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Curry leads in campaign funds

Incumbent’s contributions are more than double that of his opponent, records show. Otting says closet voters have helped her.

October 09, 2008|By Brianna Bailey

Documents released this week show that Newport Beach District 7 City Councilman Keith Curry has raised more than $60,000 this year to finance his reelection campaign and that political newcomer Gloria Alkire has poured $25,000 of her own money into her District 2 council seat bid.

With about 250 separate donations, Curry has managed to amass a war chest more than twice the size of what his challenger for the District 7 seat, community activist Dolores Otting, has raised.

Curry’s backers include suspense novelist and Newport Beach resident Dean Koontz and his, wife Gerda, who each gave the councilman $500, campaign finance documents show. Johnson Fain, one of five architectural firms in the running to build the next Newport Beach City Hall, also donated $500 to Curry. Richard Afable, chief executive of Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, donated $249, campaign records show.

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Curry said he felt he needed to raise a large sum of money for his campaign because he is concerned that Otting is attracting the support of political action committees, who will spend money on her campaign in the form of independent expenditures.

A political action committee called Taxpayers for Safer Neighborhoods sent out a mailer to Newport Beach residents earlier this week in support of Otting.

“I have to raise a lot more money to tell the truth and get the message out,” Curry said.

Otting has raised $25,922, according to campaign disclosure statements.

Otting’s supporters include leader of the rehabilitation home group Concerned Citizens of Newport Beach, Denys Oberman, who gave Otting $300. Former chairman of the paint manufacturer Behr Process Corp., Jack Croul, who also was a major donor in the Measure B campaign earlier this year, gave Otting $500, campaign records show.

Otting also garnered several donations from other Crouls, including Kingsley Croul, Spencer Croul and Leah Croul Fletcher, who all donated $500 each. Sanitation company Rainbow Disposal Co., also donated $500 to Otting’s campaign.

“I feel like I’m on target, but you can always do more. I know how to run a grass-roots campaign,” Otting said.

Otting said she is not intimidated by Curry’s fundraising prowess.

“He’s the incumbent, and they always raise more money,” she said. “I get a lot of the closet voters who give $99 because they don’t want to appear on the donor’s list.”

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