Yeah, that was the beginning of the end.  The undersea cable between islands 
was the thing that brought it all down.  There were other cables there that he 
was using and it was actually NECA that put a stop to the duplicate facilities. 
 But more than that, the whole island had phone service from GTE before this 
company was even formed.  He was allowed, similar to a Native American tribal 
deals, to make a new telephone company to totally overbuild the island.  

From: Adam Moffett 
Sent: Thursday, October 22, 2015 2:18 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] ISPs “reminded” to not use government money for alcohol 
and vacations

Wow


On 10/22/2015 4:17 PM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:

  Sounds like this guy ruined it for everyone. 


  Since 2002, Sandwich Isles Communications has collected $242,489,940 from the 
federal 
  Universal Service Fund to serve no more than 3,659 customers.
  2
  During that same time, Albert Hee, the 
  owner of Sandwich Isles’s parent company Waimana Enterprises and affiliate 
ClearCom, apparently used 
  the company as his family’s personal piggy bank. For example, the companies 
apparently paid $96,000 
  so that Hee could receive two
  -
  hour massages twice a we
  ek; $119,909 for personal expenses, including 
  family trips to Disney World, Tahiti, France, and Switzerland and a four
  -
  day family vacation at the 
  Mauna Lani resort; $736,900 for college tuition and housing expenses for 
Hee’s three children; 
  $1,300,000 for 
  a home in Santa Clara, California for his children’s use as college housing; 
and 
  $1,676,685 in wages and fringe benefits for his wife and three children.
  3
  That’s not all. When the FCC last looked at Sandwich Isles’s corporate 
expenses, our staff found 
  tha
  t it was spending $5,460,973 more on corporate operations each year than 
similarly sized companies, 
  with significant management and leasing fees to affiliated companies (like 
Waimana and ClearCom) that 
  benefited Hee and his family.
  4
  On top of all that, sev
  en years ago, Sandwich Isles dropped a $1.9
  -
  million
  -
  a
  -
  year lease it had with 
  an independent undersea cable network in favor of a $15
  -
  million
  -
  a
  -
  year lease for a cable network built by 
  ClearCom and owned by Paniolo LLC.
  5
  Unsurprisingly, Paniolo is itself ow
  ned by Blue Ivory LLC, 
  which is wholly owned by Blue Ivory Hawaii Corporation, which in turn is 
owned by private trusts of 
  Hee’s three children.
  6
  What is worse, Sandwich Isles appears to no longer be paying what it owes to 
  Paniolo
  —
  yet is still collecting 
  payments from other rural telephone companies as if it were.


  On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 1:14 PM, Steve <[email protected]> wrote:

    Already trying to control the money.  This is why we opted out of getting 
involved in any form of Government program.  It just allows them to keep their 
fingers up your ass and use you as a puppet.

    
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/10/isps-reminded-to-not-use-government-money-for-alchohol-and-vacations/

    Internet service providers who accept government funding in exchange for 
providing Internet access in rural areas were "reminded" this week that they're 
not allowed to use the money for food, alcohol, entertainment, personal travel, 
and other expenses unrelated to providing Internet access.

    The Federal Communications Commission issued a public notice with a 
"non-exhaustive list of expenditures" that cannot be reimbursed. The list 
includes all of the above as well as political contributions, charitable 
donations, scholarships, payment of penalties and fines, club membership fees, 
sponsorships of conferences and community events, gifts to employees, and 
personal expenses of employees and family members "including but not limited to 
personal expenses for housing, such as rent or mortgages."



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