‘It’s open warfare over there’

About two weeks ago, we started hearing about the panic and paralysis that had taken over the [tag]Justice Department[/tag] in the wake of the [tag]prosecutor[/tag] [tag]purge[/tag] [tag]scandal[/tag]. “You have no idea,” said one Justice official, “how bad it is here.”

How’s the nation’s federal law-enforcement agency doing now? Apparently, it’s getting worse — the New York Daily News reports that “Gonzales’ closest advisers [have] turned on one another.”

“It’s unreal – it’s open warfare over there,” a former Justice official with close ties to Gonzales’ team told the Daily News.

The AG’s ex-chief of staff Kyle Sampson will testify in the Senate tomorrow, and Gonzales’ ex-counsel Monica Goodling pleaded the fifth and refused to talk. [tag]Gonzales[/tag] has blamed Sampson for mistakes in how the firings were handled.

Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty, who privately blames Goodling for misleading him on the matter, may also be jockeying to take over if Gonzales resigns, sources said.

In fact, it seems part of the administration’s problem with this fiasco is an inability to find a convenient scapegoat. Gonzales blames Sampson, McNulty blames Goodling, the White House blames McNulty, Republicans on the Hill blame Gonzales, and no one on the right has figured out a way to blame Dems, the media, or MoveOn.org. It’s a wild west, every-man-for-himself environment … and these guys are yet to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Obviously, with so much finger-pointing, chances are these officials are going to contradict one another, making the whole bunch look worse. But just as importantly, it’s also more likely that at least one of these guys, motivated purely by self-interest, will cut some kind of deal and rat his or her colleagues out to save his or her skin.

Someone practically invented popcorn for a situation like this.

In other purge-related news:

* When Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) called David Iglesias to pressure him on a local federal investigation, Monica Goodling was on the call. My mistake. Goodling was on the call when Domenici called the Justice Department to complaint about Iglesias. She was not on the call when Domenici called Iglesias.

* White House officials have all but given up on their official email system, preferring private, un-archived, and unaccountable email addresses.

* Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.), ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, said Gonzales has been “badly weakened” by the scandal. “The explanation has been absolutely abysmal,” Hoekstra told C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal.”

* TPM: “Back in January, Dan Dzwilewski, the FBI’s special agent in charge of the San Diego field office, told the San Diego Union-Tribune that Carol Lam’s dismissal would jeopardize on-going corruption investigations and that ‘I guarantee politics is involved.’ After his quotes were published, the folks back in DC told him to keep quiet.”

* Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) sent a letter to Gonzales yesterday “demanding to know if senior counselor Monica Goodling is still a Justice Department employee and whether other key employees remain with the agency or have hired lawyers…. The letter also seeks the employment status of three other aides mentioned as possible witnesses.”

* With each passing comment, McNulty’s and Sampson’s versions of events become more contradictory.

* And USA Today reports that Senate Republicans are experiencing “scandal fatigue.” At this week’s caucus meeting, Specter asked GOP senators to downplay Goodling’s plan to take the 5th. The plea received “a lot of head shaking, a lot of eye-rolling,” said one senator who attended.

Stay tuned.

Mueller’s reasons for all the FBI mistakes: “mistakes, carelessness, confusion, lack of training, lack of guidance and lack of adequate oversight.”

That ought to be the Bush Administration offical motto.

  • I wonder if Bush will have another “accountability moment” once this has really blown up. Personally, I hope this is the final nail in their coffin.

  • It’s as if a typical Tarrantino overblown “Mexican” standoff ending merged with a Three Stooges Pie Fight. Great fun.

  • When Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) called David Iglesias to pressure him on a local federal investigation, Monica Goodling was on the call. I think we’re starting to see why she’s taking the 5th.

    Actually, the AP news bulletin says she was on the call between Domenici and DOJ, not the call to Iglesias.

    Places her in the midst of a possible criminal conspiracy in any event.

  • Senate Republicans are experiencing “scandal fatigue”?

    I’d say they’re having “we’re dead in 2008” fatigue.

    Scandals never fazed them one bit.

  • “…and no one on the right has figured out a way to blame Dems, the media, or MoveOn.org.”

    It’s funny ’cause it’s true.

    By now, everyone’s seen that all those e-mails sent through the RNC to circumvent the White House archives can’t be shielded by Executive Privledge.

    Start warming up the paper shredder, Karl… time to make a withdrawl from those Swiss bank accounts and buy a ticket to Cozumel.

  • I guess House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers ( D-Mich.) and Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) will be adding Dan Dzwilewski (the FBI’s special agent in charge of the San Diego field office) to their list of witnesses.

    The Bushies’ nightmare has come true: Congressional Democrats with subpoena power. Nice.

  • This is a very sad tale indeed! Madam Justice is the one who’s being harmed. We have been subjected to too much baffoonery and incompetence by these nimpkumputs in the WH. For the sake of our lives, liberties and properties, the Bushies gotta go! -Kevo

  • Events are building to a Titanic Moment..
    A mighty vessel built with “unsinkable” compartments (such as redistricting, the K street project, judicial appointments, pervasive cronyism) , was designed with such confidence that there was little planning for lifeboats.
    Now that most of these compartments are breeched, We see screaming Republicans panic over who gets to survive.

    The sinking of the Bush administration is following the script of a disaster movie, Get the jumbo tub of popcorn because it’s just starting.

  • Remember the Politico quote from March 15:

    “We’ve only had subpoena power for the last six weeks and every tree that we’ve barked up so far has had a cat in it,” said a senior Democrat who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly. “Imagine where we’ll be after six months.”

    I predict Senator Specter and the other Republihacks are going to have “scandal pneumonia” by the end of this Congress. Many will not survive (politically) past the 2008 election.

  • kevo (#8), it is all Madam Justice’s own fault for being such a wanton harlot. If she’d just kept herself covered up like Ashcroft wanted, all of this political whoring around wouldn’t have happened. First naked embodiments of justice, and then all morals just go out the window.

  • “…and no one on the right has figured out a way to blame Dems, the media, or MoveOn.org.”

    Yeah, and I think it’s hilarious seeing the MSM tying themselves in knots trying to come up with an angle on Sen Webb’s firearms troubles.

  • ….no one on the right has figured out a way to blame Dems, the media, or MoveOn.org…..

    This reminds me of Foley-gate. The wheels are really starting to come off now. The fact that Goodling was on the call with Domenici and Iglesias is (how can I even use this word?) shocking. Amazing what you get to see when you shine a light under a rock.

    When I have several weeks of free time, it would be interesting to compile a list of all the scandals that have come up with BushCo (or has that been done already?). Remember, they’re only investigating the ones that have come up this year!

  • Gonzales blames Sampson. McNulty blames Goodling.

    Always classy when powerful men blame subordinates for their own screwups.

  • Oh to be a fly on the wall as the BushBot circle jerk becomes a circular firing squad… You know the phone is ringing off the hook in Karl’s office.

    However, I’m getting a bit tired of popcorn. Time to switch to nachos and beer.

    Cheers!

  • wow. only three months of oversight and the DOJ has all but imploded and the WH is forced to abandon its email system in fear of subpoenas. makes you wonder what they’ve been getting away with all these years. it also is a pretty good reflection on how utterly craven and servile Congress was under GOP control.

    is Bush’s original promise to restore honor and dignity to the office still operative, or can we now safely abandon that empty slogan.

  • oh, we can now add the GSA to the growing list of executive agencies that are set to implode.

  • Benjamin, Bush is still planning on restoring honor and dignity to the White House. What he neglected to explain was that that campaign promise will be honored by him turning the keys over to a Democratic administration in January 2009, or earlier if America gets lucky.

  • To be fair re: Scandal Fatigue, the Republicans have been immersed in them since Foley. They do deserve a break, the poor guys.

    But let’s not give them one.

  • I’ve been posting at the TPM MR about why Monica Goodling was prosecuting low-level criminal cases out of the USA Attorney’s office in the Eastern District of Virginia in the fall of 2004.

    The cases involved, passport fraud, I-94 fraud and gun charges. In two of the three cases, the defendant was represented by the federal public defender’s office. The case file on third is incomplete in Lexis-Nexis so I don’t know who represented the third defendant.

    I’ve been racking my brain for two days to come up with a reason why Monica Goodling, DOJ WH liason, was prosecuting low-level criminal cases in the fall of 2004. So far, the only answer that sounds halfway reasonable is that Goodling was padding her resume to give her the credentials for a USA or other similar position.

    Kyle Sampson prepared a summary evaluation of all of the USAs in February 2005. If Goodling was under consideration for a USA position, Sampson would know about it.

    Goodling was also listed as Special Assistant United States Attorney in a 9/28/05 appeals case ruled on by Michael Luttig. Needless to say, the feds prevailed.

    Here is the link to the TPM MR thread where I posted details about the four cases. Scroll down to the end to the last couple of comments.

    One person who knows why Monica Goodling was prosecuting low-level criminal cases in the fall of 2004 is the AG’s new chiefof staff, Chuck Rosenberg. He was an AUSA in the USA-EDVA’s office at the time and subsequently became USA for the office in June 2006.

    If Goodling was prosecuting cases to pad her resume, you better believe there was pressure on the judges to rule in favor of the DOJ. The DOJ would not go through all of that trouble to not obtain a 100% successful prosecution rate for Goodling.

  • I posted the details of the low-level criminal cases prosecuted by Monica Goodling in a separate post on my blog at the TPM Cafe to make them easier to read.

    Click here.

  • You make a keen observation Zeitgeist. I, though, would never blame a naked lady for anything. -Kevo

  • Reid, Pelosi, Dennis K., Waxman, and all other elected Democrats…hammer them, hammer them, hammer them, hammer them.

    Impeachment is potentially an effective bludgeon threat. Get behind it, one and all!

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