it get? Our Chancellor was publicly served a federal subpoena at the administrative buildings of our University. Just allow that to sink in for a minute.

You really can’t read this entry with reading this one where we provide our commentary and the community engages in a fantastic conversation.

Additionally, this editorial was printed in the Charlotte Observer this morning (so, I presume it was also in the News & Observer). It gives a nice, quick rundown while leaving out the part where Easley’s pay went from about $80,000 a year to $170,000 a year during her employment.

This whole deal, like others swirling around it, smells bad. The governor’s wife lands a high-paying job to run a campus speaker series and public safety center. The interim provost who gives her the job suddenly becomes permanent provost despite not being a candidate for the job. And the school’s board chairman is a buddy of then-Gov. Mike Easley’s who does favors for the governor and gets help from the Easley administration around the time Mrs. Easley is landing the job.

The provost, Larry Nielsen, and the chairman, McQueen Campbell, have resigned. Mary Easley must do the same – now. Her continued presence can only hurt N.C. State.

That won’t end this mess, though. Questions remain for Oblinger. He and Nielsen have been summoned to testify before a federal grand jury. Campbell says he told Oblinger about Mary Easley’s interest in changing jobs, Bowles says, but Oblinger claims not to remember anything about it. And it’s becoming apparent that Bowles didn’t ask enough questions when Mrs. Easley was hired, when he fully supported the arrangement.

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61 Responses to Another morning, another front page embarrassment for Oblinger, NC State

  1. Rick 05/20/2009 at 5:07 PM #

    “These guys didn’t go to class for you or take your exams. Let them get what they are due, or be proved innocent.”

    I understand what you are saying but perception is reality and if NCSU is perceived as a place that encourages illegal activities then I fail to see how that will not reflect poorly on my education.

  2. old13 05/20/2009 at 5:38 PM #

    Nice letter to the editor in today’s N and O signed by 5 deans at NCSU expressing support for Neilsen.. they said he did such a great job as interium that they asked that he be considered as a permanant Provost. These 5 deans feel he was doing a great job and that this is a bad thing for NCSU.

    If that’s not good-ol’-boyism I don’t know what is – and I’m tired of it!

  3. LRM 05/20/2009 at 5:54 PM #

    Any chance of linking Fowler & Lowe as co-conspirators to this?

  4. BladenWolf 05/20/2009 at 6:41 PM #

    I think packalum44 makes a good point. This looks like tyical politics to me. Positions going to the powerful and not neccessarily the most qualified is nothing new and happens everyday.
    I also think Easley was a smug little asshat even before he became governor and had an enemy list a mile long. So it’s not surprising that UNC grad Bowels may have been on that list and is more than happy to point the boney finger of indignation at good ole’ NCSU to “even the score”.
    The sad part to me is that the media continues to throw egg on our collective face again and again when the same shit is going on over at Chapel Hole ad nauseam.

  5. john of sparta 05/20/2009 at 6:50 PM #

    packalum44…here’s how VIP admissions work at most universities:

    (first, assuming ME’s son did NOT, on his own, qualify for admission)
    the college (Yale, Stanford, UNX) sends acceptance letters to ALL who
    applied from the VIP child’s High School who scored academically
    as well or better than the VIP-kid. of course, it’s at FULL tuition.
    that’s how all those Hollywood-types can go to Princeton.
    yeah, a few lucky appliers get through and can afford to go
    ….but that’s life. take your shot. or jump 4 feet straight up
    in the air and you won’t have to worry about such things.

  6. Afterglow 05/20/2009 at 9:02 PM #

    Does this bode poorly for that myopic bovine Fowler or will he walk out of this? After reading everything I’m beginning to think this smoke will soon turn into a bon fire on Hillsborough Street from all of the celebration… and then again there’s always that humiliating kick in the crotch to look foreword when reality sets in if things don’t quite pan out; so I got that going for me. Ah! Sir, may I have another!

  7. Alpha Wolf 05/20/2009 at 9:54 PM #

    Of course five deans are going to stick up for one of their own. It would be shocking — as in electric chair shocking — if they didn’t.

  8. Wolf74 05/21/2009 at 7:03 AM #

    Lets just face it. This should not be a surprise to anyone. This bunch hasn’t even been able to properly direct an athletic department for the last 20 years so how could anyone expect them to be able to properly direct the largest university in North Carolina!

  9. McCallum 05/21/2009 at 7:17 AM #

    “If that’s not good-ol’-boyism I don’t know what is – and I’m tired of it!”?-old13

    Hold on a second. I have friends and professional contacts on faculty in Raleigh and they are voicing much of the same stuff. There was some pretty heavy consensus that Neilsen had done a pretty decent job in past positions and his history made him a good fit for the job.

    I’m not so certain why the faculty in the engineering schools would be good-ol’-boyin it for a guy they did not know since the good-ol’-boy system historically involves folks you do know.

    Could he have gotten pressure downward from the Chancellor, Campbell, and Bowles? Who is to say (at this time) but what should emerge is the peril in finding ethical, I’m not talking about abstract ethics but rooted and known ethics, folks that will stick to their guns when the balance of their life long efforts have brought them to a certain point.

    The troubling part is that Neilsen had not actively sought the position so he should have been confident in his ability to blunt pressure.

    WAIT!!!

    This is NC State so just forget everything I just said. He said hell with it, made the move and didnt care how it looked. For just a second I tried to view the matter through fair eyes not the eyes that have seen State in action for over 20 years.

    Forgive my even treatment of a place that deserves none.

    McCallum

  10. YANCSSB 05/21/2009 at 9:05 AM #

    Is it wrong to hope that just enough bad news happens that the current administration is gutted and we start over from scratch?

  11. wufpup76 05/21/2009 at 9:26 AM #

    “Is it wrong to hope that just enough bad news happens that the current administration is gutted and we start over from scratch?”

    ^Actually, I find myself feeling much this way … bonus cherry for impacting the athletics side of the University.

    It feels strange, but I’m not getting all that worked up about seeing NCSU thrown all over the headlines in a not so positive light. I’m more or less numb to a lot of this crap.

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