One of the 85 ‘loyal Bushies’ comes under scrutiny

Last year, Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle (D), seeking a second term, was considered relatively vulnerable by the Republican establishment. The GOP had successfully recruited then-Rep. Mark Green (R-Wis.) to be their gubernatorial candidate, they cleared the field so he could get the nomination, fundraising was brisk, and some early polling showed Green within striking distance.

Right around the time that Green officially became the GOP nominee in Wisconsin, U.S. Attorney Steven Biskupic brought charges against a top official in Doyle’s administration, accusing the state purchasing supervisor of corruption. Were the charges politically motivated? It’s hard to say for sure, but consider how quickly a federal appeals court dismissed the charges yesterday. (thanks to reader D.D. for the heads-up)

Federal judges Thursday ruled that former state purchasing supervisor Georgia L. Thompson was wrongly convicted of making sure a state travel contract went to a firm linked to Gov. Jim Doyle’s re-election campaign and freed her from an Illinois prison.

The three-judge panel in Chicago acted with unusual speed, ruling after oral arguments by Thompson’s attorney and the U.S. attorney’s office.

During 26 minutes of oral arguments, all three judges assailed the government’s case, with Judge Diane Wood saying at one point that “the evidence is beyond thin.”

During a news conference later Thursday, Doyle, a former state attorney general, said the three judges did an “extraordinary thing” by entering an order finding Thompson innocent and ordering her immediate release.(emphasis added)

I’ll spare you the minutiae of the case, but here’s the story in a nutshell: Thompson, who was originally hired under Doyle’s Republican predecessor, awarded a state contract to Adelman Travel, which became controversial because two of the company’s officers had donated the state maximum to Doyle’s re-election campaign.

There was no evidence that Thompson personally profited from the contract and nothing to suggest she approved the contract for political reasons. Biskupic brought charges anyway and managed to win a conviction, which was thrown out swiftly yesterday.

Given the recent evidence involving the politicization of U.S. Attorneys’ offices, the questions are unavoidable.

Indeed, it’s worth remembering that Wisconsin Republicans used the bogus scandal during the gubernatorial campaign as a political defense when Green stood accused of accepting dubious contributions.

Just to be clear, I know of no evidence to suggest that the U.S. Attorney in this district was trying to influence the election. I have no idea if Karl Rove gave Biskupic a call and said, “You know, it’s a close race. Anything you can do would be helpful.”

We do know, however, that shortly before a close election, Biskupic brought extremely thin criminal charges against a top Doyle administration official who apparently did nothing wrong.

It’s one of the lasting problems of the administration’s purge scandal — there are now constant suspicions about prosecutors’ political motivations. Now that the nation has learned that several U.S. Attorneys were pressured to bring politically-charged cases for Republicans’ benefit, and some of those who refused lost their jobs, it’s inevitable that prosecutions like this one will garner fresh scrutiny.

I recently started a list.

* 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.

* In New Hampshire, Democrats want 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.

* 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, recently 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.”

Bingo. It’s the consequence of the administration undermining public confidence in the system.

Don’t forget the Pequot/Aguirre/Mack/SEC scandal that the Senate Judiciary Committee was investigating when it — oops, so sorry — ran out of time. See: http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/8378450/c_2984290/?f=archives. The CSPAN coverage was riveting — liars on parade, with the added bonus of a lecture on honesty from Arlen Specter. (Well, not exactly a lecture, more an observation that he disliked being lied to by witnesses under oath. Selective outrage indeed!)

It’s not a US Attorney story, but the grubby fingerprints of a politicized DoJ are all over it. Perhaps the crime — firing a whistleblower for pointing out that a federal investigation was a coverup — is not that unusual, but the presssuring of senior SEC personnel to perjure themselves in a Senate hearing and the obviously criminal conduct of the IG’s “investigation” are noteworthy.

  • The next time you get called for jury duty in the Federal system, tell the pinstriped persecutor that you wouldn’t believe a Bush-loving cocksucker like s/he if they told you it was Monday, toss off a few of these examples so you poison the jurors already chosen, forcing them to start over. You won’t have to waste any more of your time with the Bush System of Injustice.

    Alternatively, if you have time on your hands, take the job and then be the juror who hangs the jury, forcing the bastards to start over.

    It’s time to “monkeywrench” these bastards by any means available.

  • and then there’s Monica Goodling’s girlfriend, Rachel Paulose, as reported over at TPM:

    It’s a major shakeup at the offices of new U.S. Attorney Rachel Paulose.
    Four of her top staff voluntarily demoted themselves Thursday, fed up with Paulose, who, after just months on the job, has earned a reputation for quoting Bible verses and dressing down underlings.

    Deputy U.S. Attorney John Marty is just one of the people dropping themselves in rank to simply a U.S. Attorney position. Also making the move are the heads of Paulose’s criminal and civil divisions and the top administrative officer.

    The move is intended to send a message to Washington – that 33-year-old Paulose is in over her head.

    A source said managers had been unhappy with Paulose and decided to collectively resign.
    “They did it jointly because they couldn’t stand her anymore,” the source said, citing what been described as her “dictatorial management style and general lack of management experience.”

    Paulose replaced former U.S. Attorney Tom Heffelfinger, who resigned in February 2006. At 34, she’s the youngest current U.S. attorney. She’s also the first woman to hold the post in Minnesota.

    The move might have come from a disagreement in the direction of the office, but is also “indicative of how the U.S. Department of Justice is acting now,” another source said.

    “These are career prosecutors who wouldn’t do it without a reasonable basis,” the source said. “If these folks took this action en masse and all of them are well respected career prosecutors, they wouldn’t do so lightly.”

  • As a postscript, Doyle won with a comfortable margin and a Democrat (Steve Kagen) flipped Green’s seat. I’m sure that wasn’t part of MC Rove’s “The Math”

  • And the most likely reason for Fitzgerald not getting purged, even though the Bush/Gonzalez cabal marked him as below average, is because of this case that Fitz brought just before last year’s Illinois governor elections.

    In announcing the indictment against Rezko, 51, of Wilmette, U.S. Atty. Patrick Fitzgerald said his office was unconcerned about whether its actions would impact the upcoming election. Fitzgerald refused to discuss Blagojevich.

    “We’re not going to stop momentum or take a siesta for political reasons,” Fitzgerald said. “We’re not concerned with elections. We’re concerned with bringing the cases as soon as they’re ready to go.”

    I wonder how much pressure Fitzgerald actually got to bring the charges?? To Fitz’s credit, it was just indictments, not a verdict…the trial won’t actually take place until Feb. 2008. In addition, the accusations didn’t hurt Blago and he was re-elected. Plus it helped that the prior Repub governor was more crooked than his granny’s teeth.

  • CB, everytime you start a list it brings a happy tear to my eyes. And everytime you add to that list, I think a Bush/Cheney/Rove minion earns its horns and tail.

  • If you are creating a compendium on “loyal Bushies,” add this:

    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 in 2004.

  • there is a face to put on the abuse of federal law and federal courts by the politicization of the u.s. attorneys’ offices.

    that face belongs to one georgia l. thompson, a career civil servant in minnesota who was a purchasing supervisor.

    it seems thompson was targeted by the u.s. attorney’s office in order to aid the 2006 republican gubernatorial campaign of mark green.

    so the campaign is over, and most involved have gone on to to other things.

    but where is georgia l. thompson?

    she just got out of federal prison:

    freed by an angry trio of federal appeals court judges who called the u.s. attorney’s office’s evidence against thompson “beyond thin”.

    and what did this abuse of prosecutorial power cost this american citizen?

    – a (false) felony conviction

    – four months in a federal prison

    – her $77 K state job

    – her home

    – her life savings

    (s. walters and j. dietrich; milwaukee journal sentinel; april 5, 2007)

    would you like your government to treat you that way?

    think about that.

    think hard!

    because the case of georgia thompson shows that any one of us can be sacrificed in the meat grinder of republican power politics.

    and one more thing –

    shades of gurantano –

    “at sentencing, the government urged a longer period of incarceration because [thompson] DID NOT ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY.”

    got that .

    thompson felt she was innocent.

    she refused to confess falsely,

    so

    our federal government asked that she be put in the slammer for a longer period of time.

    in short,

    she was being threatened with more unjust prison time

    unless if she would confess to a wrong-doing of which she was innocent.

    does this remind you of the soviet union in the 1950’s?

    it should.

    political show trials brought to you by karl rove and the republican party with assists from abu gonzales and a ruthless little apparatchi(c)k named monica goodling and some career-before-honor u.s. attorneys..

    have american fnally arrived at the day when we live in fear of our government?

  • Cummins was dead-on. Recently, TPM discussed the fact that Brent Wilkes was using Carol Lam’s firing to argue that SHE was politicizing her office in an effort to derail the bribery charges. Also, here in Detroit, Geoff Fieger had his office raided in 2005 to investigate whether he reimbursed employees for donating to Edwards’ campaign. Although he argued previously that it was politically-motivated, these arguments have gained new life recently.

    I don’t know how to link properly, but a recent Detroit News article is linked below.

    http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070315/UPDATE/703150453/-1/rss

  • http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07084/772099-110.stm

    Here’s a link to the response to the Mary Beth Buchanan article. Is it odd that the only one who came to support Ms. Buchanan was the Republican Party Boss for Pittsburgh?

    Also, it is not that Ms. Buchanan focuses too little time on Republicans, it is that Ms. MARY BETH BUCHANAN HAS FOCUSED NO INVESTIGATIONS ON REPUBLICANS.

  • There has been some discussion that, although investigation of reasons why the eight USAs who were purged were removed is important, it is more important to look at the actions of those who got to stay on the job, and why they got to stay.

    This story highlights that issue rather starkly.

  • Don’t forget the TN Senate race between (R) Bob Corker and (D) Harold Ford, Jr.

    After the 2004 Presidential election, there was a special election for a state Senate seat, Ophelia Ford, Harold’s aunt, was declared winner by a handful of votes, in a highly dem district. The Reps cried foul and a nasty recount occured, Ophelia was still seated. Then there was an investigation by the local newspaper ( wonder who they got their tip from?) that found 3 or so dead people had voted. Lots of wrangling ensued, another election was called, which Ophelia won by an overwhelming majority. Harold’s father, Sr, “looked into it”( the 1st election )and said that the election day shenanigans were perpetated by the Reps. No one bought it, but now ya gotta wonder.

    Then in 2005, early 2006 TBI brought bribery charges against quite a few state Dems and only 1 rep. The sting was called “Tn. Waltz”. Harold’s uncle was one of the accused.

    One of Corker’s campaign memes was the Ford political machine, and the Ford family corruption.

    During Corker’s mayorality in Chattanooga, Corker made a deal with Wal-Mart selling them land that was deeded to the city in a perpetual land trust. Corker’s own company made millions on the deal, since he owned adjoining land. Local Dems and Environmentalists have been begging for years for their to be an official investigation into the illegality, or at least malfeasance of this deal. The local DA refused. and I think the local USA did also.

    I’m not saying ANY of this has ANYTHING to do with the abject degeneracy of the Bush DoJ…….. I’ll let someone else do that

    And thank you for remembering Black, he seems to be ground zero of this infestation of the illness that is infecting our justice system.

    Thanks!

  • I would add the case of Debra Wong Yang, who, after opening an investigation into Rep. Jerry Lewis, was bought out for $1.5 million dollars and hired by… the law firm representing Rep. Lewis.

  • tom cleaver – note too that the resignations occurred IMMEDIATELY after someone from DoJ came to visit:
    the MN star tribune‘ has the item today. this is MOST juicy!

    “The job changes followed a visit to the office by a representative from the Executive Office of the U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C.”

  • I’ve said before, the scandel isn’t the seven (eight) U.S. Attorneys who were fired.

    It’s the 85 who kept their jobs.

  • What’s happening up in Alaska?

    Didn’t the FBI raid the offices of the son of Alaska Senator Ted Stevens last year?

    Who’s in charge of that investigation?

  • FBI searches offices of Alaska lawmakers
    Legislators targeted in five locations as part of ‘pending investigation’
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 11:39 p.m. ET Sept 1, 2006

    JUNEAU, Alaska – The offices of at least six Alaska legislators, including the son of Sen. Ted Stevens, were raided by federal agents searching for possible ties between the lawmakers and a large oil field services company, officials and aides said.

    Department of Justice spokeswoman Jaclyn Lesch said Friday the searches began Thursday and were continuing Friday. FBI spokesman Eric Gonzalez said a total of 20 search warrants were being executed across Alaska, but would not say where.

    A copy of one of the search warrants, obtained by The Associated Press, links the investigation to a new production tax law signed last month by Gov. Frank Murkowski and a draft natural gas pipeline contract Murkowski and the state’s three largest oil companies negotiated.

    The warrant called for seizure of documents concerning any payment made to lawmakers by Bill Allen and Richard Smith, executives of oil field services giant VECO Corp. Agents also looked for documents about contracts, agreements or employment of legislators provided by VECO, Allen, Smith and company president Peter Leathard.

  • Oh, it gets even better. The Republicans here in Wisconsin were screaming about alleged voter-fraud, but now none of them will own up to who took it to the White House.

    http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=587128

    Steven Biskupic’s brother Vince was revealed to have taken cash payments from those about to be charged with felonies to avoid being charged and serving jail time:

    http://www.truthinjustice.org/more-vince.htm

    Vince lost his bid for Wisconsin Attorney General in 2002. And where was he on Valentine’s Day, 2003? Serving as best man at the wedding of bribe-taking Winnebago County DA Joseph Paulus!

    http://www.truthinjustice.org/Biskupic-paulus-gift.htm

  • I was wondering how it was bushies justice dept. was bringing seven times more public corruption cases against dems than repubs. Makes it easier if you don’t need much evidence.

  • Glad you brought up Wisconsin angle that I sent to you yesterday at 5pm. Shocked you didn’t see fit to give me a link. Then you double dip and link yourself on Salon–man, things have changed since Peter left there.

    The main thing is that the story gets out–not blogger ethics or basic fairness.

    Your list of all cases is a contribution and it’s likely to grow.

  • orionATL,

    “at sentencing, the government urged a longer period of incarceration because [thompson] DID NOT ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY.”

    As anyone who has any familiarity with federal sentencing could inform you, your interpretation of this is entirely wrong. The article you quote (without citation, I note) is clearly referring to Section 3E1.1 of the United StatesSentencing Guidelines, which provides that a defendant’s sentence may be reduced from the recommended range if the defendant “demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for his offense.” This section is applied literally every day in federal courts across the nation, and there appears to be nothing unusual about its application in Thompson’s case. Moreover, she did not, as you suggest, receive a higher sentence for failing to confess; rather, she was ineligible for a sentence reduction that is made available to defendants who accept responsibility. That may sound like a semantic distinction, but the United States Supreme Court has recognized that “[a]lthough such a reduction in sentence creates a powerful incentive for defendants to confess, it completely avoids the constitutional issue that would be presented if the Guidelines operated like the scheme here and authorized an upward adjustment whenever a defendant refused to accept responsibility.” McKune v. Lile, 536 U.S. 24, 65 (2002) (Breyer, J., dissenting).

    In any case, the suggestion that this was some special penalty applied to Thompson demonstrates complete ignorance of the most basic principles of federal sentencing.

  • TROHA HA HA!

    Dem Gov. Jim Doyle AND various Bushites helped this creep for dough!

    Dems are no better than Repubs when it comes to quid pro quo!

  • What I’d like to know is, if the case was so thin, how did she get convicted in the first place? Was it by a jury of peers?

  • For those coming here from Kos who don’t know who Dennis Troha is:

    http://www.madison.com/tct/mad/topstories/index.php?ntid=128250

    Doyle’s administration remains under investigation by federal authorities, who last month indicted Kenosha businessman Dennis Troha on charges that he laundered political donations to Doyle through family members in order to exceed state campaign contribution limits.

    The indictment charges that Troha, through several family members, gave Doyle nearly $200,000 in campaign donations in an attempt to get the governor’s approval of a proposed off-reservation gaming casino in Kenosha.

    Federal investigators are also probing whether Troha got special treatment from state Department of Transportation officials in an unrelated tax dispute involving his trucking company.

    In another case, federal, state, and local prosecutors are examining the Public Service Commission’s approval of the sale of the Kewaunee nuclear power plant, which came after utility company officials involved in the deal held a fund-raiser for Doyle.

    Doyle has denied any wrongdoing in all of those cases.

    Republicans and reform groups critical of those deals said Thompson’s release does not clear Doyle.

    “Given that we do not know the rationale behind today’s decision, it is inappropriate to consider this a vindication of the Doyle administration,” state GOP director Mark Jefferson said in a statement.

    The statement quoted comments reportedly made by juror Marvin Bizzelle on a WTMJ radio show in Milwaukee after Thompson was convicted in June. “Someone above her was involved in it, but they know how to keep their hands out of it so they don’t get charged with it. We felt there was pressure…”

    Jefferson noted that Doyle’s administration is still under investigation by state and federal authorities.

    “If anything, we hope today’s ruling spurs a renewed effort in the search for the full truth,” he said.

    One Republican strategist, however, said off the record that Doyle might have gained a short-term win on the ruling.

    But, he added, “he would probably do well to use caution about a victory lap.”

    “There are more FBI agents at the DOT than people applying for driver’s licenses,” he quipped, in reference to the Troha inquiry.

    Mike McCabe, director of the nonpartisan Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, argued that many viewed Thompson as taking the blame for her political superiors in the Department of Administration.

    Despite her acquittal, he said, “It still doesn’t make the circumstances around the state travel contract smell any better.”

    Oh, and the Menominee Tribe that Troha was pimping for?

    Former Chairman Michael Chapman made a nice fat commission by being the very one who introduced his self-confessed ‘guide’ and ‘inspiration’ – JACK ABRAMOFF – to the Agua Caliente Band of California!

    Did Troha give a lot of money to Bush as well? Sure he did!

    Because Dem. Doyle & dumb Bushies help those who butter their bread.

  • james dillon:

    1. you seem remarkably unconcerned with my central point, which is that an american citizen’s life was ruined

    by the DELIBERATE abuse of federal prosecurorial power

    for the purpose of attacking a political (democratic) opponent in a governor’s race in wisconsin.

    2. i wouldn’t know a sentencing guideline if it fell off a library shelf onto my toe.

    3. in the body of my comment, if you look just after

    ” — her home

    – her life savings”,

    you will see a citation from the newspaper article i used as the basis of my comments – the milwaulkee journal sentinel april 5, 2007.

    4. georgia thompson’s attorney is stephen hurley.

    in that journal-sentinel article, mr. hurley is quoted from a statement he released :

    “at sentencing, the government urged a longer period of incarceration because georgia did not accept responsibility … today the government ought to accept responsibility for the consequences of its acts.”

    take up your complaint with lawyer hurley. perhaps a clear thinker like yourself will be able to convince him of the error of his ways.

    5. the supreme court be damned.

    any moron, even a lawyerly moron like yourself, can comprehend that when a prosecutor threatens a defendant wrongly accused, or accused for political reasons, with a longer sentence, that threat is an implicit demand for a confession. there are few things more abhorrent in the law than putting an innocent in a double bind like this.

    nonetheless, the technique is used all the time, and you must know that to be the case, knowledgeable as you seem to be in the law.

    6. if your point is that not all calls by prosecutors for longer sentences are unfair,

    then you are only stating the obvious.

    for instance, i would happily recommend a longer sentenced for various bush administration officials lying to congress over the last six years.

    but this case is not your routine fraud or tax evasion case,

    in this case,

    our government used its great egal power to wrongly attacke an American citizen for political purposes.

    that, need i remind you, is why we have the very peculiar constitution we have.

    the guys who wrote it up had already seen what kings and their courtiers can do to a citizen.

  • our government used its great egal power to wrongly attacke an American citizen for political purposes.

    Why do you expect better?

    If not for the obvious fact that the Kings of Commerce & their Left/Right puppet courtiers have convinced you that ‘kings’ were a thing of the past.

    This is America…

    Land of the Reservations.

  • orionATL,

    Good comment #29

    But you know what? Loyal Bushies will argue one of two things: that the system is corrupt and Thompson got off on a technicality (innocence — a technicality, imagine that !). Or else they will magnanimously cite Georgia Thompson’s case to prove that our judicial system works as intended (wink, wink).

    But at no time will they ever admit that using the courts for partisan political purposes is wrong. Oh, no. The GOP is too special and too clever to be wrong.

  • Here’s another “Loyal Bushie” report for your list.

    This one’s from California

    Loyal Bushie and “company man” Kevin Ryan launch an FBI investigation on top CA Democrat the day he assumes his leadership post in the CA State Senate. The investigation has been wandering now for over two years accomplishing nothing but embarassing headlines for the Democrat.

    In other words… Mission Accomplished.

  • Mary Beth Buchanan was also the Director of the Executive Office of the US Attorneys from June 2004 to June 2005 and a supervisor of Monica Goodling. Ms. Buchanan held the position of Director of the Executive Office of US Attorneys prior to Mike Battle. Mike Battle resigned from his post (allegedly) because he refused to go through with politically motivated firings. Ms. Buchanan on the other hand has been promoted to other national offices such as the Office for Violence Against Women (or what not).

  • Mary Beth Buchanan also has gone after all major local democrats in the Pittsburgh Area.

    Former Mayor Tom Murphy
    The Late Mayor Bob O’Connor
    Former Sherrif Pete DeFazio
    Coroner Cyril Wecht
    and two judges at the state level (both Democrats)

    Since she has only been in her position since the end of 2001, she is average 1 Democrat a year.

  • Orion,

    I admit your initial post (and, indeed, your subsequent one) was a bit hard to follow, but it seemed to me that your mischaracterization of Ms. Thompson’s sentencing, and in particular, her ineligibility for a reduction for acceptance of responsibility, was a “central point.” I think we can agree that wrongly pursuing criminal charges against an innocent individual for the sake of political expediency, if that’s what happened here, is abhorrent, but that doesn’t justify a wide-ranging and ignorant mischaracterization of an aspect of the federal justice system that actually works to many defendants’ benefit. First, I would reiterate my main point– Ms. Thompson was not given a longer sentence because she refused to confess. Rather, she was ineligible for a sentence reduction for that reason. The outcome was the same– her sentence was longer than it would of been if she had confessed– but there is a serious conceptual difference between the two. You’re right, though, that Ms. Thompson’s attorney’s comments were rather imprecise on that point (perhaps justifiably so for a defense attorney trying to give his client’s case the most powerful emotional punch, but unfortunate for a member of the public relying on that attorney’s comments for a clear understanding of what happened in the case).

    any moron, even a lawyerly moron like yourself, can comprehend that when a prosecutor threatens a defendant wrongly accused, or accused for political reasons, with a longer sentence, that threat is an implicit demand for a confession.
    Of course it’s an implicit demand for a confession– Guidelines Section 3E1.1 is intentionally designed to encourage confessions and cooperation from defendants. The idea is to encourage defendants to spare the government the expense of going through a criminal trial by offering to shave a little bit off their sentence if they confess up front, and it happens all the time. But before you condemn that as some kind of Stalinist tactic, consider that it’s usually in a criminal defendant’s best interests to confess and cooperate, anyway. I can’t cite the statistic offhand, but well over half of federal criminal defendants who go to trial end up being convicted, anyway. Of course, with no incentive to plead guilty, they would have nothing to lose by going to trial in the hopes that they might beat the odds and walk free, so the system sets up incentives for early cooperation. The assumption is that a truly innocent person would not confess to a crime she didn’t commit simply for the sake of getting a reduced sentence (and the reduction isn’t much– two or three points off of the final Guidelines calculation, which generally translates to several fewer months in prison). That seems to be exactly what happened in Ms. Thompson’s case.

    Let’s also bear in mind that identifying Ms. Thompson as “a defendant wrongly accused, or accused for political reasons” is rather a bit of Monday-morning quarterbacking. Even if her prosecution was prompted by political considerations, I rather doubt that that was clear to the Assistant United States Attorneys who were in charge of prosecuting her case– and who did, after all, manage to convince a jury (or possibly a judge) beyond a reasonable doubt that she was guilty of the charges.

    there are few things more abhorrent in the law than putting an innocent in a double bind like this.
    Well, again, before you start calling this aspect of the criminal justice system “abhorrent,” bear in mind what I explained above, that it actually works for the benefit of defendants most of the time. It is, of course, a terrible situation for any innocent person to be caught up in the criminal justice system, but as the prosecutors were, quite obviously, under the impression at the time that Ms. Thompson was not an innocent person, I don’t see how this aspect of the system could have been applied any differently.

  • james dillon;

    personally, i don’t give a rat’s ass what you admit.

    your second comment ( # 35) is clearly an effort to try to recover from the foolish comment you made earlier (# 24).

    my response to # 36:

    1. if either of my comments were hard for you to follow,

    then you are dumber than i imagined.

    the posts were very clear.

    your lawyerly sophistry about how difficult they are (for you – unstated, of course) to read is no condemnation of my comments.

    it is rather a condemnation of your inability, or more likely unwillingness, to give them an intelligent read.

    2. “I think we can agree that wrongly pursuing criminal charges against an innocent individual for the sake of political expediency, if that’s what happened here, is abhorrent, but that doesn’t’t justify a wide-ranging and ignorant mis-characterization of an aspect of the federal justice system that actually works to many defendants’ benefit”

    no, we can’t agree.

    and your sly effort to assert now, what you failed to asset earlier, about an innocent individual, is admission of that egregious oversight..

    3. as for “wide ranging and ignorant”,

    please refer to #29 above, item 6:

    ” 6. if your point is that not all calls by prosecutors for longer sentences are unfair,

    then you are only stating the obvious.”

    4. your comment

    “Let’s also bear in mind that identifying Ms. Thompson as “a defendant wrongly accused, or accused for political reasons” is rather a bit of Monday-morning quarterbacking. Even if her prosecution was prompted by political considerations, I rather doubt that that was clear to the Assistant United States Attorneys who were in charge of prosecuting her case– and who did, after all, manage to convince a jury (or possibly a judge) beyond a reasonable doubt that she was guilty of the charges.”

    this is simply ignorant bullshit on your part.

    ignorant of what?

    ignorant of the historical CONTEXT in which ms. thompson’s prosecution occurred.

    – the u.s. doj has replaced competent u.s. attorneys with strong political partisans

    – the justice department has conducted prosecutions for political advantage; this case appears to be one of those.political prosecutions.

    – competent u.s. attorneys (e.g., david iglesias) have been fired by the doj for refusing to conduct such witch hunts and witch trials.

    – the judge is a bush-appointed right-winger who is loyal before all else

    – the trial and conviction and sentencing occurred during the middle of a gubernatorial election in wisconsin in which the harm from conducting the prosecution adhered strongly to the democratic opponent of a republican candidate for governor.

    – a federal appeals panel demanded the defendant be freed ON CONCLUSION OF THE ORAL HEARING which lasted 30 minutes. she left federal prison at 4 p.m. that same afternoon.

    now tell me, jimmy boy, how often in your career have you seen this happen?

    how many times, jimmy boy?.

    lawyerly sophistry such as that you have displayed here is contemptible and, one would hope, an embarrassment to other lawyers.

  • Please look into ALABAMA. Former Democratic governor Don Siegelman was tried and convicted by the feds on “corruption” charges. This was in the federal Middle District of Alabama (where the state capital of Montgomery is located.) The accusations were of a “scheme” in which donors to Siegelman’s previous gubernatorial campaign were allegedly “rewarded”.

    The US Attorney’s Office there had more than one run at Siegelman: the first one ended in an acquittal, but the second one garnered a conviction. COINCIDENTALLY, this conviction came just as the governor’s race was heating up, in mid-2006, and Siegelman was clearly the main Democrat who would have been a real threat to the Republican governor, Bob Riley (who was running for a second term in 2006.)

  • Two quick things: (1) Georgia Thompson was not a “top official” in the Doyle administration. She was about six layers down. Doyle has never met her or spoken to her. As you point out, she was hired by the previous GOP administration. (2) It is worth listening to the oral arguments, in which the three Republican-appointed federal judges were incredulous that Thompson had even been charged, let alone convicted and imprisoned. This will take you to my post and a link to the audio,

  • America the Beautiful, land of certain “inalienable rights”, City on a Hill,
    Beacon of Liberty to the worlds desperate huddled masses, how have you become what you appear to be today? A significant number of your citizens are
    cretins who are convinced of their moral and spiritual superiority which they have attempted to impose on everybody by supporting a man(?) who seemed to them to be a fellow Christian traveller.29 percent of these are still completely supportive ot the criminal duo at the top, even after an avalanche of disclosures
    of criminality. They either support these tactics or cannot admit they (the
    intelligent anointed Christian saviours) TWICE elected the scum othe earth to be their leader.

  • James Dillon, Esq.

    Why do you ASSUME the prosecutors in the Thompson case OBVIOUSLY believed Ms. Thompson to be guilty, after all that has come to light? You’re a lawyer? Yeah. Right. Pfffft.

  • Meg Scott Phipps, first female elected Commissioner of Agriculture in North Carolina, daughter of one of the oldest politically active (Democrat) families in the state, was convicted of a fundraising scheme. She was singled out by the feds and absolutely villified. I am certain it was politically motivated. I wish someone would look into this case.

  • Comments are closed.