‘I was ordered to resign’

The more we learn about the Bush administration’s prosecutor purge, the more disconcerting it looks. Bud Cummins’ dismissal was suspicious in Arkansas, Carol Lam’s removal was odd in San Diego, and now we’re learning more about John McKay’s dismissal in Seattle.

Former U.S. Attorney John McKay told The Associated Press on Wednesday that his resignation this month was ordered by the Bush administration, which gave him no explanation for the firing.

“I was ordered to resign as U.S. attorney on Dec. 7 by the Justice Department,” McKay, who had led the department’s Western Washington office, said in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C. “I was given no explanation. I certainly was told of no performance issues.”

His comments came one day after Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty acknowledged to the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Justice Department has fired seven U.S. attorneys in the West since March, for reasons he would not divulge. The dismissals have been heavily criticized by Democratic lawmakers.

“John McKay has worked diligently for our region and it is deeply disconcerting that he could have been let go for political reasons,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. “Congress and the American people have no tolerance for the politicization of the U.S. attorney’s office.”

Moreover, it appears that Bush gang isn’t just politicizing federal prosecutors’ offices, it’s also politicizing their actual prosecutions.

Paul Kiel noted yesterday that a new study highlighted the partisan cloud hanging over the administration’s federal investigations.

A study of reported federal investigations of elected officials and candidates shows that the Bush administration’s Justice Department pursues Democrats far more than Republicans. 79 percent of elected officials and candidates who’ve faced a federal investigation (a total of 379) between 2001 and 2006 were Democrats, the study found — only 18 percent were Republicans. During that period, Democrats made up 50 percent of elected officeholders and office seekers during the time period, and 41 percent were Republicans during that period, according to the study.

“The chance of such a heavy Democratic-Republican imbalance occurring at random is 1 in 10,000,” according to the study’s authors.

The vast disparity came not from the more high-profile investigations of state-wide or federal officeholders (the disparity there was 55-44 Democratic), but from the far more numerous investigations of local officials. The study found that 85 percent of the 309 local officials and candidates who faced investigation were Democrats.

Go ahead, Alberto Gonzales, argue that this is just some kind of random coincidence. Let’s see who believes that.

For what it’s worth, yesterday, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) made it clear he’s not letting go of this controversy, and today we learn that House Dems are just as interested.

Democrats have signaled they aren’t dropping the controversy over what they describe as the Bush administration’s “firing” of federal prosecutors.

Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, yesterday sent a letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, demanding that he appoint the recently fired U.S. Attorney in San Diego as a special counsel so that she can continue overseeing a congressional corruption probe.

Carol Lam, appointed in 2002 as San Diego U.S. Attorney, was among at least seven U.S. attorneys recently dismissed by the Justice Department. Ms. Lam supervised the investigation and prosecution of Republican Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham, now in federal prison for soliciting bribes. That case led to related investigations, including inquiries into a businessman who also had dealings with Rep. Jerry Lewis, the California Republican who until recently was chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, and into Kyle “Dusty” Foggo, the former third-ranking official at the Central Intelligence Agency. Both individuals deny any wrongdoing.

I hope readers aren’t sick of me writing about this; it just appears to be a controversy with legs.

Stay tuned.

Thanks for sticking with it, CB. I wonder if the Democrats will be able to weed out all of these poltical prosecutors when we get the White House back. This stinks of Rovian, inserting the devil in the details, tactics for politicizing everything.

  • hang in there CB. this is really twisted when you start interfering with criminal prosecutions.

    oh, and, as usual, where in hell is the msm on this? like everything else – just not there.

  • It’s interesting that Lam, Cummins and McKay all come from states with two Democratic senators. As I understand it, senators from the president’s party “consult” with the DOJ about US Attorney appointments in their state. So if the White House is looking for an easy way to reward a crony, best to do it in a state where there’s no Repub senator with his own waiting list of hacks demanding plum appontments.

    This doesn’t apply to all of the Gonzales Nine (or whatever the number’s up to by now), but it does to the three most egregious cases. I’m sure this plays a role in what’s going on.

  • Looks like the “poor performance” record of these terminated prosecutors is all those Dem investigations with apparently little to no high profile convictions to show for it. Unlike the “successes” with the GOP investigations.

  • Out of all those investigations of Dems, how many led to actual indictments/convictions.

    Now, let’s compare that with the number of Republican’ts and how many of them were indicted and/or convicted.

    It’d be an interesting stat to see …

  • Hang in there, Carpetbagger, on this story. This needs to be part of the “Throw the bums out” narrative of the ’08 election, since a (God forbid) McCain Administration would probably leave many of the inherited hacks in place.

  • And will someone please explain to me why impeachment would be a bad choice (I mean, unless we are actually going to charge them with treason, which I am not against either)?

  • Maybe we can call this sordid mess “Tammany Two” and let it be a chapter in that future blockbuster, “The Rise and Fall of the American Reich….”

  • Keep on this story CB. This is a piece of the GOP attack on America. This is also one that might be the straw that broke the camel’s back. If there is one group Bush should not have messed with it is a group of experienced, smart, and high profile lawyers.

    This is an amazing story and I hope Schumer blows this thing up.

  • you know, CB, when impeachment time comes, all congress has to do is go through your archives and they’ll have all the ammunition they need. thanks for the good job!

  • This topic well deserves a ground zero for analysis and your interest is obvious. Put on your Pit Bull-ogger hat, Mr. CB and tell us the story.

    We are watching a, thus far, way too successful attempt to dismantle America and turn it into something ugly, paranoid and mean. Hell knows what’s coming but at least you can get it all on record.

  • The firings could be two edged. One aspect is these U.S. Attorneys have gone after high profile Republicans; the other aspect is a “numbers game” where too few Democrats have been prosecuted for the White House’s satisfaction. The U.S. Attorney for Philadelphia (a local Republican) has gone after more Democrats than Republicans–by a ratio of 5-to-1 or more.

  • “I hope readers arenโ€™t sick of me writing about this;”

    Good God, no. This is incredibly important.

  • I just can’t escape the feeling that I’m living in Alice’s Wonderland.

    Schumer can bray “I won’t let this go” till the cows come home. I don’t believe him.

    And what’s with McKay saying he was “ordered to resign”. What if he had refused?

    Couldn’t all these fired prominent attorneys threaten legal action against unjustified terminations?

    Didn’t we win both houses last November 7? Aren’t we overwhelmingly ahead on all issues in all the polls? Doesn’t that count for anything anymore?

  • The Bush administration fires the competent and rewards the incompetent. Why would they treat an Attorney General any differently?

  • BC raised a terrifying point: what if this purge is to place an army of Ken Starrs out there to harrass Democratic lawmakers in the run-up to 2008? Wasn’t the new attorney in Arkansas a dirt digger for Karl Rove? With these guy everything is political. It’s just a matter of figuring out the motive.

  • As someone living in San Diego, I’m absolutely NOT sick of this; it’s the same thing as the Plame case, which I appreciated you staying on top of on the long road to this trial.

  • I think most Americans still have a sense of fair play and would find this sort of behavior outrageous — provided it becomes enough of a scandal to get on the tube, in the papers, and in their faces.

    If the blogosphere can’t force the issue, maybe someone should make up a story about getting a bj from McNulty in the men’s room over at Justice.

  • You won’t see any of the fired attorneys raising too much of a fuss for two reasons: First, they serve at the pleasure of the President, and all of them know that. Second, though many may be competent prosecutors with good legal minds (Carol Lam is certainly one of those), they are also loyal members of the GOP; otherwise they would never have got the job in the first place.

    A story in the San Diego Union-Tribune this week said that one of the triggers of Lam’s removal was complaints from Congressman Darrel Issa, whose district includes north-coastal San Diego County. His supposed beef was that Lam’s office hadn’t prosecuted enough immigrant smugglers. You don’t have to be the president of Mensa to figure out that Issa was just a stalking horse for Jerry Lewis, Duncan Hunter, and others who have more reason to resent Lam’s refusal to “mind her own business.”

  • The lawless thugs who inhabit our WH are attempting a coup against the rule of law. The firing of federal prosecutors is merely the tip of the iceberg. Just wait for history to shine the light on the criminal operation this WH has been sponsoring in Iraq for the past 4 years. Bushco has been successfully fleecing America for far too long now. It’s time to bring out the pots and pans. -Kevo

  • Keep on this, CB. This is the opening wedge of a very juicy steak and all of your loyal readers are hungry for more. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Not to whine, but one thing I’m sick of is bloggers apologizing for writing too much about a particular issue. I’m even more sick of readers who complain about that. It’s your fucking blog and you can write about any god damn thing you want. That’s what I come here for. And if some punkass reader doesn’t like what you’re writing about, they can get their own damn blog and not write about it there. But I won’t read them. I’ll just keep coming here and trusting your judgment. There is usually a post or two a day that doesn’t capture my interest, and I skip them. But I respect your judgment and think that 99% of your other readers do too.

    Keep up the good work and don’t let the punkass whiners get you down. It just encourages them. Write what you think is interesting and don’t apologize. And that’s an order.

  • I am also glad you are following this story CB. It deserves exposure and serious examination. We won’t get any of that from the MSM until it is revealed in blogs like this one. When kevo said it is a coup against the rule of law, I couldn’t agree more. It feels to me as though there was a bloodless coup in 2000, and ever since, they have tried to get as much power as they can. They have stolen everything they could steal, from our treasure, to the lives of our children. As a teacher I have a lot to say about “no child left behind” and the scam that it is, but what they are trying to do to our judicial system is bone chilling.

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