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How Whatcom County Protected a Corrupt Natural Resources Planner, and Became Corrupt Itself
INTRODUCTION:
Far far away, behind the word mountains, far from the countries Vokalia and Consonantia, there live the blind texts. She packed her seven versalia, put her initial int belt and made herself on the way her home. Far far away, behind the word mountains, far from the countries Vokalia and Consonantia.
A Whatcom County Natural Resources Planner used his regulatory power over wetland permits and critical areas to steer properties toward mitigation credits — then profit from them. An 80-year-old property owner was among those affected. The financial trail points to nearly three-quarters of a million dollars in alleged gains.
The Castlerock property wasn't a one-time windfall. The pattern extends to properties purchased by Mahaffie's girlfriend and his company — and to a personal mitigation bank worth over $500,000 that Mahaffie could offer to the very developers whose permits he controlled. The same regulatory power that made properties "unbuildable" was the same power that determined who could fix them.
When citizens connected the dots, they didn't just talk — they documented everything. Property records, permit timelines, transaction histories, business registrations, and a clear pattern of regulatory decisions that benefited Mahaffie personally. They filed a formal 120-page complaint. Whatcom County was now on record. It could no longer claim it didn't know.
After the whitewash report, county attorneys formalized the outcome with an official all-clear letter — using legal language to characterize documented conflicts of interest as permissible conduct. The letter wasn't a finding of fact. It was a paper shield designed to end the conversation and protect the institution from accountability.
In October 2024, Whatcom County Planning Director Mark Personius sent a threatening letter to a citizen who had shared information about the investigation. Not a correction. Not a denial. A threat. This is what government accountability looks like when the system is protecting itself — not the public.
The evidence is on the record. The cover-up is documented. The threats are in writing. Now Whatcom County Council faces a choice: investigate this properly under state law, or become part of the cover-up by doing nothing. This final installment names the specific actions the Council can and should take — and makes clear that the public is watching.
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This is the last call for big chances and discounted prices. Get the most out of Focus theme today.