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Rolando Plant
10/30/2009

Butler
 
1,155 days later, is promised Rolando plant trick or treat? 

By Billy Davis

The month of October passes the three-month mark since Roland Butler, appearing before the Board of Supervisors, assured the board that his Crenshaw plant would open for business.

“You can read my lips on that one,” Butler told supervisors in July, when he promised a 90-day deadline.

The month of August triggered a second benchmark: a three-year span since Panola County government handed Butler an empty Crenshaw factory in exchange for a promise of assembly line jobs at Rolando Curtis Foods.

The 2006 contract requires Butler to hire at least 150 workers within 690 days, then to maintain 80 percent of that workforce for five years.

Hundreds of Crenshaw residents had applied for a job at Rolando, hoping to work at what would be the struggling Delta town’s only industrial employer.  

The jobs have never come, however, even after Butler used the property as collateral to obtain a $1.4 million loan from a Colorado financier.  

Butler’s assurances of a functioning factory have become a familiar sight in The Panolian, most often when he has been pressed by the newspaper to explain another missed deadline. But Butler could not be reached this week about the newest missed deadline despite several attempts to contact him.

A reporter visited Butler’s home this week in Batesville’s Edgarwood subdivision, but the home did not seem to be occupied. No lights were on, and a Panola County Solid Waste garbage can had not been wheeled to the road for pick-up.

A spokesman for Solid Waste said Butler has not paid the monthly bill since February.

Butler has said he is renting the home from former County Administrator David Chandler, who retired last year.

Before Butler’s July encounter with supervisors, he had assured two of them, Gary Thompson and Kelly Morris, that Rolando Curtis Foods would open in 90 days. That promise had come in March 2008 – now a year and seven months ago.

Thompson, reached this week, said he was aware the latest promised deadline had come and gone.

“Yeah, I thought about it this week,” said Thompson, who serves as board president.

Beyond demanding more answers from Butler, Thompson said he was unsure if supervisors have any legal recourse to seize the former county property.  

Thompson added, however, that he believes the 2006 contract includes a deadline clause that would allow the property to revert back to the county if Butler fails to meet hiring goals stipulated in the contract.

The stated deadline is “four of five years,” the board president recalled.  A review of the document by The Panolian shows a five-year deadline.

A second contract clause triggered Butler’s appearance in July, after supervisors learned the contract allowed them to review how Butler spent the $1.4 million he acquired from the loan. But Butler left without producing what had been requested, an itemized list of expenditures.

He promised at the meeting that the list was forthcoming, but the financial document has yet to materialize, County Administrator Kelley Magee said this week.

Where workers for the Crenshaw plant will come from remains a mystery, since Butler told The Panolian in 2007 that he failed to find qualified applicants in Crenshaw during a job search in the little town. He had moved his job search to Batesville, he said.

After claiming he failed to find an adequate workforce, Butler made another claim in 2008: he had made a deathbed promise to late Supervisor Robert Avant that the plant would open soon.

Avant, whose district includes Crenshaw, had urged other supervisors to back the property transfer, citing the joblessness in the Delta area.

The unopened food plant was a repeated topic at Tuesday night’s political forum in Sardis, where District 2 supervisor candidates took turns taking political swipes at Butler and his unopened plant.

The forum was held prior to next Tuesday’s special election in District 2.   

“You bring him (Butler) into court so Panola County can return and get that building back and put that building back on the market,” speculated Tim Holliday.

Other candidates shared similar get-tough views, though candidate William Pride was the only one to note that a Deed of Trust had been filed. The property is now collateral, he pointed out.  

“You can’t just walk in there and take it … you’re going to have to deal with those lienholders,” Pride opined.

Only the District 2 incumbent, Vernice Avant, defended Butler, saying he was struggling to open the plant in a recession and had invested his own funds.

A second candidate, Paul Henderson, pointed out that Butler had invested money from a lender, not his own capital.  

Mrs. Avant also suggested Butler “come before the board,” apparently for another visit before supervisors, but she did not elaborate.

The Panolian reported in August that Mrs. Avant had been the lone county supervisor to back Butler’s plan to obtain a $700,000 state loan from the Miss. Development Authority.

A spokesman for MDA could not advise the status of Butler’s loan application by press time Thursday.


Visitor Comments
 
Submitted By: Aussie Mom Submitted: 10/30/2009
All I read on his lips are lies.


Submitted By: mj Submitted: 10/30/2009
So mrs avant what do you need him to come before the board again for? Do you not believe this guy is a liar? Do you need him to yet again come up with some more lies to tell you for you to see that? The building is gone, he will not be able to pay off the loan he got and the building will belong to the bank. So it is to late for the board to act on this. Just leave it alone and move on. Learn from your mistakes and don't let it happen again(looks like mrs avant hasn't learned anything). Maybe Mrs. Avant doesn't need to be in office seeing that she has no problem with people ripping Panola county off. One piece of advice board, get a back bone. Don't ask the man for information and then don't follow up on it for months. He should have been called to every meeting until he gave what you asked for.


Submitted By: say what?? Submitted: 10/30/2009
sooner or later, the folks in charge will finally agree on what everyone else already knows. "we were had".


Submitted By: DCinMissippi Submitted: 10/30/2009
This yahoo has taken y'all for a ride all the way to his Swiss bank !!


Submitted By: CJ Submitted: 10/30/2009
Boy, oh boy, another million dollar blunder that happens to be where...in District 2! Mrs. Avant is a nice person, but this million dollar screw job is over her head. She still believes there is hope for a company that has broken promises to the board of supervisors because he has an endless list of excuses at his command...courtesy in-part to the board of supervisors. And for Gary Thompson to say he is not aware of the legal ability of the board to do anything is just sad. What's the point of having elected officials if they don't know what to do.


Submitted By: Fishnlawyr Submitted: 10/30/2009
Does the Bd of Supervisors have the power to subpoena someone to appear before their legislative body and answer questions. If yes, they can subpoena those same records that he hasn't produced. When he refuses to comply....that will, according to everything that is all right and positive with the world will give them the authority to consider the contract as breached. Then they can bring in the $500/hr lawyers to do what any collection lawyer can do for minimal costs.


Submitted By: Fishnlawyr Submitted: 10/30/2009
By the way, has anyone ever thought about getting the records of Mrs. Avant's businesses that have government contracts?


Submitted By: BillT Submitted: 10/30/2009
Makes you sorta wonder about our supervisors' competence doesn't it. I wonder how many bank accounts increased that first year. If memory serves me correctly the Panolian had published that one employee had been hired by Butler and that was Avant's son. Is he still getting paid?


Submitted By: MIlton Submitted: 10/30/2009
Besides Mr.Butlers creditors no one has really lost anything. Panola county gave this man a worthless building which he used to borrow way more money than it is worth, and it is looking like we will eventually get that back. We should be glad that we have found out he is a crook on the front end. Would anyone eat something from a factory run by this guy?


Submitted By: JR Submitted: 10/30/2009
SORRY MILTON; PANOLA COUNTY WON'T GET THE BUILDING BACK UNLESS THE TAXPAYERS BUY IT AT FORECLOSURE WHEN THE FOLKS THAT LOANED THE MONEY TRY TO RECOUP THEIR LOSES. IF WE STILL HAD ANY OWNERSHIP INTEREST IN IT THE LOAN WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN MADE.


Submitted By: MIlton Submitted: 10/31/2009
Re: JR Thompson added, however, that he believes the 2006 contract includes a deadline clause that would allow the property to revert back to the county if Butler fails to meet hiring goals stipulated in the contract. The stated deadline is “four of five years,” the board president recalled. A review of the document by The Panolian shows a five-year deadline.


Submitted By: mj Submitted: 11/1/2009
Look the guy ran a scam. He took the 1.4 million he got and maybe spent couple hundred thousand of that to improve the building. He didn't spend it all that is why he can't produce the records of what he did with the money. Now he hid what money is left and is just waiting for the bank to take the building for defaulting on the loan. Then he will sail off into the sunset with his little over 1 million. I think this was his plan all along other wise where is the report from him showing how he spent the money??? Because he can't show it. Then he sees how stupid our board is and trys to get their help getting another 700,000(thank goodness they didn't fall for it). So i say just sit back and wait and let the bank take the building and then turn around and collect the property taxes on that building because the building will never sell. So what have we really lost beside being taken advantage of by a con man, nothing a run down building that we where paying insurance on it to sit empty, so in a way we gain by not having to pay for the ins. anymore.


Submitted By: MIlton Submitted: 11/1/2009
Mj I agree with your premise that the County is not really losing anything, except alot of time and dignity, messing with this guy. I doubt though that he has any of this money left. This scam most likely cleaned up his last "business venture" and gives him a little capital to throw around in the next rural county that is willing to give strangers tax breaks and run down buildings, but can't get tax payers trash picked up on the right day.


Submitted By: JR Submitted: 11/1/2009
I BASE MY OPINION ON COURTHOUSE RECORDS,DEEDS,& ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS I PUT TO THE COUNTY ATTORNEY. WE AINT NEVER GETTING ANYTHING (OTHER THAN THE OBVIOUS) OUT OF THIS DEAL BUT A GOOD LEARNING EXPERIENCE.


Submitted By: jim Submitted: 11/1/2009
Look for Butler's forwording address to he somewhere in South America. BillT : I have asked the same question about Avant's son three or four times and have never received an answer.


Submitted By: accountable Submitted: 11/1/2009
I don’t believe he ever spent 1.4 million dollars; unless the new bricks (and I don’t see any) are solid gold. I don’t even believe the lien is legitimate; Scam artist have filed false liens before. If not properly investigated, they’ll hold a “fake foreclosure” sale and split the proceeds. Something smells regarding the lien holder in this case. And the fact that Mr. Butler said “he is renting his home from David Chandler” doesn’t smell right either. Everything about this whole “deal” seems to have a “connection.” I’ve said before, the Board should require a full accounting of expenditures (take him to court if necessary and get a court order; if he doesn’t comply, the judge can hold him for contempt.) Mr. Butler should be compelled to produce the accounting and prove his lien. If not, charges should be filed!


Submitted By: T. C. Submitted: 11/2/2009
BUTLER AND AVANT,S ARE LAUGHING ALL THE WAY TO THE BANK


Submitted By: Fishnlawyr Submitted: 11/2/2009
People keep saying things like: " So what have we really lost beside being taken advantage of by a con man..." Doesn't it bother you to be lied to...taken advantage of...and then cheated out of jobs that the community needed so badly? There wasn't a person in line trying to get one of those non-existent jobs who wasn't a victim. Why can't we expect more out of people who promise more.


Submitted By: JR Submitted: 11/2/2009
WELL MILTON I LOOK AT IT THIS WAY; ANY "HOLD" PANOLA COUNTY MAY HAVE ON THAT PLACE COMES WITH A BIG DEBT NOW. AND THE LIEN HOLDER COMES FIRST, NOT PANOLA COUNTY. IF WE GET IT BACK WE GET THE DEBT OWED AS WELL. WHEN IT COMES TO LEGAL MATTERS I'LL GO WITH THE COUNTY ATTORNEY'S EXPLANATION OVER GARY'S ANY DAY.


Submitted By: snow man Submitted: 11/3/2009
come on people let's face the facts that all the county supervisors are equally responsible for this screw up with this crook Mr. Butler and all have benefitted with cash for this robbery of in this county. Several people to include Mr. Butler should have been charged and in prison right as we speak. So any normal breathing person should no that a crime or two has been committed by these bogus supervisors and the crook Mr. Butler wake up and do something if it's not fixed. No the only way the building is returned back to this county is that we repay back the entire loan plus interest and penalties on the said loan. We would have done better buying swamp land in Flordia that we would never see!




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