Ex-Bears Fullback Pleads Guilty In Minority-Contractor Scam

Former Bears fullback Roland Harper pleaded guilty Tuesday to fraud for allowing his trucking company to be used by a white-owned firm to obtain contracts set aside for minority-owned businesses.

Harper, 55, of Algonquin, pleaded guilty in federal court to one count of mail fraud and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors. In return, prosecutors agreed to recommend he serve about 16 months in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 14.

Harper, who is African-American and was president of Rohar Construction, admitted he obtained contracts from Chicago Public Schools on behalf of Monahan Landscape Co., which got more than $1.5 million in payment.

The landscaping business, based in Arlington Heights, is headed by Aidan Monahan, 58, of Bensenville, who pleaded guilty last week to mail fraud. Monahan faces up to almost 5 years in prison when he is sentenced in September.

According to records, Rohar in 2003 was awarded a contract from the schools to oversee landscaping on some of its property, even though trucking, not landscaping, was Rohar’s specialty.

CPS spokesman Mike Vaughn said that when Rohar was awarded the contract, Rohar was believed to be “a general contractor with landscaping capabilities.”

“But when our Office of Business Diversity got involved, they questioned whether Rohar had landscaping capability,” Vaughn said. That office then notified the CPS’ inspector general’s office, which investigated and notified authorities.

Once Rohar was hired, Assistant U.S. Atty. Nancy Miller said, Monahan used his equipment for landscaping and controlled Rohar’s bank accounts.

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

A Force to be reckoned with

Cross switched to the Perth-based franchise after it had taken the wooden spoon in its first season in the Super 14 after nine years with the Sydney glamour club in the NRL.
He made his debut in 2007 against the Highlanders and played every game for the Force last year before being named in the Australia A team and playing in all five of its Pacific Nations Cup games.
After finishing last in 2006 the Force went into the final round of last season with a mathematical chance of making the semi-finals.
They have just claimed their first win on New Zealand soil after beating the Blues last weekend and are knocking on the door of the top four, with a run of home games still to go.
Cross form in the midfield has been one of the reasons for the teams success but the former Australian schoolboys fullback admits its been a difficult transition coming back to the 15-man code.
%26quot;I found last year pretty difficult. Obviously its a new game and the season is over so quickly but I learnt a lot last year and I definitely feel a lot more comfortable in the team, Im just really enjoying myself. Ive worked hard, it definitely hasnt come easy, thats for sure, Cross told The Southland Times from Queenstown.
Positioning and deciding when to join a ruck and when to stay out where amongst the lessons Cross, who switched to league straight after school, has had to relearn.
%26quot;Youve just got to get your instinct back and I think last year I was just half a second behind, but now I feel like Im getting to where I need to be.
Cross and his Force team mates will be chasing a second New Zealand win on Saturday when they take on the Highlanders at the Queenstown Events Centre.
Its Cross second visit to the resort town after going there %26quot;a long time ago on a schoolboy rugby trip with Waverly College from Sydney.
An Australian junior rugby league representative, Cross is eager for more international experience.
%26quot;Its definitely in the back of my mind. Id love to play for Australia. Hopefully if I can keep improving and the Force keep winning then I think youll se a lot more Force players in the Australian team.

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Friday, March 21st, 2008

Vainikolo stars in Highlanders win

Evans, the oft-injured All Black pivot, returned to Dunedin with his new franchise the Blues and gave the 1200-strong crowd a decent taste of what theyll be missing now that hes trading his wares in the City of Sails.
By halftime Evans had scored 16 points with two tries one a straight missed tackle 10m out, the other from a charge down of an attempted Mike Delany clearing kick and three conversions and he looked pretty comfortable amongst his new company of star performers.
He was also getting a friendly reminder of the outrageousness of his decision to head back north by a small section of the terrace which took delight in suggesting he spends his free time engaged in activities which cannot be printed here.
However, there was enough from his Highlanders counterpart Daniel Bowden to suggest the southern franchise will not be completely lost at playmaker.
Outweighing Evans contribution after the break was left winger Vainikolo, the sort of player who could get the fans streaming back through the Brooks turnstiles.
Bowden was on hand to finish off a scorching chip and regather from Vainikolo before halftime and he laid on a nice try to fullback Mike Delany who had replaced James Wilson before the game after the Southlander rolled an ankle when he tripped over his dog just after the break.
Ezra Taylors try midway through the second half put the Highlanders back on level terms at 21-all after the Blues had led 21-7 at halftime and then the dangerous Vainikolo put the team ahead when he ran 65m to score untouched.
It was scintillating stuff, but it was little surprise for Highlanders coach Glenn Moore who first spotted the Northland draft pick early in the Air New Zealand Cup.
%26quot;He never was a secret for me. Hes a good player,%26quot; Moore said.
The second half turned out to be a Highlanders benefit.
They dominated at lineout time, particulary with Isaac Ross snaffling the oppositions throw at the front, and gradually earned cleaner ball from the scrum.
Possession and territory swung heavily in the Highlanders favour and under the new rules, that will generally translate into five-pointers.
What many expected to be a dispiriting final hitout before the Super 14 for the Highlanders was a confidence-boosting performance ahead of the opener against the Reds in Brisbane next weekend.

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Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Southlanders take out rivals

Well, no one was laughing at Rugby Park, in Invercargill, on Saturday as the Southland Maori senior team turned in a winning performance against its Otago counterpart that was much better than the 17-10 scoreline suggested.
Despite scant preparation - the team had not had a single practice where everyone was available - Southland dominated its traditional rival to retain the Sam Dawson trophy and confirm the favourites tag for next months Te Waipounamu tournament, an event Southland has won for the past two years.
In 1997 Otago beat Southland home and away by better than 100 points each time, but with a little encouragement from Rugby Southland, which now makes its con-tracted players available if it can, and some hard work from the likes of Jason Harrison and Jason Te Huia, those days are only a memory.
Harrison was pleased the Maori team could put on a winning outing on Rugby Park.
%26quot;The boys were determined to do well, put on a good show for our supporters,%26quot; Harrison said.
That they did.
Fullback Tane Puki opened the scoring with a typically cheeky chip and regather from the 22m line to score, while Pehi Te Whare laid on what would be the winning try when he intercepted and then kicked for the corner, despite being held in the tackle, for wing Kapa Moeke to dot down.
Robbie Robinson added a drop goal after halftime to put Southland out to a 17-3 lead, although Ben Perieras try got Otago back to within seven points with 10 to go.
Harrison said Southland could also expect to field strong Colts and womens teams at the Te Waipounamu tournament in Timaru.
It may also not be the last time you see Harrison, the former Stags halfback, wearing a maroon jersey on Rugby Park this season.

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Monday, January 28th, 2008

Rookies out to stake claim

The rookies will be trying to stake a claim for a starting berth come the competition opener in three weeks but eight of the starting 15 have yet to play a Super 14 game.
In Invercargills one and only taste of Super 14 rugby, former Waikato player Steven Setephano gets the early crack at posting a claim for the wide-open No 8 position with Ezra Taylor — the other likely option for the Highlanders at the foot of the scrum — starting from the bench tomorrow.
Former Northland pivot Daniel Bowden also gets the first crack in the No 10 jersey with him likely to go head to head with Southlands James Wilson for that spot when the Highlanders open the 2008 season against the Queensland Reds in Brisbane on February 15.
Four Southlanders, Jimmy Cowan, Tim Boys, David Hall and Chris King, get an ideal chance to impress after being named in the starting 15 for tomorrows game.
Fellow Stags Wilson and Hoani MacDonald have been included on an extended 12-man bench.
The other Southlander in this years Highlanders squad, Jamie Mackintosh, will not play in Invercargill tomorrow because he is still recovering from ankle surgery.
Looseforward Craig Newby is also unavailable and Cowan has been given the captains job.
Meanwhile, it hasnt taken long last years Highlanders player Callum Bruce to get his chance to prove his southern doubters wrong with the 24-year-old named to start at second five-eighth for the Chiefs.
Bruce was unwanted by the Highlanders this year and was drafted to the Hamilton-based franchise.
He made the move permanent last week when he signed with Waikato for the Air New Zealand Cup.
Former Southland age-group player and All Black Mils Muliaina will return to his home city and run on at fullback.
Stephen Donald (ankle), Liam Messam (knee and ankle strain), Sosene Anesi (sprained ankle) and Alex de Malmanche (back strain) have all been ruled out of playing for the Chiefs tomorrow because of injury.
Chiefs management have also opted to rest minor injuries to Dwayne Sweeney, Ben Castle, and Kristian Ormsby. Tomorrows game will kick-off at 2.30pm with four 20min quarters being played with breaks in between instead of the usual 40min periods.

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Friday, January 25th, 2008

Two UGA football players jailed

University of Georgia police arrested cornerback Donavon Baldwin, 21, for improper driving and driving under the influence at 3:05 a.m. Sunday.

Fullback Fred Munzenmaier, 19, was arrested 34 minutes later by university police for underage possession of alcohol and being a pedestrian walking in the roadway.

Both were booked into Athens-Clarke County Jail and later released on bond — $750 for Munzenmaier and $2,000 for Baldwin.

Georgia coach Mark Richt has suspended each of the players for at least the opening game against Georgia Southern. They also will have to perform community service and be subject to the university’s judicial review process.

“They know better, and I’m disappointed in both of them,” said Richt in a released statement. “They will have to pay a price, but it’s unfortunate the rest of the team will also have to suffer for their poor judgment.”

Baldwin, a junior from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., played in eight games primarily as a special teams player. He is expected to be a backup cornerback in 2008.

Munzenmaier, a sophomore from Norcross, played in nine games in 2007. He is expected to be a backup fullback in 2008.

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Thursday, January 24th, 2008

Seahawks ground game Rundown

The Seahawks offense was running nowhere fast well before the season skidded to a halt Saturday in Green Bay.

Seattle couldn’t gain 18 inches when it needed it most in Cleveland in November, didn’t have a player gain 100 yards in a game after September and finished with its fewest rushing yards in any season since 1999.

The run-down offense bottomed out in Green Bay with the franchise’s lowest rushing total in any game since 1998. Twenty-eight yards. That’s all the Seahawks ran for Saturday, and after the game, Shaun Alexander put words to a reality that was evident about four games into the season.

“We have some problems in the running game,” Alexander said, “and I think that we’re going to work really hard this offseason to fix them.”

It’s a necessity. One that will require some determination and perhaps a difficult decision or two. The Seahawks have a quarterback who had the most prolific season of his career, a defense that showed dramatic improvement at least it did before Saturday night but Seattle’s persistent and pronounced inability to run the ball betrayed the team in the snow of Green Bay.

“This is just a fine example of all the things that take good running playoff games, being on the road and playing in bad weather,” Alexander said afterward. “It was one of those things that, not only hoping that you run the ball well, it’s almost a must when you have those three situations.

“And when you don’t, it gets out of hand quickly.”

And this offseason Seattle must get a grip on that inability to run the ball.

Alexander turned 30 before the regular season started, and even in training camp people were checking the expiration date for elite running backs. He broke his wrist the first game, sprained his knee in the eighth game and averaged a career-low 3.5 yards per carry, which was less than backup Maurice Morris (4.5) and fullback Leonard Weaver (4.4).

But it’s more than just the man who carries the ball. It’s the men who block for him. Right tackle Sean Locklear is an unrestricted free agent and right guard Chris Gray will turn 38 this summer. Is Ray Willis ready to assume a bigger role? Is a potential free agent like Pittsburgh’s Alan Faneca worth the big bucks it would require to sign him?

The Seahawks stayed alive longer than three-fourths of the teams in this league, which constitutes a successful season in the NFL. But if Seattle is to get any further, it must address the difficulty it had running the ball. Unlike the 2006 season, injuries do not explain away the warts that became evident for the offense on Saturday. Seattle ran the ball just 15 times, despite holding a 14-0 lead early in the game. Can’t blame that on play-calling, though. The Seahawks never showed any sign of getting traction in the ground game.

That wasn’t a surprise considering Seattle’s seasonlong struggle to run the ball. Alexander gained 105 yards in the season-opening victory over Tampa Bay. He never gained that many yards in a game again.

Alexander will be 31 next season. His contract calls for him to make $4.48 million in 2008, according to the NFL Players Association. Seattle could bring him back as is, it could ask him to take a pay cut or it could release him. He would count $6.78 million against the cap if Seattle retained him without restructuring his contract. He would count at least $2.3 million against the Seahawks’ 2008 salary cap if the Seahawks cut him outright this offseason.

He wasn’t thinking about addition or subtraction after Saturday’s game. Just improvement.

“The first thing we do is, we all go look at film, go find the mistakes and correct them,” Alexander said. “I need to find a way to get out of the first game of the season without hurting anything or breaking anything. That would help.”

Alexander hurt his foot in the season opener in Detroit in 2006 and though he played the next two games, he was later diagnosed with a broken bone in his foot that kept him out six games. This season, he suffered a broken bone in his wrist in the season opener against the Bucs. He later missed three games because of a knee injury.

It wasn’t the beginning that will cast a shadow over this offseason, but how the season ended.

“We’ve been to the same spot now two years in a row,” Alexander said. “So whatever we’ve been doing in the offseason, it’s good enough only to get us here. So we’ve got to go find something to get us past this point.

“For me, if it means I’ve got to go take tumbling classes to make sure I don’t break something when I get hit, so be it. We’re going to find a way to get past this mark.”

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Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Free agency will test Seahawks’ connections

On debrief-and-depart day at Seahawks headquarters, it was time for the family members to go their separate ways after Seattle’s 42-20 loss to the Green Bay Packers in the NFL divisional playoffs.

The Seahawks locker room is, as defensive tackle Chuck Darby often calls it, a brotherhood. And many in that close-knit family hope it can stay intact.

“It’s not up to me, but I would like to see everybody [on defense] back,” linebacker Julian Peterson said after Saturday’s game. “I thought we did some great things. We have definitely a lot more room for improvement. Considering how we started off and how we finished, we did a great job.”

It’s certain with free agency beginning in early March that not every Seahawk from the NFC West championship team will be back next season. But the feeling after Saturday’s loss was that the Seahawks are in a good place as a team, having gone to the playoffs five consecutive seasons, won four straight division titles and established themselves as not just a top football team but one with a solid foundation as an organization.

Big-name, big-money players like Peterson, Patrick Kerney and Deon Grant have come to Seattle and flourished. Players say their success and that of the team can only help the Seahawks attract more high-profile free agents.

“You start it with the quarterback. We have a good quarterback,” said coach Mike Holmgren when asked what kind of team he thinks he has. “Offensively, I think we have a lot of good players. I think we have a good team. … We have some youth, we have some experience. We have a couple of guys that have played a long time, and probably we’ve got to look at how that’s going to go. But this is a good football team.”

Before free agency begins, the Seahawks must either re-sign or reapply the franchise tag to kicker Josh Brown, if they want him back. If they re-sign him, the Seahawks will have to decide if they want to use the franchise tag on a player like cornerback Marcus Trufant, whose contract is also expiring.

Trufant had his first Pro Bowl season, and his quiet demeanor, hometown appeal and work ethic have made him a good fit on the team general manager Tim Ruskell has put together. Trufant said he thought about getting his contract extended earlier this season, but when it didn’t happen, he moved on.

“You got to play ball regardless, so I just blocked it out all year and just kept playing ball,” Trufant said. “Just trying to ride for my teammates and help out any way possible.”

Asked if he’ll give the Seahawks every opportunity to bring him back, Trufant was noncommittal.

“I think so, but you just kind of have to play it by ear. The business is the business,” he said. “Really, I’m not committing either way.”

There also are decisions to make with other starters who could become free agents, like wide receiver D.J. Hackett, fullback Leonard Weaver and right tackle Sean Locklear. Also, do the Seahawks hang on to players that are well-seasoned but perhaps not as effective as they were in the past, like right guard Chris Gray, tight end Marcus Pollard, or even running back Shaun Alexander?

Pollard likely played his way out of Seattle on Saturday, misjudging two balls in the snow, one going through his hands in the end zone. He also fumbled, and after the game Holmgren strongly indicated that he would address the position.

Brown is optimistic he’ll reach a long-term deal with the Seahawks in the next month, before the franchise-tag deadline in late February.

“It’s guaranteed money, so there’s really no negative on the kicker’s part,” Brown said Sunday. “Typically, it’s more money than you’re asking for, anyway.”

Locklear has been a mainstay at right tackle for most of his four-year career, but he admitted he’s looking toward the next step in his life and career the free-agency period.

He also made clear that he loves his Seahawks teammates and the atmosphere in the locker room.

“You hear about other people going everywhere, and the grass is not always greener,” he said. “It’s going to be a big decision.”

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Monday, January 14th, 2008

Come on, feel the (real) noise

Maybe the Washington Redskins like playing with fire. Or maybe they are so convinced the Seahawks faithful at Qwest Field will not disrupt their offensive rhythm that they are brimming with confidence.

Either way, the battle line has been drawn. It’s one thing to challenge an opponent. But Washington has essentially called out Seattle’s 12th Man.

Those fighting words came from an article in the Washington Times on Thursday.

“That place has to be miked up because the last time we played there, it was ridiculous we couldn’t hear ourselves talk,” Washington fullback Mike Sellers, a Lacey native, said in the article. “For a stadium that small, it can’t be that loud.”

Was Sellers kidding? Did he know what he was saying? Who knows. But once the Seahawks got wind, they had a response.

“I think the 12th Man should get upset about that,” cornerback Jordan Babineaux said.

“Everyone that knows us … knows that we don’t pump in anything artificial,” coach Mike Holmgren said. “It’s all our fans. They have learned to do that. They realize how much they help us, and so you don’t have to encourage them a lot.

“Now I would suspect, that if they think people are accusing us of doing something like that, they might even come with a little more voice. It’s a wonderful atmosphere for a home team to play in, and they help us, there’s no question about that.”

Washington center Casey Rabach said his team wasn’t worried, unable to imagine any stadium louder than Minnesota’s Metrodome.

Yet Qwest Field noise has been a factor in producing 68 false starts against the opposing team since the beginning of the 2005 season. That’s 11 more than at the Metrodome.

“It’s not a good place to go for a playoff game,” said Washington coach Joe Gibbs.

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Sunday, January 6th, 2008

Hawks sink Washington 35-14, face Packers next

With a shocking turnaround early in the fourth quarter, all signs pointed to Washington’s storybook season adding one of its most compelling chapters yet.

But in a matter of 28 seconds, the Seahawks struck back to take hold of a 35-14 victory Saturday in the NFC wild-card playoffs.

With 28 seconds between them, Matt Hasselbeck’s 20-yard touchdown pass to D.J. Hackett and Marcus Trufant’s 78-yard interception return for a touchdown turned a 14-13 deficit to Washington into a 28-14 lead as the Seahawks rallied for their fourth consecutive home playoff victory.

The Seahawks advance to play their third divisional-round game in as many years. They will play at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Green Bay for a chance to advance to the NFC Championship game.

The Seahawks took a 13-0 lead into the fourth quarter, but Washington rallied. Quarterback Todd Collins hit Antwaan Randle El over the middle for a 7-yard touchdown on the first play of the quarter to cut the lead to 13-7.

Two plays later from scrimmage, Hasselbeck threw the first of two fourth-quarter interceptions. On the following drive, Collins threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Santana Moss on a crossing route.

And like that, with 12:38 left, Washington had the lead, 14-13.

Disaster seemed imminent after the following kickoff, when a short Washington kick took an awkward bounce past returner Nate Burleson. Washington’s Anthony Mix recovered at the Seattle 14-yard line. But the drive stalled, and Washington kicker Shaun Suisham missed wide left on a 30-yard field-goal attempt that kept the Seahawks’ deficit at one.

With 8:03 left, the Seahawks took over at the Washington 42, and a five-play drive ended with Hasselbeck’s 20-yard touchdown pass to Hackett, who was wide open down the middle. Hackett finished with 101 yards receiving.

Hasselbeck’s pass to Marcus Pollard on the two-point conversion put Seattle ahead 21-14 with 6:06 left. On the next play from scrimmage, Trufant intercepted Collins and ran 78 yards down the left sideline for a touchdown with 5:38 left.

Jordan Babineaux added on with a 57-yard interception return for a touchdown with 27 seconds left.

The Seahawks led most of the way until the crazy fourth quarter. They took the lead with 3:45 left in the first quarter on their longest run of the afternoon and fullback Leonard Weaver’s longest run in almost three months. On first down, Leonard Weaver ran right off tackle, then cut to the sideline before diving over the pylon for a 17-yard score.

Josh Brown added a 50-yard field goal in second quarter and a 33-yarder in the third — both into the wind — to give the Seahawks a 13-0 lead going into the fourth quarter.

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Sunday, January 6th, 2008