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(That thing that involved Jeff when Bay 101 was scheduled to open but didn't.)" 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. So Jeff, Brian and the remaining non-family partners backed out of Bay 101, handing everything over to Tim and George Jr. It wasn't the idea of gambling. "They didn't teach anything about this. Jeff Bumb says he believes that state and local investigators at the time of Bay 101's limbo were investigating a rumor that Jeff had tried to get someone killed, a charge Jeff denies. "Could he [Jeff] do any other work on his own behalf?" 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. And it was very explicit in there that no Bumbs could have anything to do with the club. When he was jailed, the desperate cop wrote a 15-page handwritten letter in pencil to George Bumb in May 1997 asking the Flea Market owner to bail him out. And for nearly a month, they did. But Jeff was confident. When Jeff and Brian were denied licenses for Bay 101, Tim (above) and brother George Jr. jumped in. Ultimately, the charges against the older Bumb were reduced to a misdemeanor. Behind the scenes, the Bumbs suspected their potential gambling competitors and a disgruntled former Flea Market employee of giving investigators unsubstantiated material to use against them. The teenagers had been drinking booze earlier in the night. In 1970, Patrick teamed up with several musicians from around San Jose who had a band . Snow White or Cinderella? 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." Ultimately, Jeff says with resignation, he hopes I find the truth, "not my truth, not their truth, just the truth." 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. 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. On Nov. 8, 1995, attorney Albin Danell, Elizabeth's brother-in-law, contacted the police, apparently after consulting with Elizabeth. EVERY DAY THE CLUB stayed closed, the Bumbs lost more money. Meanwhile, Jeff and his lawyers spent 15 months trying get his father to appear at a deposition. Toward the end of the call, things got heated. It's like we had no life except for the family." Ultimately, the charges against the older Bumb were reduced to a misdemeanor. Realizing that, Jeff offered to pay higher card-room taxes (next year the city expects to collect $4.5 million from Bay 101) and pick up the tab for security. he asked. He and his brothers had a plan, he says. In February 1994, nearly one year after the San Jose City Council gave Bay 101 its blessing, the state denied the Bumbs and their partners' gaming license application. San Jose Flea Market Wikipedia Republished // WIKI 2 Just so everyone got the point, Jeff Bumb announced to the press that he and Brian were divesting from Bay 101, and records show he eventually sold his shares for $1.4 million. When he was jailed, the desperate cop wrote a 15-page handwritten letter in pencil to George Bumb in May 1997 asking the Flea Market owner to bail him out.