‘An overblown personnel matter’? I don’t think so

Further helping demonstrate the seriousness of the prosecutor purge scandal, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has published an op-ed in USA Today, which denies nearly all of the assertions those of us who’ve been following the scandal know to be true.

Gonzales calls the controversy “an overblown personnel matter,” and, once again, insists that the U.S. Attorneys in question were fired for “reasons related to policy, priorities and management.”

The Justice Department, out of respect for these individuals, would have preferred not to talk publicly about those reasons, but disclosures in the press and requests for information from Congress altered those best-laid plans. Although our reasons for their dismissal were appropriate, our failure to provide those reasons to these individual U.S. attorneys at the time they were asked to resign has only served to fuel wild and inaccurate speculation about our motives. That is very unfortunate because faith and confidence in our justice system are more important than any one individual.

We have never asked a U.S. attorney to resign in an effort to retaliate against him or her or to inappropriately interfere with a public corruption case (or any other type of case, for that matter). Indeed, during the last six years, the department has established an extremely strong record of rooting out public corruption, including prosecuting a number of very high-profile cases.

Like me, U.S. attorneys are political appointees, and we all serve at the pleasure of the president. If U.S. attorneys are not executing their responsibilities in a manner that furthers the management and policy goals of departmental leadership, it is appropriate that they be replaced.

Perhaps Gonzales hasn’t been keeping up on the details of the controversy. If he were, he’d know that this defense doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Gonzales tries to suggest he’s the good guy here by keeping the rationale for the purge secret. Apparently, he didn’t want to embarrass the prosecutors.

But how, then, does Gonzales explain the fact that the Justice Department told Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), in writing, that Carol Lam was doing a fine job “prosecuting border cases — even though they’ve since said that the reason for Lam’s firing was her poor performance on border cases”?

How, then, does Gonzales explain the fact that at “least three of the eight fired attorneys were told by a superior they were being forced to resign to make jobs available for other Bush appointees, according to a former senior Justice Department official knowledgeable about their cases.”

Gonzales argues today that the Justice Department’s purge never had anything to do with public corruption cases. How, then, does Gonzales explain the series of coincidences connecting the fired U.S. Attorneys with the corruption cases they just happened to be involved with? Gonzales goes on to argue that the DoJ never “inappropriately interfered,” but there’s that pesky phone call from a senior Justice Department official that the prosecutors perceive as possible amounting to “obstruction of justice.”

“An overblown personnel matter”? Please. “The whole series of events has been remarkable and unprecedented,” said Mary Jo White, who served for nine years as the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York during the Clinton and Bush administrations. “It’s not a matter of whether they have the power to do it; it’s a matter of the wisdom of the actions taken. It shows a total disregard for the institution of the U.S. attorney’s offices and what they stand for.”

Josh Marshall, who deserves enormous credit for the fact that this scandal has reached this point, summarized the big picture.

Let’s be clear. The DOJ needn’t establish a lengthy or any paper trail to justify firing a US Attorney. Maybe they didn’t like the way she prosecuted gun crimes. Or maybe her bosses at Main Justice just didn’t like how she went about her job. Maybe they just plain didn’t like her. That’s fine. And while it would be irregular to fire a US Attorney in the middle of a president’s term for no evident wrongdoing, it would not in itself be improper. None of the USAs, as they’re called, are irreplaceable. And they do serve at the president’s pleasure.

The issue here is different. There is a clear and growing body of evidence that at least three of these firees were canned for not allowing politics to dictate their prosecution of political corruption cases. Or, to put it more bluntly, for not indicting enough Democrats or indicting too many Republicans. Which is to say they were fired for not perverting justice.

In the face of that evidence the administration has come up with a series of changing and often contradictory alternative explanations, which range from the frivolous to the ridiculous.

The administration isn’t at war with the fired attorneys or Congress. They’re at war with the obvious.

This is a scandal with limitless potential.

So he doesn’t have time to testify before Congress but he has time to write and submit an oped?

  • (Reposted from yesterday’s thread, with additions)

    The hearings on the US attorneys are also uncovering all sorts of collateral creepiness about how BushCo operates. This is from Emily Bazelon’s article about the hearings in Slate (http://www.slate.com/id/2161307/pagenum/all):

    “Perhaps the most astonishing moment of the hearings was when it came out that the Department of Justice was dumb enough to accuse Iglesias of “absentee landlordism” because he had to take 40 days of annual duty in the naval reserve. “It was ironic,” Iglesias said of that misstep, since it’s the Department of Justice that enforces the law that forbids job-based discrimination for activities related to military service.”

    Do your naval reserve duty, and get fired. I’m sure all the reservists in Iraq are delighted to hear that message.

    Repeat after me: The Bush administration hates the troops. The Bush administration hates the troops.

    Maybe if we say this often enough, with all the voluminous supporting evidence (Walter Reed, slashed benefits, slashed VA funding, no exemptions from the bankruptcy bill, repeated “stop-loss” orders, discharging qualified gay personnel, no body armor, no HMV armor, no clear mission …), this meme will finally attain the conventional-wisdom status it deserves?

    It looks like Gonzalez is being set up as the fall guy for this thing, just as Libby was the fall guy for the Plame outing. There are still almost two years left – what happens when they run out of fall guys?

  • Someone please remind me why Clinton was impeached again? The US political system became farcical when they tried to impeach him. Now it’s just pathetic. These clowns should have been impeached in 2004. The fact that they are still in office shows how low the system has sunk. It’s like the reign of Caligula in Rome.

  • Now, now. If you’re going to argue with Abu Gonzales’ reasons point-by-point, you don’t realize that this Administration doesn’t work that way. The Faithful may need some reassurance (hence the compassionate AG op-ed piece), but once that’s done all the rest of us need do is add a soft “Amen”. Unless, of course, you want to be known as a Bush Crime Family heretic, and you know what previous faith-based regimes did with heretics.

  • Liam J’s got a good point about the pendulum effect on our political culture. After the political witch hunt that was the Clinton impeachment, subsequent impeachment proceedings are going to be help to a higher standard, otherwise they might appear to just be political retribution.

    The same pendulum is shaping our natuional attitudes toward the Iraq occupation because of a collective felling that we shouldn’t let what happened to our troops during Viet Nam happen again. At least that’s how it’s being exploited politcally.

    As for the US Attorney’s debacle, it’s another pendulum swing. The Bushies have swung so far to the political that it is impossible to believe that any move they make is for anything but a political purpose. For a party whose sole purpose is to screw Democrats in any way possible,the angle that these guys weren’t trying hard enough to score political points is the only explanation for the firing of these attorneys that makes sense

  • Poor Gonzo Quixote. He went to the jousting match. His horse ran away. He broke his lance. His helmet rusted. And now the windmill is going to open a 100-percent-pure can of reality-based whoop-a$$ on his scrawny little hide.

    If you see me crying, it’s because of how hard I’ll be laughing when this symphony of corruption—commonly known as the Bush administration—finally hits critical mass.

    We will, however, need a very large prison for all the criminals. Maybe we could just park them on a deserted island somewhere in the Pacific. Something that’s been used for atomic testing, perhaps….

  • Robert Parry (of Iran-contra fame) speculated yesterday that the reason Cummins, the Arkansas prosecutor who was due to be replaced by a Rove acolyte, was so that the Bushies would have a point man ready to rummage through the files for Clinton-related scandal ahead of the 2008 election.

    http://www.commondreams.org/views07/0305-28.htm

    Maybe the Rovians wanted to make space for some well-connected muckrakers in place for ’08 (Cummins, Charlton), maybe they wanted to punish some prosecutors for not playing ball in ’06 (Iglesias), and maybe they were looking to work up some damage control (Lam).

    But whatever the case, the fact Abu G has found the time in his busy schedule to write a prominent op-ed over an “overblown personnel matter” rather obviously suggests it is anything but.

  • “It looks like Gonzalez is being set up as the fall guy for this thing, just as Libby was the fall guy for the Plame outing.” – BC

    If so, they’d better wave a promised pardon in Abu G’s face post haste. Abu baby is a fair weather despot. He’s the perfect strutting, taunting, sneering cock of the walk who talks trash knowing that someone/thing has got his back because of his position.

    If he got his panties in a jam and he didn’t know for sure that he had a get out of jail free card in hand, he’d sing any song requested. He talks tough but he’s a tender little pansy. He ain’t takin’ the fall and keeping his mouth shut for nobody if Abu G’s shit ain’t taken care of too.

  • While this is politically embarassing, I doubt it is a “scandal with limitless potential.” As they may fire these attorneys for any reason, there can be no charges filed for wrongful termination. Perhaps some Congresspersons will get scolded, but if we aren’t impeaching over war lies, Plame, etc. this business barely rates a blip. It is just another in an endless series of political black marks for the administration.

  • Right, Berto! And isn’t this is the administration that never fires ANYBODY for ANYTHING? What’s so different about these attorneys? The mind reels.

  • ” . . . insists that the U.S. Attorneys in question were fired for “reasons related to policy, priorities and management.””

    Can’t argue that they weren’t fired for reasons related to ‘policies’ and ‘priorities’ but the Congress owes us a thorough investigation of those ‘policies’ and ‘priorities’.

    Thank you, Liam J, for the “C” word. I’ve been thinking that W is looking more and more like Caligula every day. Does he have a sister?

  • And Gonzales is an overblown sack of methane. Is it me or does he write like the villian in a bad sci-fi flick? You know, the guy who wears a lot of leather, keeps a scantily clad babe on a chain and has an intercom system in the torture chambers so he can listen to his prisoners scream while he eats? Seriously:

    The Justice Department, out of respect for these individuals, would have preferred not to talk publicly about those reasons, but disclosures in the press and requests for information from Congress altered those best-laid plans.

    “Ah, Captain Fantastic. I did not want to unleash the flying nuclear robot pirahnas on the innocent people of Twirlygig Four, but your persistent prying forces my hand.”

    Yech. I know it is a trifling thing when compared to all of the shit he has done but I belive that writing (especially a concerted effort like an op-ed piece) reveals the mind of the writer. Abbie writes like a 24k Creep. Oooh, look at me. I’m so sly and cunning. Watch me issue a little threat in the newspapers. And I will blame it all on the naughty people who angered me in the first place. Tee hee.

    Gag.

    That is very unfortunate because faith and confidence in our justice system are more important than any one individual.

    Yup. So get the fuck out Abbie, you’re a god damned disgrace to America, to civilization. You probably think the Hamurabi [sic] Code is too liberal. You make John Asscroft seem almost human. I’m surprised Lady Justice hasn’t stepped off her pedestal wrapped her scales around your head and stuck that sword up your arse. Guess she’s too repulsed to get any where near you.

  • Is this information only available on these blogs? I mean, is the MSM carrying any of this type of opinion about the USA’s claims or is Gonzales’s article unchallenged? Because if those people who don’t get their info from the blogs don’t read between the lines then they are not going to reach the same conclusions. What is obvious to me may not at all be obvious to those who only watch the news or read the head lines. I never watch the news so I don’t know what is being said there so I don’t know if ‘public’ opinion is such that they would see what a joke this op-ed from Gonzales is. Doesn’t explain why the calls came at the time they did from Wilson and Domenci or why they would even ask what they asked…besides, staffers do that not congressmen. Easily identified as unethical. So who does Gonzales think he’s talking to…who would believe his lines?

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