CHAUNCEY BAILEY PROJECT PART 2 OF 3
By Cecily Burt and G.W. Schulz
CHAUNCEY BAILEY PROJECT
E.M. Health Services, a home health care company founded by a
high-ranking member of Your Black Muslim Bakery, opened for business in
July 1996, flush with a $1.1 million loan from the city of Oakland. But shortly over a year later, signs of trouble already
plagued the business — and a review of documents shows that the
founders of the struggling company paid themselves lavish salaries, and
lucrative consulting contracts went to bakery associates and family
members. More than a decade later, the city hasn't received one penny
in repayment for the loan, and questions remain over why city officials
granted the loan in the first place. Under the terms of E.M.'s loan, the company wasn't scheduled
to make principal payments for two years — until 1998 — but just 15
months after getting the money, CEO Nedir Bey asked to defer repayments
until 2000. The city, which had already questioned several invoices
submitted by the company, did not approve the extension. Instead,
officials responded by requesting an audit of E.M.'s books. In his request for an extension, Bey did not mention that in
May 1997, E.M. Health had applied to the California Department of
Insurance for a $2 million loan to purchase a 4,000-square-foot office building on 17th Street in downtown Oakland. In his application to the state, Bey cited Oakland's loan approval
as proof of his good reputation, even though by then the city was
already questioning tens of thousands of dollars in operating expenses
claimed by his company. The $1.1 million loan agreement called for E.M. Health to
begin repaying monthly interest and principal payments of $19,692 on
May 1, 1998, the date the company was projected to have enough billable
clients to break even. But May came and went with no payments.
And, documents show, E.M. Health would ask for more.
But the story of how the business, a subsidiary of the
now-bankrupt Your Black Muslim Bakery, received the money despite a
flawed business plan and a disturbing criminal incident in Nedir Bey's
past illustrates the extent politics and pressure played in officials'
decision to approve the loan. Bakery members also have been linked to several violent
incidents, including the Aug. 2 shooting death of journalist Chauncey
Bailey, as well as alleged real estate and welfare fraud and child
rape. Details of the company's financial growth were outlined in
correspondence between Nedir Bey and various city staff who reviewed
documentation to support the original $1.1 million loan application, as
well as documents surrounding Nedir Bey's later attempts to obtain a
$2.5 million loan that was never granted. In a January 1997 letter to the city, E.M. Health said it had
contracts with 13 patients between October and December 1996, which
should have generated more than $23,000 in revenues for the three-month
period. The same letter said seven would-be home health aides had
graduated from a training program run by a different company. Those
aides could not be sent out to care for Medicare/MediCal patients until
they passed their certification exams that month, the letter said. The letter also reveals that E.M. Health had a goal of
generating $1.2 million in income in 1997 by providing services to 50
clients. The company instead reported large losses in 1996 and 1997. It started to pull in more revenue early the following year,
according to a letter from former Economic Development Chief Bill
Claggett addressed to then-City Manager Robert Bobb. Clagget's letter stated that the company had a net profit of
$30,068 for the first two months of 1998, but was still experiencing
delays in receiving reimbursements for its Medicare/MediCal clients. By June 17, 1998, Nedir Bey stated in a letter to city loan
department manager Teri Robinson-Green that E.M. was "doing about
$80,000 a month." In another letter listing E.M.'s achievements, Bey
claimed the company had hired 55 people, trained 30 people and served
more than 200 patients. But still no loan payments.
E.M. Health's agreement with the city stated that the company
and its employees, many of whom were also trusted bakery associates and
family members, would not profit from the business. Any extra income
after expenses would be funneled back into Qiyamah, a nonprofit
organization founded by the bakery to further Yusuf Bey's community
work. Qiyamah was E.M. Health's parent company. But the salaries, car lease and billing rates charged by
bakery members who moonlighted as consultants to E.M. Health coupled
with too few billable clients and delays in reimbursements by Medicare
and MediCal all but ensured there wouldn't be enough money left over to
pay back the city's loans. "It's interesting how that millionaire from the skating rink
got $12 million and declared bankruptcy and never paid the city back,"
Nedir Bey said, referring to the builders of Oakland's downtown ice
rink, who defaulted on an $11 million loan before E.M. Health Services
was funded. The city took possession of the rink. "Is the city calling
him and trying to ask him those kind of questions? "The bottom line for me, I'm trying to move forward with my life. Everything that you're discussing is in my past," Bey said.
A POPULAR MESSAGE E.M. Health's business model resonated with Oakland's black
politicians who were eager to even the playing field for black
businesses that had not gotten an equitable share of city contracts and
loans. They lauded the accomplishments of Yusuf Bey — the controversial
but charismatic founder of Your Black Muslim Bakery — and viewed the
health care proposal as a continuation of his good works. The plan also resonated with the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development and appeared to meet its criteria for loan
funding. E.M. Health's $1.1 million loan came from a $44 million pot of
money the federal agency offered Oakland to fund start-up organizations
that sought to provide jobs in low-income communities.Still, in a June 4, 1996, letter to Kofi Bonner, Oakland's
then-director of community development, local HUD director Steven Sachs
wrote that "E.M. Health Services business plan is still being developed
..." with many "issues still to be worked out."Sachs urged the city to consider "providing a much smaller amount of financial assistance to this start-up business." That same night, despite Bonner's warning that Nedir Bey had
not yet provided several documents the city required for the loan, nor
procured a provisional license from state health officials, the council
voted to give the company a $275,000 advance on the $1.1 million HUD
loan. In fact, even though E.M. Health was $63,000 in arrears in
its business taxes, the company ended up getting $538,000 in interim
loans from the city of Oakland over the next six months, before HUD
officials reimbursed Oakland for the money in April 1997. Nedir Bey relied on that type of sentiment when he approached
the city in February 1998 and asked for an additional $2.5 million —
half loan, half grant — to buy a shopping center in West Oakland to
house a new urgent care clinic, in addition to funds he sought
unsuccessfully from the state department of insurance. The shopping center plan lacked numerous financial details and included no downpayment or personal investment by Nedir Bey. Nonetheless, he lined up his supporters and produced letters of
recommendation from well-respected medical experts, including David
Kears, director of the Health Care Services Agency for Alameda County;
Michael Lenoir, president of the Ethnic Health Institute at Alta
Bates/Summit Hospitals; and H. Geoffrey Watson, president of the Golden
State Medical Association, which represents 2,000 African-American
physicians in California. Claggett said he would have loved to have someone revitalize
that blighted shopping center, but nothing about E.M.'s finances by
then suggested it could support a new business venture. City records
show that E.M. Health incurred losses of $425,000 during 1996 and
$343,000 in 1997. E.M. Health was already three months behind on the payments
for the $1.1 million loan, and a mere six months later, E.M. Health's
parent, the Qiyamah Corporation, would default on a $100,000 bank loan originally signed by Saleem Ali Bey, also known as Darren Wright. 'I don't think they ever gave up' Nedir Bey nonetheless again pressured the city into rushing the
review of his new loan request. By July 1998, he sought direct backing
from then-Mayor Elihu Harris, whose father was an E.M. Health patient
for a short time, according to company records on file with the city."Staff should be more inform (sic) on the procedures and
policies of the city of Oakland as opposed to me having to check with
the mayor and then letting you know what you can and cannot do," Bey
said in a July 1998 letter to Gregory Hunter, now Oakland's
redevelopment agency director, apparently unhappy that the request had
not yet been forwarded to the loan review committee. Kears recalls Nedir Bey first approached him for a letter of
recommendation, but that evolved into a request for money to finance
outreach efforts for new patients. The county wound up giving Bey a
$25,000 contract, the most it could provide without approval from the
Alameda County Board of Supervisors. Kears said he doesn't know whether
E.M. Health ever submitted invoices to use any of the money. The $2.5 million loan application eventually stalled as Nedir
Bey failed to produce documentation requested by the city related to
the first infusion of cash, the repayment of which was falling further
and further behind. By the time the city sent its first default letter to E.M.
Health in December 1998, the payments were eight months past due and
the company had crumbled. City employees would later discover that the company's
offices had been cleaned out, office furnishings and computer equipment
pledged as collateral gone. Claggett said that not long afterward, he was questioned by
the FBI about E.M. Health and Nedir Bey. The FBI's San Francisco office
did not return a call seeking comment about the probe. No way to collect The Oakland city attorney sued E.M. Health. In December 2000 in an attempt to recover $1.45million in loan
funds and $98,600 in unpaid interest. The city won a default judgment,
but no one could collect on it, in part because there was no personal
guarantee made when the loan was awarded. City Attorney John Russo said recently that it is up to the
city's Finance Department to collect on the $1.5 million judgment,
which remains unpaid today. The city wasn't the only one left holding worthless paper
when E.M. Health deteriorated. Orthopedic and Neurological
Rehabilitation, Speech Pathology Inc. of Los Gatos sued Nedir Bey and
Cecil R. Moody, an E.M. Health agent listed among business registration
records, in 2000 to recover $8,700 worth of services it provided to the
company's patients over a two-month period. According to the lawsuit,
E.M. Health billed MediCal and Medicare but never reimbursed the
company. In May, Daulet Bey, a Muslim wife of Yusuf Bey and mother of
current bakery CEO Yusuf Bey IV, 21, and her daughter Jannah Bey filed
papers to revive Qiyamah's state business license. It's not clear
whether bakery associates plan to use Qiyamah to attempt a new business
venture. The license was promptly suspended again by the state
Franchise Tax Board for failing to file an information report in 2005,
according to spokeswoman Denise Azimi. Nedir Bey's costly experiment was finished and thousands in unaccounted for public funds were left in his wake. MediaNews investigative reporters Thomas Peele and Josh
Richman, KQED reporter Judy Campbell, and radio reporter Bob Butler
contributed to this report. Cecily Burt is a MediaNews staff writer.
G.W. Schulz is a staff writer at the San Francisco Bay Guardian. SOURCE OF THIS STORY













Recent Comments