| TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! | ANSI |
| echo: | |
|---|---|
| to: | |
| from: | |
| date: | |
| subject: | Re: Bushies coercion of Federal prosecutors |
From: "Mark"
Eh, a bunch of nothing. He can fire them at will and probably should have
sooner. If the congress didn't want whatever clause you're referring to in
the PA, they shouldn't have passed it that way.
Hillary or Barack will be firing all of them in less than 2 years anyway.
"Rich Gauszka" wrote in
message news:45edf6f4{at}w3.nls.net...
> You conveniently forgot about the bypassing of Senate approval due to
> Bush's perversion of the Patriot Act for political purposes
>
>
> Gary Britt wrote:
>> Prosecutors are part of the executive branch not the judicial branch and
>> all serve at the pleasure of the President. When Bill Clinton came into
>> office in 1993 he fired all 84 US Attorneys. Bush didn't do this kind of
>> mass firing. Clinton also did many mass firings in other areas of
>> government as well. Also not followed by Bush.
>>
>> Bush should have followed the Clinton model, but he was trying to play
>> nice, foolishly thinking that he could achieve with washinton democraps
>> what he had achieved with Texas democrats. Washington democraps ain't
>> the same kind of critter.
>>
>> Gary
>>
>> Rich Gauszka wrote:
>>> Yet another debasement of the Patroit Act - The Bushies firing Federal
>>> prosecutors to get their cronies in without Senate confirmation.
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/politics/4606122.html
>>>
>>> WASHINGTON - A fired federal prosecutor told a Senate committee Tuesday
>>> that he felt "leaned on" and sickened as Republican
Sen. Pete Domenici
>>> hung up on him in disgust last fall when told that indictments in a
>>> corruption case against Democrats would not be issued before the fall
>>> elections.
>>>
>>> "He said, 'Are these going to be filed before
November?'" former federal
>>> prosecutor David Iglesias, one of eight U.S. attorneys summarily fired
>>> in recent months, told the panel. "I said I didn't think so. And to
>>> which he replied, 'I'm very sorry to hear that.' And then the line went
>>> dead."
>>>
>>> The Bush administration also applied a heavy hand after the firings of
>>> eight prosecutors became public and some of the dismissed U.S. attorneys
>>> had been quoted in media, according to one of those ousted, Bud Cummins
>>> of Arkansas.
>>>
>>> Cummins said in an e-mail released by the Senate Judiciary Committee
>>> that Mike Elston, chief of staff to Deputy Attorney General Paul
>>> McNulty, had called and expressed his displeasure that the fired
>>> prosecutors talked to reporters about their dismissals.
>>>
>>> "If they (DOJ) feel like any of us intend to continue to
offer quotes to
>>> the press, or organize behind the scenes congressional pressure, then
>>> they feel forced to somehow pull their gloves off and offer public
>>> criticisms to defend their actions more fully," Cummins said in the
>>> e-mail to five other fired prosecutors.
>>>
>>> Iglesias said he received the call at home on Oct. 26 or 27th and that
>>> it lasted two minutes, "tops."
>>>
>>> "I felt leaned on. I felt pressured to get these matters
moving,"
>>> Iglesias testified.
>>>
>>> Asked by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., whether such a call was unusual in
>>> Iglesias' experience, the former prosecutor answered,
"Unprecedented."
>>>
>>> Six of eight prosecutors fired by the Department of Justice in recent
>>> months were expected to appear before House and Senate panels - all six
>>> under subpoena before the House, four voluntarily in the Senate. Justice
>>> officials have said most of the eight were dismissed for
>>> performance-related issues, an allegation those testifying staunchly
>>> denied.
>>>
>>>
http://www.cumberlink.com/articles/2007/03/06/editorial/editorial/daily938.
txt
>>>
>>> The New Mexico controversy suggests a possible attempt to use the courts
>>> to sway an election. In San Diego, reasonable people might detect a
>>> whiff of payback as well as a possible fear of where an unfinished
>>> investigation might lead next. And when a former Karl Rove aide ends up
>>> as a federal prosecutor in Arkansas, it's hard to avoid the notion that
>>> someone's planning to revive the Whitewater scandal against Sen. Hillary
>>> Clinton.
>>>
>>> Apparently, a little-noticed provision of the Patriot Act allows U.S.
>>> attorneys to be replaced without Senate confirmation. A lack of
>>> confirmation hearings no doubt caused some fine political minds to
>>> believe they could put people more sympathetic to their plans in those
>>> jobs, as long as they kept things quiet.
>>>
>>>
--- BBBS/NT v4.01 Flag-5
* Origin: Barktopia BBS Site http://HarborWebs.com:8081 (1:379/45)SEEN-BY: 633/267 5030/786 @PATH: 379/45 1 633/267 |
|
| SOURCE: echomail via fidonet.ozzmosis.com | |
Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.