FBI raids the Office of Special Counsel

It’s been weeks since a corruption scandal humiliated the Bush administration, so I suppose we were overdue for news like this.

Federal Bureau of Investigation agents raided the Office of Special Counsel here, seizing computers and documents belonging to the agency chief Scott Bloch and staff.

More than a dozen FBI agents served grand jury subpoenas shortly after 10 a.m., shutting down the agency’s computer network and searching its offices, as well as Mr. Bloch’s home. Employees said the searches appeared focused on alleged obstruction of justice by Mr. Bloch during the course of an 2006 inquiry into his conduct in office.

The independent agency, created by Congress in the wake of the Watergate scandal, is charged with protecting federal employees and deciding whether their complaints merit full-scale investigation — a first line of defense against fraud and mismanagement in government. It also enforces a ban on U.S. employees engaging in partisan political activity.

This story has taken a few twists and turns, but it’s actually really interesting, and more than a little comical.

The Office of Special Counsel isn’t the most high-profile office in government, but it’s generally tasked with investigating whistleblower complaints. Bloch, however, has been ambitious — about a year ago, the OSC launched a broad investigation into Karl Rove’s political activities, with particular attention on the prosecutor purge, RNC emails, and fairly obvious Hatch Act violations (Rove’s office politicized various federal agencies). “We will take the evidence where it leads us,” Bloch said. “We will not leave any stone unturned.”

But while the investigator was investigating Rove, he was also facing his own investigation.

The Special Counsel looking into a potential cover-up appears to have been engaged in his own cover-up.

The head of the federal agency investigating Karl Rove’s White House political operation is facing allegations that he improperly deleted computer files during another probe, using a private computer-help company, Geeks on Call. […]

Recently, investigators learned that Mr. Bloch erased all the files on his office personal computer late last year. They are now trying to determine whether the deletions were improper or part of a cover-up, lawyers close to the case said.

Bloch claims that he contacted the private PC-help service — bypassing his own agency’s computer technicians — to deal with a virus that had control of his computer.

He apparently asked the technicians to do a “seven-level” wipe, which, as the WSJ reported, “makes it nearly impossible for forensics experts to restore the data later.” While Geeks on Call was there, he also directed the technicians to wipe laptops used by his two top political deputies.

Bloch used tax-dollars to pay for all of this, and the $1,149 receipt makes no mention of a virus. Jeff Phelps, who runs Washington’s Geeks on Call franchise, said it would be unusual to address a virus problem by wiping a hard-drive. “We don’t do a seven-level wipe for a virus,” he said.

Nothing suspicious here. No sirree.

This is, as David Corn put it a while back, “a dizzying situation.”

The investigator investigating officials who oversee the agency that is investigating the investigator. Forget firewalls. This looks more like a basement flooded with backed-up sewage — with the water rising.

I should note, by the way, that this probe was launched while Bloch was already under investigation for additional alleged wrongdoing.

Only with the Bush gang is this set of circumstances even possible — Bloch is ostensibly investigating the Justice Department for its political activities, and simultaneously the Justice Department sends the FBI to raid Bloch’s office and home. What’s more, everybody is probably guilty.

Thank goodness Bush was elected to restore honor and dignity to the executive branch of government.

This is the weirdest game of Clue ever.

  • It’s sorely, sorely tempting to just say “Kill ’em all and let God sort ’em out.” But if a lot of these people don’t face criminal investigation under the next President (because it won’t happen under this bozo) American justice is lost and gone forever, like Darling Clementine.

  • I’m betting the justice department couldn’t stop someone at the FBI from doing this raid without them blowing the whistle. There’s a lot of people at the FBI who plan to stay there even if there’s an investigation next year.

  • I can see the future:

    January 20, 2009

    I hereby issue a full, free and absolute pardon to every political-level person employed by my administration (January 20, 2001 – January 20, 2009).

    Signed,

    George W. Bush

    P.S. Includes me.

  • Who would have thought that it would not be the media, Hollywood celebrities or the opposition party that saved the Republic, but Federal Prosectuors.

    Federal Prosecutors are literally the only check in an out of control system right now. No wonder Karl Rove went after US attorneys with such a vengeance: it was the last piece of the puzzle for his permanent autocracy.

  • Seriously, I don’t think that a President can pardon himself.

    Wouldn’t Bush have to resign and have President Cheney grant former President Bush a pardon?

  • I’m confused. RacerX, why do you think the FBI raided Bloch despite the wishes of the JD, instead of at their insistence? After all, he was investigating the attorney purge, as well as several other Executive agencies.

    Also he’s in charge of checking out the RNC e-mails, which I assume means he was in charge of investigating violations of the Presidential Records Act. But he’s erasing his own computers? And using an outside firm to do it?

  • Seriously, I don’t think that a President can pardon himself.

    Yeah, yeah. A President can’t do a lot of things, What are you going to do about it?

  • As long as President Cheney had been pardoned by his predecessor, I’m sure that would work out just fine…

  • This is more than likely meant to tie all the cross investigations into knots so tight no entity will be able to untie them before 1/20/09. It’s called running the clock. Come on, who really thinks this thugocracy will really investigate itself. There’s no integrity left anywhere.

  • Remember when Bush was sworn into office, how the wingers hooted and crowed about how ‘the grownups are in charge’, and how Bush made a big deal about the fact that he would dismiss anyone in his administration guilty of even ‘the appearance of impropriety’?

    If he made good on that promise, it would save the next administration a lot of effort investigating and prosecuting them all. Of course, the executive branch wouldn’t have enough staff to function for the next 8 months — which probably wouldn’t be a bad thing.

  • …a “seven-level” wipe…

    Are you sure this isn’t connected to the Larry Craig scandal somehow?

  • I’m confused. IS there a “good guy” in this or is everybody typically Bushian-evil?

  • If this business ever gets to trial (insert cynical joke about “running out the clock” here), it would be very interesting to hear from the Geeks on Call employee who did the work. But by the time the investigators are done investigating the investigations, most of the administration will have fled to Argentina.

  • Republicans and any technology more advanced than a hammer are not a good mix.

    I suspect this is the actual course of events: Mr. Blotch was surfing the internons for pr0n and picked up a nasty computer bug. He didn’t know that his IT staff already knew he spent his Saturdays looking at GoatSpank.com so he freaks out, calls the Geeks and essentially has them burn the room. His IT deparment sees this on Monday, says WTF? and started making anonymous calls.

    Now Mr. Blotch will have to decide: Come clean with the ugly truth or hope the Presidunce protects him?

    And charles owes me a new keyboard.

  • I think it is pretty clear that Bloch’s ‘investigations’ were nothing of the sort. Rather, they were shams designed to give the appearance of oversight and sterilize the issues from other outside investigation, including from Congress.

    My guess is that someone at the FBI put together a case that the JD simply couldn’t stop, resting partly on the stupidly transparent act of wiping the hard disks.

  • I think people at (or is it on) this blog are getting truly wacko. You’re seeing suspicious and evil behavior everywhere. This is probably nothing more than a case of Bloch getting rid of nude pictures of Larry Craig, underage congressional interns, and some soon-to-be-running-reelection-campaigns Repub senators engaging in group activities on his harddrive. Nothing at all to get worked up about.

  • Under the constitution, the President has full power to pardon ALL offences against the United States except in cases of impeachment. Hence the President can pardon himself on the way out. And as ex-presidents are NOT civil officers of the United States, he would not be reachable by impeachment.

  • This is like one of those gangster movies where the gang members have a falling out and everybody starts shooting everyone else.

  • If impeachment proceedings were started…just started in the House…forget them going anyplace…just started, then Bush would not be able to pardon himself or anyone in his administration on the way out. Come on Pelosi, for future protection, just “start” impeachment proceedings or forever be considered complicit in Bush Administration’s corruption.

  • Okay, so what about us little guys, who need attention from the OSC??
    If they are under attack and a large percentage of the staffers are working on Karl Rove, who pays attention to us? Do I have to wait forever as my head is getting battered at my agency?

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