While what you read
in the Westerly Sun makes it seem like this notorious company is winning,
that’s not the whole picture
Copar has more legal, financial problems
Copar has more legal, financial problems
Charlestown Town Councilor George Tremblay says Charlestown has done everything it can to control Copar, when in fact, they've done almost nothing |
By Will Collette
If you’re a Copar fan and all you read is the Westerly Sun,
you’d think the company has outfoxed its many opponents. That’s not because Sun
investigative reporter Dale Faulkner isn't doing his job of covering the Copar story. Quite the contrary,
I think he’s doing a great job, but there are limits to what a paper like the
Sun can or will cover.
The Sun has reported that the Copar Quarries successfully
quashed the Town of Westerly’s half-hearted efforts to enforce its own
cease-and-desist order by getting
the whole case moved to state Superior Court. That's to the relief
of town officials who were clearly over their heads.
You may also have read Charlestown Town Councilor George
Tremblay’s spirited defense of Charlestown’s attempts to control Copar.
According to Tremblay, Charlestown has done everything it can.
As
is so often the case, Tremblay got his facts wrong. In fact, Charlestown
has done next to nothing to control
Copar’s Bradford site and absolutely
nothing to control Copar's Charlestown site, despite an array of enforcement options. Charlestown showed that it was willing to do
anything – anything, legal or illegal
– to block the Whalerock wind project while it blew off the suffering Charlestown
neighbors of Copar.
Now, there’s a new
Sun article by Faulkner, and follow-up Sun editorial, reporting that the limited testing done on silica
dust in and around the Bradford quarry did not exceed federal standards. Again,
Dale reports the facts and the facts are that, for the limited duration that
the tests were done – with Copar’s knowledge they were happening – the dust did
not exceed EPA’s current exposure standards.
But that’s not the whole story, either on silica dust or on the bigger Copar picture.
One key fact is that EPA’s
standards are out of date. The federal Occupational
Safety and Health Administration has proposed cutting exposure limits in half, and are fighting tooth and nail with
industry and Congressional
Republicans to make that standard stick.
What silicosis does to lung tissue |
The other key fact is that only a
permanent 24/7 monitoring program will give you useful data.
And finally, EPA standards that are based on exposure to healthy adults are useless when applied to babies and small children, the frail elderly and people suffering from existing lung diseases.
And finally, EPA standards that are based on exposure to healthy adults are useless when applied to babies and small children, the frail elderly and people suffering from existing lung diseases.
But beyond these details, there’s a lot more important
information about Copar that hasn't yet made it into the Westerly Sun.
Phil Armetta - Middletown CT based trash titan is the money man behind Copar (photo by Stephen Devoto, Middletown Eye) |
In my last several investigative articles on Copar and its
executives, I detailed the serious legal
and financial
issues that should have come out before Copar was allowed to do business in
Rhode Island.
I noted the long list of criminal convictions of their CEO Sam Cocopard, the federal prison time done by their chief financial backer Phil Armetta, as well as the legal problems of CFO Randy Roberge and Controller Daniel Thibodeau.
I noted the long list of criminal convictions of their CEO Sam Cocopard, the federal prison time done by their chief financial backer Phil Armetta, as well as the legal problems of CFO Randy Roberge and Controller Daniel Thibodeau.
I detailed the crushing
amount of debt Copar has taken on and contrasted that to the many times its
CEO Sam Cocopard has simply washed out his debt by going bankrupt. I listed the
many civil
judgments that have already been issued against Copar and its subsidiaries.
Of course time doesn’t stand still, and neither do the boys
at Copar, so I went back through the court records and Westlaw database to look
to see if they’ve had other legal or financial adventures since my last report.
They did.
Let’s start with....
Let’s start with....
IRS
Tax Liens
This just showed up on the Westlaw database – on May 21st,
the IRS whacked Copar with a tax lien for $32,247. This was not the first time
that Copar or its CEO Sam Cocopard had been dinged for not paying taxes, but
this is quite recent. Copar didn’t pay off the IRS until July.
This is the seventh time that a Copar subsidiary or CEO Sam
Cocopard has been hit with a tax lien. It’s the fifth one from IRS. Click
here to see a comprehensive list of the company’s civil problems.
Richmond
Commons sales deadline expires
The original plan for Richmond Commons, now less likely to ever happen |
Despite Copar’s reputation, they were welcomed with open
arms into Richmond last spring to set up their third Rhode Island operation
right off Route 138 on the edge of Richmond’s major business district. Copar
signed a deal with John Aiello, owner of the 552 acre proposed
Richmond Commons development.
The deal involved Copar paying Aiello for the stone they
remove from the site, preparing the site for eventual construction of Richmond
Commons, with an option – and expectation – that Copar would buy the property from Aiello.
Under the deal, Copar was supposed to come up with $3
million cash by the end of November. Aiello would then give them a $9 million
mortgage and Copar would be the new owner. Aiello has already secured all the
necessary town permits to build what is supposed to be South County’s largest
mixed use development.
Richmond Town Council President Joe Reddish was more than
willing to overlook Copar’s terrible history with Westerly and Charlestown
because he really wants to see Richmond Commons get built on his watch after
over a decade of stalls and palaver.
But no deal. Copar didn't come up with the $3 million and,
sources tell me, there are even more problems. Word is that Aiello is very disappointed
with Copar and is looking for a new buyer. Now Reddish
is stuck with Copar – and no Richmond Commons, it looks like, for the
foreseeable future.
Copar
has ANOTHER gravel spill
Photo by Tina Shea |
The spill occurred on December 3 and was photographed by CCBC activist Tina Shea. The spill occurred in Charlestown right on Route 216 near the Bradford quarry’s main gate. As you may recall, Copar had a big spill in September at the junction of 91 and 216.
Since this spill was on the Charlestown side of Route 216, Tina called Charlestown Police. She was told by CPD that it's really a Westerly problem (which has been the party line for the CCA Town Councilors - Boss Tom Gentz, Deputy Dan Slattery and George Tremblay) who control town government.
Tina called Westerly PD. Westerly PD said, nah-uh. The spill happened on the Charlestown so it's Charlestown's jurisdiction. Tina called CPD back to tell them what Westerly PD said. She waited as long as she could before having to go to work to see if CPD would send a cruiser out. They didn't.
Neither town police force covered themselves in glory on this one - playing pass the hot potato is not very good community policing.
Phil
Armetta loses to his kids
One of the reasons Copar exists and is in our backyard is
Phil Armetta, the money man behind the company. Until Armetta was swept up in
the federal investigation of organized crime in the waste disposal industry, he
was a fast-rising figure in the Connecticut garbage business.
Phil's son, Michael Armetta, president of Phil's former flagship company, Dainty Trash (photo by Stephen Devoto, Middletown Eye) |
But after pleading
to a reduced charge and serving three months in federal prison, Armetta had to
give up his trash businesses. He gave up control of the then under construction
Kleen Energy “recycling” plant in Middletown shortly before it blew up in 2010
(killing six workers) and deeded over his trash hauling businesses, including
his flagship, “Dainty Trash Services” (I’m not making that name up) to his
children. Click
here for the Hartford Courant’s colorful background on Armetta. Click here for a CNN-Fortune Magazine piece.
But since then, he swore he’d get back into the trash
business. Thus his association with the merry band of characters who run Copar.
Phil has often fancied old quarry sites for new waste facilities – Kleen Energy
was built in an old quarry. Sam Cocopard and his colleagues quarry the land,
creating very nice holes in the ground. Copar is currently building Armetta’s
new flagship trash disposal site in Lisbon, CT, again in an old mine site.
But Phil also had an eye on his old businesses and has been
in an open
feud with his children for several years. Among other things, Phil has been
trying to restrict their use of his old office and property which is right next
to his new office in Middletown, CT. He fought his kids before the Middletown
Planning & Zoning Commission and lost.
By searching Connecticut court records, I found this
September decision which hands Phil a decisive defeat – the Superior Court
of CT denied his appeal of his loss before the P&Z.
The story I hear from Middletown sources is that the kids
have their own plan for dealing with Dad although they did drop
their own lawsuit against Dad, also in September.
For Charlestown, Westerly and Richmond, the lesson here is
that while Copar may have presented itself to Rhode Island as a quarry
business, it doesn’t take a whole lot of research to see that there’s a whole
lot more to them than just cracking rocks.
More
legal problems for Copar, Cocopard
"Samuel F. Cocopard - Non-appearing" |
Since my last round-up of legal problems for Copar and its
subsidiaries, and its CEO Sam Cocopard, several new cases turned up on Westlaw
and in the Connecticut Courts database. Among them:
Roscommon Infinity LLC settled its
lawsuit against Copar in May for an undisclosed amount.
Cavalry SPVI LLC filed a
contracts-collection lawsuit against Copar CEO Sam Cocopard on August 2.
According to court records, it looks like Cocopard was a no-show and refused
service.
On August 21st, Asset Acceptance LLC also filed
suit against Cocopard with the same result – no show, no service.
For many companies I have investigated over the years, the
above issues would be more than enough to trigger alarm bells. I've seen
companies lose licenses and contracts for less, and these items are simply
updates on Copar’s already remarkable rap sheet.
That’s enough for today. Just as a preview, I did a little
back-checking on one of the more outlandish cases involving our Copar neighbors
and even made a four hour pilgrimage to collect the records for what I promise
you will be an amazing up-coming story.
To read all of Progressive Charlestown’s coverage of the
Copar Quarries controversy, click
here.