A cloud of suspicion over the rest of Justice’s decisions

Seeds of doubt abound. Now that the nation has learned that several U.S. Attorneys were pressured to bring politically-charged cases for Republicans’ benefit, and many of those who refused lost their jobs, it’s inevitable that previous [tag]Justice Department[/tag] decisions will start to garner fresh scrutiny.

Paul Krugman noted a couple of weeks ago, for example, that Chris Christie, the former Bush “Pioneer” who is now the U.S. attorney for New Jersey, issued subpoenas as part of an investigation against Sen. Bob Menendez (D) shortly before last year’s election.

This week, some Dems are looking further back. (thanks to K.Z. for the tip)

New Hampshire Democrats say they will ask Congress to investigate whether prosecution of a Republican phone-jamming scheme on Election Day 2002 was intentionally delayed until after the presidential election two years later.

The furor over alleged political firings of eight federal prosecutors prompted the move, Kathy Sullivan, chairwoman of the state’s Democratic Party, told The Associated Press Tuesday.

And why wouldn’t it? In 2002, Republicans hired a telemarketing firm to jam the phone lines at the Democratic Party and the Manchester firefighters union, a nonpartisan group offering rides to the polls on Election Day, in order to disrupt get-out-the-vote efforts. The scandal resulted in four criminal convictions, but James Tobin, New England chairman of Bush’s campaign in 2004, was not indicted until a month after Bush won a second term.

“Why did it take so long for the indictment against Mr. Tobin to be brought?” Sullivan asked. “His name was apparently out there and known to the Department of Justice for several months and yet nothing was done with him until after the 2004 election.”

Did politics play a role in the delayed indictment? I have no idea, but benefit of the doubt has gone out the window.

Every suspicious indictment and investigation suddenly deserves scrutiny. And it’s getting it.

* Did the U.S. Attorney’s office in Pennsylvania intentionally target Bob Casey allies to undermine his Senate campaign against Rick Santorum?

* Why was the career U.S. Attorney in Guam removed in 2002 after he started investigating disgraced GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff?

* Why has Western Pennsylvania’s U.S. attorney, Mary Beth Buchanan, spent a disproportionate amount of her time launching public-corruption investigations against Democrats, while overlooking Republicans?

* In July 2005, the [tag]U.S. Attorney[/tag] in Denver decided not to pursue a matter in which bouncers at a Bush event impersonated Secret Service agents to throw out three law-abiding ticket-holders because of their bumper sticker (the Denver Three controversy). Did politics dictate the decision?

As Bud Cummins, one of the purged prosecutors, explained:

“[T]he public must perceive that every substantive decision within the department is made in a neutral and non-partisan fashion. Once the public detects partisanship in one important decision, they will follow the natural inclination to question every decision made, whether there is a connection or not.”

Exactly. [tag]Bush[/tag] administration officials may have obstructed justice, politicized federal prosecutors, and lied to Congress, but let’s not overlook the fact that they also undermined the public’s confidence in the justice system, as well.

These crooks haven’t deserved any “benefit of the doubt” since they used the 9/11 attacks to justify invading Iraq.

But obviously the REAL problem is Big Government, and that Clinton Did It Too.

How long til some conservative wack-job proposes that we privatize the Justice System?

  • Again I say the bigger scandal may be the purely political use of data gathered through the warrantless eavesdropping chicanery. Rove took that data and used it to undermine democrats, intimidate opponents, and shore up the GOP GOTV efforts everywhere.

  • “let’s not overlook the fact that they also undermined the public’s confidence in the justice system, as well.”

    Then they have accomplished at least one of their objectives. Since Reagan, the Groverites have endeavored to make citizens loathe and distrust their government, so no one will come save it when Grover tries to “drown it in the bathtub.” Getting around to undermining the justice system will have the added benefit of building public skepticism in advance of so many former BushCo-ers being hauled into court.

  • Mr. Bush has tainted our entire political heritage. Sure vested interests are what we’re all about, but we have been pretty vigilant in holding people accountable to the law. We have been able to make laws over our history to keep the “playing field” as neutral as possible, and we have held out the belief that the court of law is the last vestige of fair hearings and due process proceedings. Now we have Bush and his lawless minions. What royal trappings this man has surrounded himself with, complete with his “pleasure” to do what he likens himself to do. This Administration has not my support, nor will I give them any benefit of the doubt ever again. They have soiled their legal pants, and want us to pretend we don’t smell their smell. -Kevo

  • Sounds like Bush and company are doing exactly what communists would do to cow the masses. It starts with the enforcement arm. Whoodathunk that ‘Reagan’s heir’ would try to bring communist policies into the US system.

  • This is why USA’s are suppose to be non-political – if you make them an extension of the White House, then Congress needs to constantly review their actions.

  • At what point can we start talking aloud about what many have felt for some time — that that Bush/Cheney/Rove and their rabid base buddies have been attempting to pull off a coup before our eyes.

    In support of the coup theory, consider their so-called unitary executive, stacking the SC with yes-judges (recall that Miers was the first choice and Gonzales was likely being groomed), neutering Congress, planting incompetent but like-minded ideologues throughout the bureaucracy, censorship, staged appearances before pre-selected audiences. bashing of the press on one hand and paying to disseminate propaganda through it on the other, interfering with elections, spying without oversight or warrants, indefinite imprisonment without bringing charges, denying legal representation, improperly influencing the courts, fear mongering and fake terrorist reports…

    Against the coup theory, we have, um, give me a minute – I know there’s something…

  • I keep wondering about the story in Think Progress (March 19, 2007) about the purchase of the yacht for Duke Cunningham. Apparently the defense contractor Faggo, who bribed Cunningham paid exactly $140,000.00 for the boat. The price was pre-aranged and had been negociated by phone a few days earlier. Two weeks earlier Dick Cheney paid the same contractor $140,000.00 for “office furniture and computers.” This contractor had a criminal record and no previous experience as a government contractor. I wonder if anyone is looking into that situation. Perhaps Carol Lamb was looking for bigger fish than Jerry Lewis.

  • beep52, how about a private army? Blackwater, owned and operated by a gaggle of christianists, neocons and current and and former administration officials and spooks. more

  • Here’s another example of abuse for Krugman.

    In Philadelphia, US Attorney Patrick Meehan (and Republican Party hack) tried to get Mayor John Street (D) in 2003 when Street was up for re-election that year. The Feds bugged the mayor’s office, but the Philadelphia Police found the bug, and thus prevent the Feds from interfering with the local election with a scandal.

    Why was this important? Because Philadelphia and its Democratic “machine” help delivered Pennsylvania’s electoral (college) votes in 2000–and again in 2004–to the Democratic candidate for president (not Bush). If a Republican had become mayor of Philadelphia, Rove’s goal of voter suppression to win Pennsylvania for Bush would have mimicked what happened to Kerry in Ohio.

  • And then there’s Janet Yang in Los Angeles who was about to start investigating Congressman Jerry Lewis, a powerful GOP congressman implicated in the Dukester Conspiracy, who suddenly got an offer she couldn’t refuse from Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP (one of whose very senior partners is Theodore Olson) and resigned all on her own last fall.

    “Debra Wong Yang’s decision to leave her post as U.S. attorney to pursue a private practice was entirely her own, and she had many options to choose from. We are delighted that she chose Gibson Dunn.”

    Yes. And the sun now rises in the west, did you know that?

  • Someone should get and post the Shields-Cragan raw data. Then local people could get on the individual cases. I know of a voter-suppression case here in MN, and there was a USA firing here, but I don’t know if there was a relationship. (Many of the USA firings had to do with Native Americans, as this one did.)

  • Was the investigation of the most powerful Democrat in California, State Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, commenced before the 2004 election, abandoned, then recommenced after USA Ryan was deposed in San Francisco? Was the fishing expedition moving too slowly?

  • Concerning Republican-appointed U.S. Attorney (USA) litigation activities directed at Democrats, I would like to know how many occurred during October 2006, in the month prior to the important November mid-term elections?

    1) The Mark Foley/young male House pages sex scandal broke onto the national news scene in late September, early October, and dominated the news through election day in early November. All other news paled in comparison. A major Republican sex scandal. Bad news for the religious base of the Republican Party. Especially when the coverup by Republican House leadership of Mark Foley’s activities hit the news.

    2) David Iglesias, the USA in New Mexico, was pressured by Republican politicians and White House political operatives to prematurely release grand jury “sealed” indictments brought against Democrats in New Mexico. Any news coverage, local or national, that didn’t involve Foleygate would be good news for Republican chances in November, but even better news if the good news was indictments or investigations of Democrats. Maybe even bogus claims of voter fraud? Hey, anything to get Foleygate off the front pages.

    Get the picture?

    Any Republican-appointed USAs who didn’t get with this Rove-orchestrated campaign in October to deflect the nation’s attention from Foleygate and onto indicted or under investigation Democrats (bogus voter fraud claims, for example) would have been considered insubordinate, untrustworthy, not enough of a “loyal Bushie.” Any uncooperative USAs would have been blamed afterward for costing the Republicans control of Congress. They would have to be punished. Fired.

    In other words, the pre-election Foleygate scandal acted as one of the catalysts that led to the firing of the eight USAs in November. If we could get our hands on all the White House and DOJ/USAs emails between early October and early December, I just bet this Foleygate/USAs firing link would be revealed. And it would help explain why the Republican “explanations” for the USAs firings sound so disjointed, laughable and scattershot like a Dick Cheney shotgun blast to the face…it’s all about misdirection.

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