Laura Gibbs Maczka Jordan | |
---|---|
Mayor (Place 7 Council member) Richardson | |
In office May 2013 –May 2015 | |
Preceded by | Bob Townsend (as Mayor) |
Succeeded by | Paul Voelker (elected mayor pro tem,became mayor per charter) |
Personal details | |
Born | 1965 (age 58–59) [1] Liberal,Kansas,U.S. |
Residence(s) | Richardson,Texas,U.S. |
Alma mater | Texas A&M University |
Website | Laura Maczka official website |
Laura Gibbs Maczka Jordan was the Mayor of Richardson,Texas from 2013 to 2015. She had previously become the first woman elected to the post of Mayor Pro Tem in the city's 57-year history as a home rule city. Maczka was initially elected to the Richardson City Council,Place 4 in May 2011 as a Republican,defeating Democrat Karl Voigtsberger by 74.97% to 25.03%. [2] She is believed to be only the 6th woman elected to the city council in the last 40 years.
In 2013,Maczka was elected mayor in the first direct election of the mayor since the city became a home rule city in 1956.
In 2015,Maczka became entangled in a corruption scandal involving land developer Mark Jordan,whom she would marry in 2017. Following her resignation,Maczka was convicted of bribery and wire fraud. Her conviction,along with her husband's,was vacated over misconduct allegations by a court bailiff. However,a second jury in 2021 acquitted former mayor of honest services wire fraud and conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud,charges of which she was convicted during the first trial,instead,convicting her only of bribery and tax fraud. [3] She and her husband were each sentenced to six years in federal prison. [4]
Maczka was born Laura Gibbs in Liberal,Kansas. Her family moved to Denver,Colorado,during her elementary school years,but by the time she entered 7th grade,her family had relocated to Richardson,Texas.
Maczka married real estate developer Mark Jordan in June 2017 and changed her name to Laura Jordan. She and Mark Jordan each have three children from previous marriages. [5]
This section needs to be updated.(August 2022) |
Maczka is currently the executive director of the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE) Greater Dallas, a non-profit whose mission is to provide programs that inspire young people from low-income communities to stay in school, to recognize business opportunities and to plan for successful futures. [6]
Under her leadership, the organization has grown in four years from serving 700 middle and high school students per year to more than 2000. Maczka was previously the Development Officer for St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital/Texas Heart Institute (Houston Texas) and Director of Fund Development for the United Way of the Texas Gulf Coast. [ citation needed ]
According to LinkedIn, the executive director of NFTE since July 2014 is Karen Ezell. [7] However, Ms Maczka's LinkedIn page still shows herself as having that role as of April 7, 2015. [8]
According to the Local Government Officer Conflicts Disclosure Statement [9] filed March 19, 2015 by her, Ms. Maczka is now employed by JP Realty Partners/Sooner Management in Leasing, Marketing and Communications.
Maczka initially served as the Place 4 representative on the Richardson City Council, [10] but switched to run for Place 7 in her campaign for the mayor's spot (Place 7).
In 2011, Gary Slagel, a 24-year veteran of the Richardson City Council, decided not to run for re-election, leaving his seat (Place 4) open. In the ensuing election, Laura Gibbs Maczka and Karl Voigtsberger both ran for the open seat. Maczka was endorsed by the Richardson Coalition, a political action group that had supported Slagel, and Voigtsberger was supported by the Richardson Citizens Alliance (RCA), a political action group that wanted to oust all incumbents. [11] Despite mudslinging and numerous false charges launched by the RCA against the Coalition's slate of candidates, [12] Maczka's and Voigtsberger's race was free of such controversy. She won the election to Place 4 with 5,772 (74.97%) votes to Voigtsberger's 1,927 (25.03%). [13] In 2013, Voigtsberger endorsed Maczka in her campaign for mayor. [14]
On November 27, 2012, Maczka announced her intention to run for mayor. [15] Because of the recent Richardson Charter change that set the mayor's place to be Place 7, Maczka left her current Place 4 open in the 2013 election. Her open place was eventually filled by fellow Councilmember Kendal Hartley (formerly Place 5) in an uncontested race.
On May 11, 2013, Maczka was elected by an overwhelming majority to become the first directly elected mayor in Richardson. Thanks to a Charter change in 2012, the mayor was no longer elected from the council, but was elected directly by the people. The Charter change set the mayor's place to be Place 7. Maczka won Place 7 by defeating fellow member of the Council Amir Omar by 10,167 to 4,172 (70.90% to 29.10%). [16]
The vote was canvassed (officially accepted) at the May 20, 2013 Council meeting, which marked the beginning of Maczka's term as mayor.
Mayor Maczka drew no opponents in the 2015 election and would have served two years as mayor. However, on April 2, 2015, she announced she would not serve that term as she posted on Facebook: 'There have been questions about my role as mayor for the City of Richardson for the next term. After much prayer and conversations with my family, I have made the decision that I will not serve as mayor for the 2015–2017 term and intend to submit a declination of such office at the city council meeting at which the election canvass will be conducted. My focus will be on my family, my health and professional career.'
While in office, Mayor Maczka had an affair with Mark Jordan, developer of a highly controversial project in Richardson. The details of the scandal were unclear prior to filing for reelection, which lead to Maczka running unopposed for reelection. However, as the scandal unfolded, many citizens demanded that she resign from office, which she did not do. However, Maczka was forced to not serve the additional term for which she had just been reelected. Moreover, it became public knowledge that she had taken a job with the development company that was in charge of the controversial project which she helped get approved through the city council. [17]
A special called City Council meeting was scheduled for April 28, 2015. The purpose of the meeting was to hear the report of the independent investigator into allegations that the mayor and/or members of the council violated either state law or the Richardson Code of Ethics or the city charter in terms of the Palisades rezoning development.
In addition, four specific complaints from Richardson citizens were submitted to the Independent Investigator who was chosen by the Richardson City Attorney (as allowed by the City Charter).
At the April 28, 2015 specially called council meeting, the independent investigator, George A. Staples, presented his report and conclusions on the initial investigation. His summary paragraphs states:
In conclusion, we have found no evidence of any ethical violation under state law, theCity Charter, or the Code of Ethics by Mayor Maczka or any member of the City Council withrespect to the referenced City Council votes or the Mayor's announced intention to declineanother term of office.
Mr. Staples' report goes on to say:
However, the overriding interest of the Code of Ethics as stated inSection 2-I is to ensure, "that such officers of the City shall at all times strive toavoid even the appearance of impropriety." While the facts in this case do not reveal acognizable violation of the Code of Ethics, it is certainly understandable that the sum ofthe Mayor's actions would be viewed by the public as offending the overriding interest ofthe Code of Ethics. Nevertheless, a failure to avoid the appearance of impropriety doesnot constitute a violation of the Code of Ethics, City Charter, or state law.
Mr. Staples did note that there was the possibility that the mayor withheld some emails that perhaps had public information that was required to be turned over per the Texas Public Information Act, but that these allegations, if genuine, needed to be followed up by the Public Integrity Unit of the Dallas District Attorney's Office.
Given his report, Mr. Staples said that no action should be taken by the council, and none was. [18]
Then Mr. Staples reported on his investigations of the four complaints lodged against the mayor and the council. He told the council:
After an initial review of the complaints, it was my opinion that they failed to allege aviolation of the Code of Ethics and did not contain any evidence which would constitute aviolation, were vague and lacked detail.
Mr. Staples asked the complainants for follow-up and evidence of wrongdoing, but none was provided. He therefore stated:
It is my opinion that the complaints are insufficient in detail and fail to allege a prima facie violation of the Code of Ethics.
Again, he recommended that no action be taken by the council, and none was. [19]
After the initial report, Ms. Maczka gave her side of the story. In essence, she divorced in December 2014, but that she and her ex-husband had worked out an agreement by which she and the children would be able to stay in the house, by having her parents cosign the loan. This support would also have allowed Ms. Maczka to continue to serve as mayor, so, urged by her family, she decided to file to run for re-election.
Ms. Maczka said that it was quite by surprise when several months after the loan process began, the loan company - Wells Fargo - told Ms. Maczka that despite the cosigners, that she herself would have to qualify for the loan based on her income, which at this point was virtually zero. This revelation came after it was too late to drop out of the race.
To complicate matters, Ms. Maczka, who had undergone treatment for melanoma eight years before. It also drove home the point that she had to have health insurance now. These two factors convinced her that she needed to give up the mayor's spot (hence, not take the oath of office, because it was too late to get off the ballot), and get a job with health benefits immediately. A position at JP Realty (the company doing the Palisades project for which vote she was criticized) came open, and she took it. [20]
On May 18, 2015, the Richardson City Council met to canvass the votes from the May 9th election. "Canvassing" the vote in Texas means that the elected body meets and formally accepts the election report from the local election department.
As previously indicated, Ms. Maczka submitted a letter to the City Secretary declining the office of mayor to which she had been elected. After the other council members had been sworn in, the council elected a new mayor pro tem, who was automatically, per charter changes made in 2012, made mayor. Paul Voelker is now the new mayor of Richardson. Subsequently, Mark Solomon was elected the new mayor pro tem.
On May 10, 2018, Maczka and husband Mark Jordan were indicted for various federal charges including bribery and honest services wire fraud. The indictment says that in exchange for her support of his project, she accepted monetary payments, payments to renovate her house, luxury hotel stays, flight upgrades, meals, a lucrative job, and intimate sexual contact from him. [21]
On March 7, 2019, Maczka and Mark Jordan were found guilty in federal court of four counts of bribery and honest services wire fraud. Maczka remained free on bond pending sentencing while Jordan was taken into custody due to fears he may flee. [22]
In 2020, a court of appeal threw out Maczka's conviction after it emerged that a bailiff had a conversation with the jury that may have affected the outcome. [23] Prosecutors subsequently filed a new indictment against Maczka and Jordan on federal bribery and tax charges. The trial began on July 6, 2021. [24] After a three-week trial, both defendants were found guilty of bribery, tax fraud and conspiracy. [3] [25] On August 4, 2022, she and Mark Jordan were each sentenced to six years in federal prison. [4] Candysdirt.com states that both Jordons began serving their terms Oct 24, 2022.
The Dallas Morning News reported on April 12th, 2024 that U.S. District Judge Amos Mazzant ordered her to report to prison no later than 2:00pm April 8th.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons lists a release date of May 17th, 2029 from FCI Marianna, Florida. Inmate number 27801-078.
Maczka received a B.S. [30] from Texas A&M University in 1987.
Judith A. Sgro is a Canadian politician. A member of the Liberal Party of Canada, she currently represents the electoral district of Humber River—Black Creek in the House of Commons of Canada. Sgro currently serves as the chair of the Standing Committee on International Trade and as a Chair on the Canadian House of Commons Liaison Committee since 2016.
Laura Miller is an American journalist and politician who served as the 57th mayor of Dallas, Texas from 2002 through 2007. She decided not to run for re-election in 2007. She was the third woman to serve as mayor of Dallas.
The Mayor of the City of Dallas is a member of the Dallas City Council and its presiding officer. The current mayor is Eric Johnson, who has served one term since 2019 and is the 60th mayor to serve in the position. Dallas operates under a city charter that designates the mayor as the official head of city government and a council-manager system where a city council-appointed city manager serves as the chief operating officer of the city.
The Minneapolis City Council is the legislative branch of the city of Minneapolis in Minnesota, United States. Comprising 13 members, the council holds the authority to create and modify laws, policies, and ordinances that govern the city. Each member represents one of the 13 wards in Minneapolis, elected for a four-year term. The current council structure has been in place since the 1950s.
Florence Donald Shapiro is an American politician from Texas. Her political career lasted over 30 years and coincided with Plano's growth from a bedroom community of 17,000 to a city of almost 300,000 residents. After moving to Plano in 1972, she served on the Plano City Council from 1979 to 1990 and served as the city's first female and Jewish elected mayor from 1990 to 1992.
Curren De Mille Price Jr. is an American politician of the Democratic Party, currently serving as a Los Angeles city council member for District 9. Price was a California State Senator, representing the state's 26th Senate District which he won in the May 19, 2009 special election to fill the seat vacated by Mark Ridley-Thomas. He previously served as a member of the California State Assembly, representing the state's 51st Assembly District. He was first elected to that position in 2006, and was re-elected in 2008. Price resigned as state senator on July 1, 2013, to be sworn in as Los Angeles city councilman.
Laura Richardson is an American politician who was the U.S. representative for California's 37th congressional district from 2007 to 2013. She is a member of the Democratic Party.
Blondell Reynolds Brown is an American politician and member of the Democratic Party. She served as a member of the Philadelphia City Council.
Amir Omar was the City Councilman for Place 7 in Richardson, Texas. Omar is believed to be the first Muslim elected to political office in North Texas. Omar was elected to the Richardson City Council, Place 7 in May 2009, defeating incumbent Dennis Stewart by 51.54% to 48.46%.
Portland, Maine, held an election for mayor on November 8, 2011.
Eric Lynn Johnson is an American politician and attorney who has served as the 60th mayor of Dallas, Texas, since June 2019. A Republican since September 2023, Johnson previously served as a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives, where he represented District 100 in the cities of Dallas and Mesquite.
Barbara Elizabeth Cornelius Price is an American businesswoman and politician who served as mayor of Fort Worth, Texas through 2021. She was first elected to the nonpartisan office on June 18, 2011. Price previously served 2½ terms as the elected Tarrant County tax assessor-collector, from 2001 to 2011. She is a Republican who describes herself as fiscally conservative, deplores polarization and extremist tendencies in both major parties, and professed a commitment to work for the entire community as an elected local official.
Erin Nealy Cox is an American attorney who served as the United States Attorney for the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas from 2017 to 2021. She was nominated to the position by President Donald Trump and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2017. After the 2020 election, she resigned effective January 9, 2021, and joined Kirkland & Ellis as a partner on June 23, 2021.
Jasiel F. Correia II is a former mayor of Fall River, Massachusetts. He was arrested twice on charges related to fraud and extortion while in office. Defeated in the November 2019 mayoral election, his term expired on January 6, 2020. In May 2021, Correia was convicted of multiple federal charges in a trial held in Boston; on September 21, 2021, Correia was sentenced to six years in federal prison followed by three years of supervised release. On April 22, 2022, Correia reported to a Federal Correctional Institution to begin serving his six-year sentence.
On May 4, 2019, the city of Dallas, Texas, held an election to choose the next Mayor of Dallas. The election began as a nonpartisan blanket primary, no candidate took a majority of over 50% of the total vote so the two top vote-earners Eric Johnson and Scott Griggs advanced to a runoff election on June 8. Incumbent mayor Mike Rawlings was unable to run for reelection due to term limits. Dallas also concurrently elected all 14 members of its city council, and 3 of the 9 total members of the Dallas Independent School District. Johnson won the runoff with 55.61%.
James M. Gardiner is a Chicago politician and firefighter who serves as the alderman for the 45th ward in the Chicago City Council. Elected to the Chicago City Council in 2019, Gardiner identified as a political independent; however, he would later switch to the Democratic Party and currently serves as the 45th Ward Democratic Committeeperson.
Albert Louis "Al" Lipscomb was a seven-term Dallas City Council member and a longtime advocate for civil rights. He was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit in the 1970s that successfully challenged Dallas' system of electing every council member citywide, forcing the city to change to a mostly single-member district system.
Monique Owens is an American politician and convicted criminal who served as the mayor of Eastpointe, Michigan from 2019 to 2023. She previously served on the Eastpointe City Council from 2017 to 2019 and was the first African-American to serve in either office. She was unseated in the 2023 mayoral primary.
Elections are held every two years to elect the mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts.
The 2023 Dallas mayoral election was held on May 6, 2023, to elect the mayor of Dallas, Texas. Incumbent mayor Eric Johnson ran for re-election to a second term in office. One other candidate qualified, declared write-in candidate Kendal Richardson, whom Johnson defeated with 98.7% of the vote, breaking a record set in 1909 by former Dallas mayor Stephen J. Hay for the highest vote percentage garnered by a mayoral candidate facing any opposition in Dallas history.
A federal jury heard more testimony Wednesday suggesting that the marriage between Richardson's ex-mayor and a developer was a sham intended to cover up bribes he allegedly gave her in exchange for her votes on his controversial project in the city... The developer, Mark Jordan, married Laura Maczka in June 2017 in a small ceremony with seven others in attendance, according to the pastor who handled it. Lillian Smith testified that she had just four days to prepare. That's how much advance notice Maczka, her longtime friend, gave her, she told jurors.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)