Still Standing: Jeff Bumb, Bay 101's ostracized founder, boasts that despite various local, state and federal investigations over the years he has emerged squeaky clean. She told police about at least seven other sexual encounters she had with her cousin after that. Still Standing: Jeff Bumb, Bay 101's ostracized founder, boasts that despite various local, state and federal investigations over the years he has emerged squeaky clean. A FEW DAYS AFTER returning from his son's Oct. 13, 1995, military graduation in San Diego, Jeff and his wife, Elizabeth, got some appalling news: Their 14-year-old daughter had been involved in a sexual relationship with an older male cousin. One of George Bumb Sr.'s granddaughters explained to police that her family was very old-fashioned: "The woman gets the short end of the deal; she is a whore. In fact, Tim and George had to agree not to collaborate with other Bumbs on any new business venture. So Jeff, Brian and the remaining non-family partners backed out of Bay 101, handing everything over to Tim and George Jr. Jeff signed a deal with his brothers that prohibited him from owning Bay 101 stock until he got all the necessary licenses. According to Jeff, there was tremendous pressure from his father and others in the family to keep the incest a secret. "And I told you that I loved you and you are like a father to me. After learning of the incident, Jeff and wife Elizabeth did not report the matter to police immediately. There were flowers everywhere. It wasn't the money, either. But Jeff and his family started hearing that instead of showing concern and support for his daughter, George Bumb Sr. and others in the family were blaming his freshman daughter for the incident and not her adult-age cousin. The elder Bumb may not have been feeling well, but he wasn't too sick to remember who was boss in this family. Christopher Gardner Tim and George Jr. worried that pressuring state and city officials to deal Jeff back in at Bay 101 would backfire and authorities would close down the card room. Ultimately, the charges against the older Bumb were reduced to a misdemeanor. He asked longtime family attorney Ron Werner if his brothers could write a recommendation letter for him, something state officials had told him he would need to be considered eligible for a gaming license. One of George Bumb Sr.'s granddaughters explained to police that her family was very old-fashioned: "The woman gets the short end of the deal; she is a whore. But he didn't cash out. "And when I visited you at your home I told you that other than God you are the only person I've gotten down on my knees for," Venzon says on page 7. Or at least he thought he didn't. "Hell, no," George Bumb replied. ALL TOGETHER, the intrafamily litigation has spanned nearly three years. "My issue with [George Bumb Sr.]," Jeff Bumb complains about his father, "was his control of where you lived, what kind of house you bought, where your children went to school, who your friends are, whether your children went to college, who they would marry, what kind of wedding they would have." At one point in the investigation, sheriff's detectives had Jeff's daughter call Matthew while he was working at the Flea Market to confirm the sexual activities. ON AUG. 11, 1995, Jeff sat in his Flea Market office scribbling on a piece of paper, plotting his grand return to his peach palace. The guy doesn't get a slap on the hand." During his long tenure at the Flea Market, Venzon apparently developed a close relationship with George Bumb Sr. He and his brothers had a plan, he says. "I'm a big boy." As a compromise of sorts, he was debating whether he should apply for a license as a gaming-club manager instead of as an owner. AN ATTORNEY involved likened the whole contentious affair to a divorce. The two, she said, never talked about what was going on while it was happening. The couple even had a purchase contract for a $850,000 house on Golf Links Road. The elder Bumb may not have been feeling well, but he wasn't too sick to remember who was boss in this family. "They had to find Snow White and Cinderella," Tim Bumb says, "and that was George and I." I'm on the hook for $15 million. According to Jeff, there was tremendous pressure from his father and others in the family to keep the incest a secret. "I'm a big boy." Don't Shoot: George Bumb Sr., the publicity-shy patriarch of the Bumb family and creator of the Flea Market, in a rare photo which appeared in California Today magazine in 1980. In a fit, he took the paper he was writing on, crumpled it up and threw it out the office door. "He worked for me." Eight days after the molestation incident was reported to police--and one day after Jeff Bumb formally refused his father's $6.9 million buyout offer--George Bumb Sr. sent Jeff a curt typewritten memo informing Jeff that he was terminated effective immediately and had to clean out his desk before 5pm. And Brian, the handsome and gregarious youngest brother, was in charge of day-to-day operations at the Flea Market. He demanded $10 million from his brothers to compensate him for violating the purported secret Bay 101 deal. "My issue with [George Bumb Sr.]," Jeff Bumb complains about his father, "was his control of where you lived, what kind of house you bought, where your children went to school, who your friends are, whether your children went to college, who they would marry, what kind of wedding they would have." Some improprieties did turn up: Bumb & Associates, a partnership including the four brothers and their father, had failed to file required reports disclosing more than $100,000 in political contributions made between 1989 and 1992. Well, guess what? "Jeff is a wheeler and dealer," explained his Uncle John, the Flea Market's executive vice president and owner of the Skeeball Arcade. It's like we had no life except for the family." He demanded $10 million from his brothers to compensate him for violating the purported secret Bay 101 deal. Christopher Gardner The district attorney's office says that Bumb attorney Ron Werner turned the letter over to authorities immediately after it came in the mail. "What am I going to say to the vice president?" And Brian, the handsome and gregarious youngest brother, was in charge of day-to-day operations at the Flea Market. Tim and George, under pressure from then Police Chief Lou Cobarruviaz, had already signed an agreement a year earlier that prohibited Brian, Jeff and their father from having anything to do with the card room. (In one case, George Bumb Sr. loaned Jeff $31,250 in 1992 for his son to invest in Bay 101.) Police reports would suggest she had, "for about a year," been giving "blow jobs" to 19-year-old Matthew Bumb, son of George Bumb Jr. Don't Shoot: George Bumb Sr., the publicity-shy patriarch of the Bumb family and creator of the Flea Market, in a rare photo which appeared in California Today magazine in 1980. She recalled that she was dressed in shorts and a T-shirt covered by a blanket. Within weeks, Jeff says, his six-month-old dog was dead, his cat was dead and the tires of a family car were slashed. "Could he [Jeff] do any other work on his own behalf?" The Bumbs had a plenty of experience with a cash business through the Flea Market, which they've run for almost 40 years. The couple even had a purchase contract for a $850,000 house on Golf Links Road. He demanded $10 million from his brothers to compensate him for violating the purported secret Bay 101 deal. When the Vatican eliminated Latin from the Catholic mass in the '60s, George Bumb Sr. responded by building his own chapel, named for the rebellious St. Athanasius, at the base of Mt. And it was very explicit in there that no Bumbs could have anything to do with the club. "My issue with [George Bumb Sr.]," Jeff Bumb complains about his father, "was his control of where you lived, what kind of house you bought, where your children went to school, who your friends are, whether your children went to college, who they would marry, what kind of wedding they would have." George Bumb Jr., the quiet one with a flair for things mechanical, was already at the controls of Air One Helicopter. George Bumb Jr., the quiet one with a flair for things mechanical, was already at the controls of Air One Helicopter. But Jeff says the loan dispute screwed up their moving plans. Almost four months later, on July 21, 1998, George Bumb Sr. appeared in the downtown offices of Berliner Cohen to have his deposition taken. Christopher Gardner "I don't need their help," he barked at Werner. OK--we didn't get out--OK? When family patriarch and Flea Market mastermind George Bumb Sr. was invited to attend a party with President Clinton in San Francisco a couple of years ago, he refused to go and sent his community relations specialist, Betsy Bryant, instead. "I mean," Jeff later said at a deposition, "it was a time of hurt and heartache for us--and not my father, not my mother, not my brother George, not my brother Tim, not Brian could care less." OK--we didn't get out--OK? George Bumb Sr.'s loan-repayment demands came in July 1996, just as his oldest son and his wife were about to move to Los Gatos and break away from the family and its eastside enclave. (Tim Bumb, the school's director, says it was put there to save on rent. AN ATTORNEY involved likened the whole contentious affair to a divorce. Even though all the lights were out, she told police that she knew it was Matthew "because the moonlight shined into the room through the large windows that faced the ocean." Jeff's daughter interrupted Matthew and said, "And I didn't know better. Of the four brothers, Tim and George had faced the least resistance from state gaming officials. Jeff was also getting word from his nieces and nephews that his father said at a family poker game: "If it was up to him, all the grandchildren would marry each other." Bumb family attorney Ron Werner suggested that Jeff and his family had a hidden motive for waiting nearly a month to report the incident to police. She told police about at least seven other sexual encounters she had with her cousin after that. He followed that with suits alleging breach of contract, wrongful termination and misrepresentation. Some improprieties did turn up: Bumb & Associates, a partnership including the four brothers and their father, had failed to file required reports disclosing more than $100,000 in political contributions made between 1989 and 1992. "I mean," Jeff later said at a deposition, "it was a time of hurt and heartache for us--and not my father, not my mother, not my brother George, not my brother Tim, not Brian could care less." "They didn't teach anything about this. Well, guess what? And that ain't happening because I can't afford it." "And when I visited you at your home I told you that other than God you are the only person I've gotten down on my knees for," Venzon says on page 7. Still Standing: Jeff Bumb, Bay 101's ostracized founder, boasts that despite various local, state and federal investigations over the years he has emerged squeaky clean.
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