indict dick cheney

Entries tagged as ‘gonzales cheney bush sampson attorney privilege rove wa’

a few dead-tree-items worthy of your attention. . .

March 31, 2007 · Leave a Comment

while we wait for the next barrage
of public hearings in congress,
i’ll point to encouraging evidence
that even the hard-right, old-guard
media is finding the courage to con-
front the multiple disasters that
have defined this bush presidency.

first, from the wall street journal,
a story lauding the courage of a marine.

but — contrary to our first guess,
this marine is not killing people
securing freedom in iraq, at the moment.
no, this marine is being singled out for
praise by the right-side-business-executives’
paper of record for. . . refusing to
prosecute a terror case almost
certainly built on statements
obtained through torture
.

this is significant.

very significant. . . not that col.
v. stuart couch refused to prosecute
a torture-tainted (read: violative of
the geneva conventions) gitmo case.
no — it is significant that at least
the more-principled — right or left,
will openly praise good people of
conscience who stand up to the rove/
cheney/bush sneer of distain for the
role of the rule of law in our system
of ordered libety — do take a look:

The Conscience of the Colonel

By Jess Bravin

“. . .When the Pentagon needed someone to prosecute a Guantanamo Bay prisoner linked to 9/11, it turned to Lt. Col. V. Stuart Couch. A Marine Corps pilot and veteran prosecutor, Col. Couch brought a personal connection to the job: His old Marine buddy, Michael “Rocks” Horrocks, was co-pilot on United 175, the second plane to strike the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. . .

Col. Couch refused to bring charges against a suspected terrorist because he thought evidence was tainted by torture. The rare case was a wrenching personal challenge for Col. Couch. . . Going forward, these concerns will likely become more prevalent. . .”

we certainly hope so. and we also
certainly hope the journal will begin
to report on them, regularly — and in detail.

next — this from friday’s editorial
page at the grand old gray lady:

“. . .The senators questioning Mr. Sampson pointed to a troubling pattern: many of the fired prosecutors were investigating high-ranking Republicans. He was asked if he was aware that the fired United States attorney in Nevada was investigating a Republican governor, that the fired prosecutor in Arkansas was investigating the Republican governor of Missouri, or that the prosecutor in Arizona was investigating two Republican members of Congress.

Mr. Sampson’s claim that he had only casual knowledge of these highly sensitive investigations was implausible, unless we are to believe that Mr. Gonzales runs a department in which the chief of staff is merely a political hack who has no hand in its substantive work. He added to the suspicions that partisan politics were involved when he made the alarming admission that in the middle of the Scooter Libby investigation, he suggested firing Patrick Fitzgerald, the United States attorney in Chicago who was the special prosecutor in the case.

The administration insists that purge was not about partisan politics. But Mr. Sampson’s alternative explanation was not very credible — that the decision about which of these distinguished prosecutors should be fired was left in the hands of someone as young and inept as Mr. Sampson. If this were an above-board, professional process, it strains credulity that virtually no documents were produced when decisions were made, and that none of his recommendations to Mr. Gonzales were in writing.

It is no wonder that the White House is trying to stop Congress from questioning Mr. Rove, Harriet Miers, the former White House counsel, and other top officials in public, under oath and with a transcript. The more the administration tries to spin the prosecutor purge, the worse it looks. . .”

that is certainly true. and while saturday’s
nyt opinion page seemed — to me — ill-informed
about why the judiciary committee’s decision
to take the statements of the underlings and
peripheral players in the purge scandal might
be a very savvy move (see earier my post, on
that topic), i do agree with the lady’s
ultimate punch-line, here:



[Private interviews]“. . .must not become a substitute for what this investigation really requires: sworn public testimony under oath by Karl Rove, the presidential adviser; Harriet Miers, the former White House counsel; and everyone else involved. . .

let us hope that this day, and the
day that dick cheney is called to
explain himself, under oath, and at
public hearings, is fast-approaching. . .

keep the pressure on — write sen.
leahy, and rep. conyers (see right
margin for pictures — and e-mail
contact addresses) to praise them,
and to offer your continued support
of their valiant efforts to assert
the role of the legislative branch
in keeping its eye on the manifold
unconstitutional excesses of this
particular incarnation of the
executive branch. . .

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purge-gate — new e-mails spell trouble for rove & sampson

March 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

in a well-worn “trial by bataan-
death-march”
technique, the ad-
ministration tonight turned over
another 300-some pages of e-mails
to the senate judiciary committee,
about 15 hours before d. kyle sampson,
the former chief of staff for alberto
gonzales, is to appear and testify. . .

josh marshall at the tpmmuckraker
gets all the credit here, for i first
saw versions of the texts there, but
i’ve tried to present them in an
easily-digestible, condensed and
highlighted fashion, below [just
click each image to see full-size]. . .


via the above, we see (highlighted) in february
2007, sampson writes, and the administration
subsequently repeatedly claims, “rove had
no role in the decision to appoint”
an
attorney general named tim griffin, a rove-friendly. . .

paul mcnulty, the deputy attorney general, repeats
this line to a congressional inquiry. . . just one
little problem — tonight’s e-mail dump proves sampson
himself wrote something entirely inconsistent
with that, in december 2006 — just two months earlier:

note particularly the last yellow highlight.

senator leahy — a former prosecutor — will
have quite a bit of “cross-examination” fodder
when the hearing convenes at 10 am eastern,
this coming morning.

i think i’ll revise my bets — sampson will
ultimately be disbarred, but he will also ultimately
say that “others” directed his actions. . .
i see no other path out of the woods for him. . .

so — whom will those “others” be?

rove? cheney? bush, himself?

in any event, i think we can stick a fork
in mr. sampson — he’s done — done practicing
law, unless there are documents yet-to-be pro-
duced to counter what appears to be a fairly
glaring prevarication.

this may be one of those “sam ervin” moments,
but we’ll have to catch it on cspan 3, not nbc. . .

~~~~~~~~~~~~

nota bene: in the final image, above,
note the yellow-highlighted quotations
around the term “good faith”.

why did sampson set “good faith” in
quotations? was he acknowledging that the
effort there described would actually not
be made in good faith? i think so.

i think it evinces a cynical use
of the term — thus the reference
to “running-out-the-clock”, pre-
sumably to the end of 2008. . .

disgusting.

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