Yesterday, Dr. Liane Leedom wrote that “false beliefs about sociopaths are very dangerous.” She quoted a judge who said:
“Well I tell you, the world is full of productive sociopaths. Some of them hold high public office. Some of them are lawyers. It could be that a couple of them are judges, and sociopathy by itself is not necessarily a dangerous condition. It can be productive. I think it was Clarence Darrow who commented on that”¦”
Today I’d like to present a case to prove her point.
Over the last 10 days, the Philadelphia Inquirer has been reporting about Carl Greene, the executive director of the Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA).
The agency Green heads is the city’s biggest landlord, providing housing to 81,000 low-income residents. The PHA has a budget of $345 million per year, funded by the federal government, and 1,150 employees.
Greene, who was hired in 1998, currently earns $306,000 per year. But 10 days ago, it was revealed that his $615,000 townhouse was in foreclosure, and he owed the IRS $52,000 in back taxes.
And, one of his former employees has filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against him. The woman says Greene promised her a promotion, if she submitted to his sexual advances.
Greene’s tenure
Here’s where the “productive sociopath” comes in.
Before Greene was hired, the PHA had a history of waste, fraud and abuse. Greene turned the agency around, and it’s now considered to be a major success. Public housing high rises—magnets for drugs and crime—have been demolished and replaced by townhouses. Complaints about Section 8 housing have disappeared.
But here’s what else has been going on during Greene’s tenure:
• Since 2004, six women have filed complaints against Greene with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleging sexual harassment, verbal abuse, retaliation, and sex discrimination. (Greene denies them.)
• Greene spent $1 million over the last two years for outside public relations experts, even though the agency has an in-house spokesperson.
• Four times a year, for the last several years, the PHA staff, outside lawyers and consultants were expected to pay up to $150 each for dinners at expensive restaurants in honor of Greene. According to the Inquirer,
There was an annual party to celebrate Greene’s birthday, one to mark his anniversary with the agency, another to laud his accomplishments, and, at Christmas, a breakfast at the Four Seasons Hotel.
Those gatherings were small compared with the bash PHA put together for Greene’s 10th anniversary on April 11, 2008. Hundreds of vendors, attorneys and “friend[s] of PHA” received letters asking them to donate $1,000 to $5,000 to Tenant Support Services Inc., a PHA nonprofit on which Greene has been a board member.
• In 2002, an audit by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development described Greene as a “demanding supervisor” who drove “a number of executive personnel” to quit.
• Employees say he’s created a culture of “fear and intimidation” at the PHA.
Transformation
What’s really strange about this case is how, back in 1998, Ed Rendell, then mayor of Philadelphia and now governor of Pennsylvania, worked so hard to hire Carl Greene. At the time, Greene was head of the Detroit Housing Commission, and one of his employees had accused him of sexual harassment. At first Greene turned down the Philadelphia job, but then accepted it. According to the Inquirer, he signed a three-year contract with an amazing stipulation:
If he were found liable of sexual harassment in Detroit, PHA could fire him – but would still have to pay the balance of his contract, then worth $160,000 a year.
“One simple reason,” Rendell said last week, when asked about that clause. “When I took over as chair of the Philadelphia Housing Authority, it was perhaps the worst public-housing authority in the nation. . . . I don’t think it’s an understatement to say now that PHA is the best in the nation.”
The transformation is due to Greene, whose work “has been stunning,” Rendell said. “He has done more to improve the lives of poor Philadelphians than anyone I know.”
Bloody daggers
Money problems, sexual harassment, self-promotion, and a management style based on bullying—Carl Greene sounds like a classic sociopath. Here’s what an Inquirer columnist wrote about him:
The rap on Greene was, and is, that he’s an effective egomaniac. A vicious visionary, a determined developer, a brutal boss ”¦ Politicians and advocates learned to accommodate the two Carls because he controlled zillions in federal money and the fate of the city’s most vulnerable residents.
In other words, according to his supporters, Carl Greene was getting the job done. If a few folks got steamrolled in the process, well, that was just collateral damage that they really didn’t want to know about.
When all these troubles came to light, what did Greene do? First, he disappeared—for several days, no one knew where he was. When he did talk to the media, he apologized for his personal failings.
He also said, “People with bloody daggers are doing whatever they can to finish me off.”
UPDATE:
Cost to settle sex-harassment cases against Philadelphia Housing chief near $900,000 on Philly.com.
In 2003, PHA planned to solicit big contractors on Philly.com.
Former Housing and Urban Development director ‘not surprised’ by Carl Greene’s troubles on Philly.com.
One Step~
Are you doing EDMR? If not, has anyone here tried it or know anyone that has? I’m seriously considering it.
One step!
oooooh, you are SOOOOOO right.
I forget–when can I say TOWANDA???
Hopeful,
I have done the EMDR and it is WONDERFULLY HELPFUL for the symptoms of PTSD. It gets help QUICKLY too which is one of the greatest things I think about it.
‘I think sometimes my intensity has been offputting—I don’t know. Maybe I’m just projecting, but my point is, that people don’t seem to really get it. They usually just want to think someone is a garden-variety jerk”“no big deal. ‘
hp6596 – completely! i scared off my two best friends (hmmm, guess they weren’t). they TRULY didn’t get it. but neither did they really try. they knew what the spath was at the end of it all…but they were not able to handle how i couldn’t handle what happened…thought i should not be messed up, shouldn’t have PTSD, should be my same old self…nope, won’t ever be again. and thank g_d for lf – i can say horrible things here like, ‘i truly wish the spath was dead’, and people just nod their heads and think, ‘yah, me too’, or ‘she’s come far’, or ‘she’s got a way to go’….but they don’t run off and pretend nothing’s freaking happening, or that i am not a mess. there is something nice about no one here ‘knowing’ me pre spath…there are no old expectations.
maybe having my friends flee is easier for me in a way. i don’t have to struggle to be who i was and am no longer.
Oxy,
I think I’m going to try it. In fact, I’ve certainly got nuthin’ to lose. I called someone last week and she called back and I haven’t gotten back to her yet. I’ll call first thing in the morn. Thanks for the FYI, and I’m so glad you’ve had success with it!
I forget–is Towanda context appropriate here? hehehe
hopeful6596 – i am doing nuerofeedback – http://www.brainandhealth.com/
i have done EMDR in the past for another reason. it was excellent. i had seen many people die busted up at car accident scenes, lost friends and lovers, and my mom’s life was decimated by a bad car accident… approaching driving was traumatic for me. I used EMDR. worked very well to break through the very old trauma. I got my license at 40 and became an excellent driver. when i am driving all the time i am confident and assertive…and I love driving!
and girl, you use TOWANDA anytime the spirit moves you!
One Step,
You were traumatized by this guy’s behavior and the ensuing spathisodes, as has everyone here at LF. We need people who have the quality of character and are strong enough to support us–even if they may not understand fully what our experience is. Example: I can talk about my friends’ birth of their children, but since I haven’t had children, I don’t FULLY know what it’s like. I’m not sure that was even a good example, but my point is that I can get it intellectually and conceptually, I haven’t been through the actual experience to have it integrated on an emotional level. Same with peeps that haven’t been through spathisodes–lucky them. But you get my drift, eh?
yup, i get it. i have a friend, who def. doesn’t understand from any kind of experience and she does get edgy when i rant sometimes, BUT she freaking tells me. SHE COMMUNICATES. She even read ‘the sociopath next door.’ but i think she is also rather interested in psychology generally, which the other folks aren’t interested in.
(and, now for the confusing part of the show: my ppath is a woman who pretended to be 21 people – and the one she served me on the platter all deep fried and yummy was a queer boy. it’s complicated. hens has awarded me the coveted ‘weirdest spath’ prize. I know the ‘boy’ online and on phone. and members of ‘his’ family too. the ppath is an infamous ppath. she’s getting outed more and more and there is more and more about her online. bless her heart. (insert dagger here))
Onestep,
speaking of child birth, you know I wish sometimes we could tie a plastic bag over their heads, tie it really tight around their necks, and call it “retroactive condom.” Would sure make life more simple.
The weirdest part about your “weirdest spath” thingie, One, is that yours is NOT UNIQUE, there was one I read about somewhere else (was it on here? CRS!!!! Gosh I hate that I can’t remember.) Anyway, this person a young lady, had another young lady she met on line pretend to be a “young man” and also pretended to be “his” sister and got to be friends with the young lady and it was terrible. That was bad enough, but 21???? is that 10 and 1/2 times worse? or just 10 1/2 more weird?
Not laughing at you, One, I know at the time it must h ave been horrific, but at least you know you are NOT alone in being caught is something this weird.
One Step,
Whoa! That is some complicated shite! Ones, be very happy you are away from this person. There is nothing you or anyone else could have done differently. We all make mistakes within our relationships, but their “stuff” is their stuff. They are sick regardless of our own stuff.
That is very cool your friend communicates–and I think it’s great that she read the book by Martha Stout. I did as well, and I too am interested in all that stuff. My concentration is Psychology for my undergrad.
Nitey nite–gotta go to bed. Almost midnight here!
hopeful6596