Tag Archives: US Attorneys

CA-41: Lewis Aide Subpoenaed

That was quick.  The new US Attorney for the Los Angeles region, Thomas O’Brien, was just sworn in a week or so ago.  He’s apparently making the Jerry Lewis investigation a priority:

A federal grand jury in Los Angeles has issued a subpoena for a House Appropriations Committee staffer as part of the ongoing probe of Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.), the ranking member of the powerful panel.

Greg Lankler, a staffer on the House Appropriations Committee’s Defense subcommittee, was recently subpoenaed by a federal grand jury looking into Lewis, according to House insiders.

The subpoena is for both documents and testimony, although it is unclear at this point whether Lankler will cooperate. The matter has been forwarded to the House general counsel’s office, which is still studying the subpoena.

There hasn’t been a subpoena in this case, which involves Lewis’ moving millions of dollars’ worth of earmarks to his friend, the ex-Congressman and lobbyist Bill Lowery, in over a year.  Investigators on the case have been running out of money.  So it is a bit of a surprise that this subpoena would emerge.  The big difference in recent weeks is the confirmation of Thomas O’Brien.

Draw your own conclusions.

CA-41: Lewis, DoJ Drain The Money Swamp

Bruin Kid lets us know that Jerry Lewis will be seeking re-election next year.  He’s obviously pretty confident that his legal troubles and investigations into his corrupt earmarking will amount to nothing.  I’m thinking this is why:

In Los Angeles, a federal criminal investigation of Rep. Jerry Lewis, a California Republican, stalled for nearly six months due to a lack of funds, according to former prosecutors. The lead prosecutor on the inquiry and other lawyers departed the office, and vacancies couldn’t be filled. George Cardona, the interim U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, declined to comment on specific cases but confirmed that lack of funds and unfilled vacancies caused delays in some investigations […]

People with knowledge of the case said that by the time the investigation stalled in December 2006, it had branched out into other areas, including Mr. Lewis’s June 2003 role in passing legislation that helped giant hedge fund Cerberus Capital Management. People associated with Cerberus around the same time gave at least $140,000 to a political action committee controlled by Mr. Lewis. Cerberus officials didn’t respond to phone calls or emailed questions concerning the Lewis inquiry […]

After the lead prosecutor in the Lewis case quit, others assigned to the case took time getting up to speed. Brian Hershman, a former deputy chief of the Los Angeles office’s public corruption section, declined to comment on specific cases, but confirms that his group’s work overall was derailed by the departure of experienced prosecutors. Like several others, he says he left for more money to support his family.

Replacements “are mostly rookies,” he says. “It will be some time before they’ll be able to restore the section to what it was before.”

With additional funds recently made available by Congress, the Los Angeles office has filled 12 of 57 lawyer vacancies and is expecting an additional 12 lawyers to start soon. To jump-start the Lewis investigation, Mr. Cardona, the interim U.S. attorney, in June called on a veteran prosecutor, Michael Emmick, to revive and supervise the investigation, people with knowledge of the investigation say.

Day late and a dollar short on that one, I’d gather.  This is approaching criminal conduct by the Justice Department.  At a time when the investigation was expanding, Debra Wong Yang (the US Attorney for the region) suddenly jumped ship for the law firm representing Lewis.  You can bet they never lacked funds; Yang received nearly $1.5 million.  The law firm, Gibson Dunn, took the top assistant off the case as well.  So the LA office was thrown into disarray precisely when the investigation was heating up, and the money for the office dried up at the same time.  Pathetic.  With or without Alberto Gonzales, we still have a DoJ protecting its own and politicized beyond control.  And this is the time when Democratic leaders are seeking to call off the dogs in the US Attorney case?

US Attorney for LA Appointed Without Senate Confirmation

The one, and perhaps only, hard piece of accountability that has come out of the widening US Attorney scandal is that the Congress passed legislation striking out the provision in the PATRIOT Act that allowed the Justice Department to appoint replacement federal prosecutors without seeking Senate confirmation.  The new law passed in both Houses with expansive, veto-proof majorities (94-2 in the Senate, 306-114 in the House). Any veto would be overridden, so the President has no choice but to sign the bill.

Except he hasn’t yet, and the hip-pocket veto has enabled Abu G to strike again – right in our own backyard of Los Angeles.

In a Senate Judiciary Committee business meeting Thursday morning, Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) revealed that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales once again used an interim appointment authority at the heart of the US Attorneys controversy that Congress banned in a bill sent to the President for signature on June 4 […]

Tracy Schmaler, a spokeswoman for Senator Leahy, clarified the situation in an e-mail to RAW STORY.

“It just so happens the committee got notice yesterday, that on June 16, George Cardona’s 210 days as Acting U.S. Attorney in the Central District of California will have run out and the Attorney General will appoint him as an interim U.S. Attorney at that time. (i.e. still using the end-run authority because Bush has slow-walked signing the bill),” she wrote.

The Cardona appointment is interesting, to say the least.  It was reported in the LA Times just two weeks ago that a new hire for Cardona’s position was imminent.  The Los Angeles DA Steve Cooley called the pick, Thomas O’Brien, “the most apolitical person selected to that job in quite some time.”  Remember that the vacancy here was made by Debra Wong Yang’s departure to Republican law firm Gibson Dunn, the same firm whose client was Rep. Jerry Lewis, who Yang was investigating at the time.

So Lewis’ team had already bought out Yang (allegedly!), and now they were faced with the prospect of a hard-charging independent former DA in the role.  That must not have sat well with him.  So did Lewis tell the Justice Department to keep their handpicked loyalist in place until he made his way out of Congress (he’s rumored to be retiring)?

Marcy Wheeler also sees another angle here.

Finally, the move is especially curious because Gerry Parsky, a bigwig Republican who heads a Commission that picks judicial appointees in CA, has been particularly cranky about being left out of the process of naming USAs. And DOJ already went around him on this position specifically.

Once Yang resigned in November to pursue private law practice, it was up to the commission to make recommendations to the White House and the Justice Department. But Sampson and Goodling tried to generate candidates of their own. Interviews were scheduled with half a dozen people, many of whom had held political appointments in the department.

Parsky did not respond to e-mailed questions about his role in the process.

After word of the interview schedule leaked, Parsky called the White House and the Justice Department to complain, according to a person familiar with the process who requested anonymity because it involves a personnel matter. Goodling was allowed to proceed with the interviews, but was told she had to tell the candidates that they would have to reapply through the commission.

Ultimately, the commission is believed to have recommended two candidates; the only one interviewed by the Justice officials in Washington was a career prosecutor who has headed the criminal division of the Los Angeles office. The White House has not said whom it will nominate for the post.

Some people close to the selection process suspect Goodling and Sampson were attempting an end-run around the commission to install a politically connected Washington insider, possibly by using a law that permitted the attorney general to appoint interim U.S. attorneys without Senate oversight.

Indeed, Parsky was on board with the Thomas O’Brien appointment, according to the recent LA Times article.  Until it all fell through.

What the hell’s going on here?  Why is it so important to keep George Cardona in the Los Angeles USA seat, in defiance of a law passed by over 85% of Congress?  Does this have to do with investigations of members of Congress like Lewis (and, potentially, Ken Calvert)?  Will there be an effort to suppress the vote in the extremely ethnically diverse region, and must Cardona be the point person for that?  It’s very, very curious.

CA-41: Connecting the Dots

As mentioned a couple times on Calitics, Bob Novak is reporting that corrupt con Jerry Lewis may retire in 2008.  Novak may be a douchebag of liberty, but he usually has excellent inside information from the GOP (you know, like who’s a covert CIA agent and who isn’t).  It started me wondering why Lewis would retire at this point, when the investigations into his practices have slowed to a crawl.  Then I remembered this story I read in yesterday’s LA Times:

As Congress investigates whether U.S. attorneys across the nation were fired or forced out for political reasons, the Bush administration appears to be poised to nominate a respected career prosecutor as U.S. attorney in Los Angeles.

Thomas O’Brien, 47, the chief of the office’s criminal division, worked for five years in the district attorney’s hard-core gang division before moving to the U.S. attorney’s office.

“He’s probably the most apolitical person selected to that job for some time,” Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley said. “He’s an excellent pick. He’s a career, professional prosecutor.”

The position of US Attorney for Los Angeles, which holds jurisdiction over Lewis’ case, has been vacant since Debra Wong Yang left in January to go to Gibson Dunn, a high-powered Republican law firm that is also REPRESENTING Lewis.  O’Brien appears to be an unlikely pick for an ideological White House – he’s competent, apolitical, and a respected prosecutor – but because the Congress is sniffing around all of these US Attorney threads these days, they may have no choice but to hire someone of his stature:

Carl W. Tobias, professor of constitutional law at the University of Richmond, said O’Brien’s nomination would be a healthy sign that the Justice Department is changing its policies.

“My sense of what’s going on is that there is an inclination at the Justice Department to pick these kinds of people to defuse the controversy,” Tobias said. “It seems like it’s going to be much more of a meritocracy.”

And this could be bad news for the thoroughly unmeritorious Lewis.  An independent prosecutor would follow the evidence, and there’s a mountain of it where Lewis is concerned.  He used the Appropriations Committee in the 109th Congress as his own personal earmark factory, steering contracts to clients of connected lobbyist Bill Lowery, who has graciously given half a million dollars to Lewis campaigns over the years.

A guy like this as US Attorney in LA could be Lewis’ worst nightmare:

…O’Brien motivates attorneys to be creative and volunteer for cases. When an assistant U.S. attorney passed out during opening statements last week due to a medical problem, O’Brien took over personally. On Thursday, he was in court on the case.

“He came out with that background as a D.A. where you get a file the day before and go try it,” Carter said.

A hard-charging former D.A. versus Jerry Lewis?  That’s no contest.  Maybe it’s better for him to get out of Washington while the getting’s good, and focus more time and money on saving his own posterior.

What our New US Attorney is up to

While San Diego has the rockstar of the fired US Attorneys, the Bay Area got its own taste of the Firings.  Certainly Kevin Ryan was no saint, but well, neither is the new US Attorney, Scott Schools.

What exactly is Mr. Schools up to? Well, he’s in the process of vindictively prosecuting the “Ganja Guru”:

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer demanded to know who in the Justice Department made the decision to continue pursuing Ed Rosenthal, whose conviction was overturned last year.  Newly appointed U.S. Attorney Scott Schools made the decision, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney George Bevan. Bevan said he was unsure whether Justice Department officials in Washington were involved.(AP 4/13/07)

So, do you think the smackdown of a federal judge will look very good when he has to appear before the senate to be confirmed? What about losing a civil trial for vindictive prosecution?

Even More Doolittle/Mitchell Wade/Brent Wilkes/US Attorney News

Josh Marshall delivers some knowledge about Mitchell Wade, a defense contractor and Duke Cunningham briber whose first contract in government was to screen the President’s mail for anthrax, despite having no real expertise in that arena.

This is a known briber receiving a sweetheart contract from the Executive Office of the President.  And who’s in the middle of it?  John Doolittle and his wife.  Mitchell Wade and Brent Wilkes worked closely together to bribe or otherwise give recompense to Duke Cunningham in exchange for contracts.  They appear to have done something similar with Doolittle.

flip it…

Julie Doolittle was working at (Ed) Buckham’s offices in 2002 when Buckham introduced Brent Wilkes to her husband. Federal contracts for his flagship company, ADCS Inc., were drying up, partly because the Pentagon had been telling Congress it had little need for the company’s document-scanning technology. So Wilkes was trying to get funding for two new businesses.

One was tied to the 2002 anthrax scare, when tainted letters were sent to Capitol Hill. Wilkes’ idea was to have all Capitol Hill mail rerouted to a site in the Midwest, where ADCS employees wearing protective suits would scan it into computers and then e-mail it back to Washington.

He called his proposed solution MailSafe – similar to the names of several anti-anthrax companies launched at that time – and began vying for federal contracts, even though the company had little to its name other than a rudimentary Web site.

The House Administration Committee, on which Doolittle sat, oversees the congressional mail system. Doolittle told his colleagues about MailSafe and introduced them to Wilkes, but the project never got off the ground.

The project failed in the House Administration Committee but succeeded in the White House.  The question is, did Doolittle have a role in introducing executive staffers to Wade and Wilkes?  Did he receive any financial reward?

And the larger question, of course, is the fact that there are documented instances of Doolittle receiving money in contributions from Brent Wilkes, if not Wade.  When Carol Lam opened her investigation into Wilkes and Dusty Foggo in May 2006, Doolittle was clearly likely to be implicated in that chain if the matter was investigated closely enough.  And right at that time, the Justice Department made a deal to deny Lam resources and keep her on “a short leash.”  While she was able to indict Wilkes and Foggo, the investigation never went any further, and Lam was fired.

Two weeks after then-U.S. Attorney Carol Lam ordered a raid on the home and offices of a former CIA official last year – a search prompted by her investigation of now-imprisoned former Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham – higher-ups at the Justice Department privately questioned whether they should give her more money and manpower.

“There are good reasons not to provide extensive resources to (Lam),” Bill Mercer, acting associate attorney general, wrote to Kyle Sampson, who was chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales until he resigned a couple of weeks ago […]

The day after this Mercer missive, Sampson directed Mercer in an e-mail to have a “heart-to-heart” with Lam about “the urgent need to improve immigration enforcement in San Diego.”

“Put her on a very short leash,” Sampson wrote. “If she balks – or otherwise does not perform in a measurable way by July 15, remove her.”

A month later, Justice Department higher-ups were referring to Lam derisively, saying she “can’t meet a deadline” that her production was “hideous” and that she was “sad.”

Five months later, Lam was told she was being fired.

There’s good reason to believe that the resources were withheld somewhat deliberately, to make a plausible case that Lam couldn’t handle her immigration workload.  This is nonsense, and Paul Kiel does an excellent job of calling it nonsense.  The truth is that immigration was a red herring; Lam was fired because of her investigations, which (if unchecked) would lead not only into the FBI but into the Executive Office of the President himself, and which would have picked up a lot of Congressional flotsam along the way.

And one of the chief pieces of flotsam was John Doolittle.  He has disqualified himself for any future holding of public office.  We need to continue to drain this swamp of corrupt sleazebags who view government as their own personal feedbag.  Charlie Brown is a man of extreme integrity who would restore honor to that seat in Congress.  He deserves our support.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jerry McNerney (CA-11) $
Charlie Brown (CA-04) $
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The US Attorney Scandal, Jack Abramoff, and John Doolittle

(I fixed the ActBlue form and added the YouTube video. You’ll also see buttons to set up monthly contributions to the Calitics ActBlue recipients. Let me know if you have any questions. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

The US Attorney scandal has gobbled up a lot of the headlines recently, but its origin can be traced back five years, well before the firing of 8 federal prosecutors for suspicious reasons in December 2006. 

Actually, we have to go back to the island nation of Guam, a well-connected DC lobbyist who’s now sitting in a jail cell, and a certain Congressman from Roseville.

Jerry McNerney (CA-11) $
Charlie Brown (CA-04) $



Jack Abramoff made a cool seven million dollars from contracts with the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands.  His duties were essentially to shield the American protectorate from all US labor laws, while retaining the ability to place a “Made in the USA” label on any of their products.  This successful lobbying effort allowed the CNMI to create sweatshops where sexual slavery, child labor and forced abortions were part of the landscape.  And the greatest ally to Jack Abramoff in Congress on this issue was John Doolitte (CA-04), called a “hero for the CNMI” in internal emails between Abramoff and the CNMI government.

Abramoff’s success in stopping all efforts to reform the labor situation in the CNMI caught the notice of other Pacific island protectorates.  He soon got a job lobbying for Guam, and sought to lobby against a court reform bill which would weaken the authority of the Guam Superior Court.  The Superior Court hired Abramoff, unusual in itself, and paid him in a series of laundered $9,000 checks funneled through a Laguna Beach lawyer.  Abramoff was trying to hide his involvement lobbying for the Superior Court while seeking to torpedo the bill that would impact them.

Now, Guam had a federal prosecutor, named Fred Black, and he saw this business and opened a grand jury investigation.  At precisely that time, he was fired.

A US grand jury in Guam opened an investigation of controversial lobbyist Jack Abramoff more than two years ago, but President Bush removed the supervising federal prosecutor, and the probe ended soon after […]

(Abramoff’s financial) transactions were the target of a grand jury subpoena issued Nov. 18, 2002, according to the subpoena. It demanded that Anthony Sanchez, administrative director of the Guam Superior Court, turn over all records involving the lobbying contract, including bills and payments.

A day later, the chief prosecutor, US Attorney Frederick A. Black, who had launched the investigation, was demoted. A White House news release announced that Bush was replacing Black.
The timing caught some by surprise. Despite his officially temporary status as the acting US attorney, Black had held the assignment for more than a decade.

Black was looking into other official corruption on the island as well, so it was sensible that Abramoff would want him out of the picture.

This connection to the current scandal, a clear case of firing a federal prosecutor to shield Republicans from corruption investigations, has caught the notice of the Congress. 

Two House committee chairmen yesterday asked that the congressional probe into the firing of eight U.S. Attorneys be widened to include the case of acting U.S. Attorney Fred Black who was replaced in 2002 after he began investigating the now-convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his dealings with Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.

California Congressman George Miller, the Education and Labor Committee chairman, and West Virginia Congressman Nick Rahall, the Natural Resources Committee chairman, have repeatedly pressed for a full investigation of Abramoff’s dealings with the CNMI and its sweatshop industry and of the replacement of Fred Black, the then-acting U.S. Attorney for Guam and the CNMI.

Nobody in the Congress today was closer to Jack Abramoff when all of this was going on than John Doolittle.  He received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from Abramoff.  He knew exactly what Abramoff was doing in the various Pacific protectorates, and in fact he supported it with his votes.  He enabled the kind of politicization of the cause of justice that we see today.

Fortunately, we have a choice in Congress.  Charlie Brown needs your support at the end of the first quarter.  Please consider making a contribution.

P.S. Yeah, and Jerry McNerney too.  He just announced through email that he WON John Kerry’s “March Madness” competition, and will receive funding from the Senator.

Alberto Gonzales: “whacked like a piñata”

Syndicated columnist and member of the San Diego Union-Tribune editorial board Ruben Navarrette Jr. has been fluffing up Alberto Gonzales a lot recently (March 7, March 21), so it should come as no suprise that he’s continuing to shovel muck today in a special CNN commentary.  What’s shocking is the entirely new level to which he takes the insanity.

To be up front, there’s a halfway legitimate point in all of Navarrette’s mess, which is that accepting Gonzales as a scapegoat when it’s the White House and Karl Rove behind this whole mess, is not a victory.  I’m all for Rove paying for what he did as well.  But he frames his whole argument in disgusting racist terms and tries to marginalize anyone who would have a gripe against “an honorable public servant … [and] … a straight shooter” by assuming that there’s no way that criticism could be fair or justified.

He’s good enough to give us a rundown of the people who object to Gonzales’ performance as Attorney General and makes it pretty clear that the list at this point includes virtually everyone except President Bush.  But apparently that’s just because everyone is wrong, and most of them just hate a successful Hispanic.

Leading this lynch mob are white liberals who resent Gonzales because they can’t claim the credit for his life’s accomplishments and because they can’t get him to curtsy. Why should he? Gonzales doesn’t owe them a damn thing.

Yes, that’s right. It’s all those racist white liberals who insist on keeping minorities down and can’t stand it when one of them gets power,  It’s because he doesn’t genuflect at the altar of white people that he’s hated.  It can’t possibly have anything to do with his actual job performance.  Or his systematic evisceration of the Constitution of the United States.  Which is, ultimately, where the racial argument breaks down horribly.  Navarrette would have us believe that Gonzales can’t possibly be getting criticism that’s not infused with racist bitterness.  But the flipside of this argument is that, because of his race, he gets a free pass.  Well I’m sorry, but that isn’t how it works.  You do the job and you answer for your performance.

He also argues that Democrats just pose “with mariachis as they nibble chips and salsa on Cinco De Mayo” while the real uplifting of the Hispanic community, entirely and solely in the form of Alberto Gonzales, has been done by George W. Bush.  While absurdly simplistic and not particularly based in any reality that I’m familiar with, it doesn’t have anything to do with the firings of U.S. Attorneys.

It’s telling that a Gonzales apologist wants to talk about anything except the issue at hand.  Navarrette dispenses quickly and easily with the actual substance of the US Attorney issue by laying it all on Karl Rove, then whips up an emotional frenzy over non-issues, because he knows discussing the real complaints would be a losing proposition.  Gonzales is responsible for the Justice Department, and has a long history of doing a poor job in that position.  Perhaps Navarette has a point if his argument is that this incident, if isolated, would not be grounds for Gonzales’ departure.  But that dodges the crux of the problem.  Alberto Gonzales became Attorney General in August of 2005, and in that time, the Justice Department has delivered less and less justice by the day.  That is a failure of the job, and if this incident is the straw that breaks the camel’s back, so be it.

The commentary closes with an ominous, if absurdly condescending in every direction, prediction for Democrats in 2008:

Well, if they succeed in running him off without a fair hearing, many Hispanics won’t forget the shoddy treatment afforded this grandson of Mexican immigrants. You watch. Democrats will have to intensify their efforts to win Hispanic votes in the 2008 elections. And there’s not that much chips and salsa on the planet.

It sounds to me as though the lesson being pitched here is that the color of Gonzales’ skin is more important than the substance of his job performance whether you approve or disapprove of the job performance.  Hispanics will quit the Democratic party en masse, Navarrette imagines, because Democrats aren’t defending the country, they’re attacking skin color.

If Gonzales wants a fair hearing, guess what? He can have one.  In a revelatory change of course since January of this year (coincidence?), Congress will actually conduct legitimate investigations.  All Gonzales has to do is show up and solemnly swear.  Except, of course, that George Bush, the hero of racial equality in this story remember, doesn’t want the truth to come out.  Doesn’t sound particularly helpful to the Gonzales cause to me.  But then again, I see Gonzales as a man, not a color.  Ruben Navarrette Jr. may want to try it sometime.

DiFi’s Speech for Requring Confirmation of US Attorneys

Over the flip you will find the complete text of DiFi’s speech on the Senate Floor in favor of S.214 to require Senate confirmation of the US Attorneys.  It is expected to come to a vote in the Senate tomorrow morning.  Warning, it’s quite long.

Senator Feinstein Urges Senate Passage of Legislation to Ensure Senate Confirmation of U.S. Attorneys

Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) today spoke on the Senate Floor to urge passage of legislation she has cosponsored with Senators Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) to ensure Senate confirmation of U.S. Attorneys (S.214).

The Senate is expected to vote on the bill on Tuesday morning, no later than 11:30 a.m.

Under a provision inserted without notice into the USA Patriot Act reauthorization last year, the law was changed so that if a vacancy arises, the Attorney General may appoint a replacement for an indefinite period of time – thus completely avoiding the Senate confirmation process.

Senators Feinstein, Specter, Leahy, and Schumer have cosponsored legislation to restore the process in place before 2006.  It would allow the Attorney General to appoint interim U.S. Attorney for 120 days.  If after that time the President has not sent up a nominee to the Senate and had that nominee confirmed, then the authority to appoint an interim U.S. Attorney would fall to the district court.  This was the law from 1986 to 2006.

Following is the text of Senator Feinstein’s remarks on the Senate Floor today, as delivered.

  “Mrs. FEINSTEIN.  Mr. President, I rise today to speak in support of S. 214, the bill the leader just referred to.

This is a bill that simply reinstates the Senate’s role in the confirmation process of U.S. attorneys.  It is a bill I introduced with Senator Leahy on January 9, 2007, days after I first learned in early December that officials from main Justice called a handful of U.S. attorneys from around the country and forced them to resign their positions without cause.

At that time, I had very little information and was unaware of exactly what had occurred and why.

As I looked into it, I learned that in March of 2006, the PATRIOT Act was reauthorized and a change was made in the law.  It was made in conference without Democratic Senators present.  To the best of my knowledge, it was made without the knowledge of any Senator, Republican or Democrat.

It is my understanding this was a request from the Justice Department that was presented by Will Moschella to the staff of the Judiciary Committee and, without the knowledge of Senators, was put into the bill.  It then gave the President the authority essentially to appoint a U.S. attorney without confirmation for the remainder of his term.

The bill, S. 214, that is before the Senate today simply returns the law the way it was before this action took place in March of 2006.

Today, just a little more than 2 months after I first learned about this situation, additional information has come to light.  But rather than alleviating the concerns and answering questions, we are now faced with new and more serious allegations.

In fact, the big question looming over this debate is whether the Attorney General and others in the Bush administration have misled the Congress and the public.

If true, this is very serious.

There are also allegations that the firings were done because the Department of Justice and the White House were both unhappy with some of the U.S. attorneys’ handling of public corruption cases.

If true this, too, is very serious.

We now know that at least eight U. S. attorneys were forced from office, and that despite shifting rationales for why, it has become clear that politics has, in fact, played some role.

Last week, we learned that the White House was involved in this process and that discussions took place with such prominent figures as Presidential adviser Karl Rove and former-White House Counsel Harriet Miers.

We also learned last week that these discussions began well over 2 years ago, almost immediately following the 2004 election, and it appears from recently released e-mails that Attorney General Gonzales was personally consulted, even while he was still serving as White House Counsel.

This information also shed new light on who was being targeted for firing and why.

It is this last point — why some were targeted — that has served to raise more questions and more significant concerns.

We have learned that as many as six of the eight U.S. attorneys who were involved with public corruption cases.  While we don’t know what role this played in their selection, it is an unavoidable fact that raises serious questions.

  Today, as the Senate begins the debate on the `Preserving United States Attorney Independence Act,’ I would like to discuss some of what we have learned in greater detail and some of the reasons this bill is so necessary.

I believe it is important to look at how interim U.S. attorneys have been appointed over the years.

There appears to be an assumption by the Bush administration that the Attorney General should have an exclusive authority to appoint interim U.S. attorneys.

But, in fact, history paints a much different picture.

  When first looking into this issue, I found that the statutes had given the courts the authority to appoint an interim U.S. attorney and that this dated back as far as the Civil War.  Specifically, the authority was first vested with the circuit courts in March of 1863.

  Then, in 1898, a House of Representatives report explained that while Congress believed it was important to have the courts appoint an interim U.S. attorney:

`There was a problem relying on circuit courts since the circuit justice is not always to be found in the circuit and time is wasted in ascertaining his whereabouts.’

  Therefore, at that time, the interim appointment authority was switched to the district courts; that is, in 1898 it was switched to the district courts.

  Thus, for almost 100 years, the district courts were in charge of appointing interim U. S. attorneys, and they did so with virtually no problems.

This structure was left undisturbed until 1986 when the statute was changed during the Reagan administration.  In a bill that was introduced by Senator Strom Thurmond, the statute was changed to give the appointment authority to the Attorney General, but even then it was restricted and the Attorney General had a 120-day time limit.

After that time, if a nominee was not confirmed, the district courts would appoint an interim U.S. attorney.  The adoption of this language was part of a larger package that was billed as technical amendments to criminal law, and thus there was no recorded debate in either the House or the Senate and both Chambers passed the bill by voice vote.

Then, 20 years later, in March 2006 — again without much debate and again as a part of a larger package — a statutory change was inserted into the PATRIOT Act reauthorization.

This time, the Executive’s power was expanded even further, giving the Attorney General the authority to appoint an interim replacement indefinitely and without Senate confirmation.

Unfortunately, not one year after securing this new authority, abuses have come to light.

Almost immediately after I first spoke about what I had learned in January, the Attorney General called me to tell me that I had my facts wrong.  However, he also sent up his staff to confirm that `less than 10′ U.S. attorneys had been asked to resign on December 7, 2006.

Despite this, the Attorney General adamantly denied politics had any role in the process.

In fact, in an interview with an Associated Press reporter on January 16, 2007, the Attorney General was asked about the charges of political motivation, and he responded:  `Nothing could be further from the truth.’

He further stated in response to your comment, Mr. President, that the Department tried to avoid Senate confirmation to reward political allies: `We in no way politicized these decisions.’

Two days later, the Attorney General reiterated this position when he came before the Senate Judiciary Committee on January 18 of this year and said:  `I would never, ever make a change in the United States attorney position for political reasons.’

That is a categorical and definitive monosyllabic statement.

However, the Department had to backtrack when it became evident that the former U.S. attorney from your State, Mr. President, Arkansas, Bud Cummins, was simply replaced in order to make room for Tim Griffin, who had served as Karl Rove’s special assistant and had been in charge of opposition research against Democratic candidates for the Republican National Committee.

Less than a month later, the Deputy Attorney General confirmed this fact when he testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 7, 2007.

At that time, he said:

`The fact is there was a change made [in Arkansas] that was not connected, as we said, to the performance of the incumbent, but more related to the opportunity to provide a fresh start with a new person in that position.’

Deputy Attorney General McNulty, however, went on to say that all the others who were fired were fired for performance-related reasons.  But this, too, was not the final explanation.

The Department next tried to justify the firings by arguing that the U.S. attorneys were let go because there were `policy disagreements.’

Then the Attorney General said that these U.S. attorneys had `lost [his] confidence.’

So there are three different reasons so far.  Now, most recently, the explanation has been that the Department thought it `could do better’ — the fourth explanation.

These explanations are as slippery as they are misleading.  Rather, what documents and e-mails demonstrate is that none of these reasons was the deciding factor that led some U.S. attorneys to be targeted for firing.

Instead, it appears these individuals lost their jobs because a number of Department of Justice officials and possibly — we don’t know but possibly — White House officials did not judge them to be sufficiently loyal or did not like the cases they were prosecuting or simply wanted to put in new, politically connected, young lawyers.

It appears this way because contained in the documents that were released last week is an outline of the Department of Justice’s plan for how to determine who should be let go and who should stay.

The first step of that plan was to create a new rating system to evaluate all 93 U.S. attorneys.  This was to be separate from the independent performance reports, called EARS reports.

Those reports routinely occurred and objectively examined each U.S. Attorney’s Office by evaluating their prosecution caseloads, their management, their willingness to follow Department priorities, and their ability to work cooperatively with the FBI, with the DEA, and with other client agencies.

This rating system was developed back in February of 2005, and one of the primary factors to be considered was loyalty to the administration.

One e-mail describing the ratings stated:

`Recommended retaining strong U. S. attorneys who have produced, managed well, and exhibited loyalty to the President and Attorney General.  Recommended removing weak U.S. attorneys who have been ineffectual managers and prosecutors, chafe against administration initiatives.’

Under this system, two of the eight fired U.S. attorneys received strong evaluations and recommended retaining while three received recommended removing.

One of the U.S. attorneys who received a `recommended removing’ rating was Carol Lam from the Southern District of California.  She received this low rating despite her many accomplishments and despite her positive performance evaluations.

I am familiar with Carol Lam’s career because she served in San Diego.  In that position, she has taken on some of the biggest cases and really made a positive impact on the community she has served.

But that is not just my opinion.  Leaders throughout San Diego have sung her praises.  Let me give a few examples:

Dan Dzwilewski, head of the FBI office in San Diego:

`Carol has an excellent reputation and has done an excellent job given her limited resources.’ Then, when asked whether she had given proper attention to gun cases, he said:  `What do you expect her to do?  Let corruption exist? `

Adele Fasano, the San Diego Director of Field Operations, Customs and Border Patrol for the United States, said:

`[We have] enjoyed a strong, collaborative relationship with the U. S. Attorney’s Office to combat smuggling activity through the ports of entry.’

City attorney for San Diego, Michael Aguirre, said:

`[Carol Lam] has been by far the most outstanding U.S. Attorney we’ve ever had…she’s won a national reputation as one of the top prosecutors in the country.’ This is the city attorney.

Michael Unzueta, Special Agent in Charge, Immigration and Customs Enforcement:

`Carol Lam is truly an example of a dedicated public servant and a law enforcement professional.  We will miss her leadership.’

John Cooper, Special Agent in Charge, Naval Criminal Investigative Service:

`The departure of Ms. Lam will be a great loss…  Ms. Lam is the consummate law enforcement executive who leads by example.’

And Alan Poleszak, Acting Special Agent in Charge, Drug Enforcement Agency:

`The on-going prosecution of [the] Javier Arellano Felix drug trafficking organization is both historic and noteworthy…[Ms. Lam’s] commitment to Federal law enforcement in this judicial district, county, and city, will be missed.’

  We should take note of the fact that the Arellano Felix organization is one of the largest and most dangerous Mexican drug cartels known.  They operate out of Tijuana.  They have killed hundreds of people.  They have murdered Mexican DAs, they have murdered Mexican judges, and they are a blight.  This U.S. attorney took them on.  I will tell my colleagues more about that in a moment.

The reason Carol Lam was well respected is because she worked hard and she took on the tough fights.  She has had success after success.  Let me give some examples.

·  In September of 2005, the president of the San Diego chapter of Hell’s Angels pled guilty to conspiracy to commit racketeering.  Guy Russell Castiglione admitted he conspired to kill members of a rival motorcycle gang, the Mongols, to sell methamphetamine.

·  In December 2005, Daymond Buchanan, member of Hell’s Angels, was sentenced to 92 months in Federal prison for participating in a pattern of racketeering as well as inflicting serious bodily injury upon one victim.

At that time, Ms. Lam announced:

`With the president, sergeant at arms, secretary, treasurer, and six other members of the Hell’s Angels convicted of racketeering charges and facing long prison sentences, the San Diego chapter of the Hell’s Angels has been effectively shut down for the foreseeable future.’

·  If that isn’t enough, in September of 2006, Jose Ernesto Beltran-Quinonez, a Mexican national, pled guilty to making false statements about weapons of mass destruction. Mr. Quinonez was sentenced to 3 years in Federal prison for making up a story about Chinese terrorists sneaking into the United States with a nuclear warhead.  The hoax prompted a massive investigation, Federal warnings, discussions at one of President Bush’s security briefings, and a nationwide hunt for the group of Chinese supposedly plotting the attack.

·  In December 2006 Mel Kay, of Golden State Fence Company, and Michael McLaughlin pled guilty to felony charges of hiring illegal immigrants and agreed to pay fines of $200,000 and $100,000 respectively.  The company, which built much of the fence near Otay Mesa, agreed separately to pay $5 million on a misdemeanor count, one of the largest fines ever imposed on a company for an immigration violation.

Was Carol Lam praised for this work?  No, she was sent packing without an explanation.  Those were not her only cases.

She gained a national reputation for her work on public corruption cases.  I think it is important to note that public corruption is the FBI’s second highest priority after terrorism-related investigations.

Now, I didn’t know this, but the Judiciary Committee had an oversight hearing of the FBI on December 6, 2006, where the Director, Bob Mueller, came before us and he mentioned what their priorities were, and he said:  `Terrorism first, and then public corruption second, and crime was way down on the list.’

As a matter of fact, I found it rather startling, and I questioned him about that.  He said, with some emphasis, those are our priorities, and we believe if we don’t do public corruption, nobody else will.

So the FBI has as its second highest priority public corruption.  The FBI is going to be out there putting together cases.  Who prosecutes these cases?  U.S. attorneys.

The FBI’s second highest priority, and Carol Lam rose to this challenge.

·  In March of 2004, her office convicted Steven Mark Lash, the former chief financial officer of FPA Medical Management, for his role in defrauding shareholders and lenders of FPA.  The collapse of the company left more than 1,600 doctors being owed more than $60 million and patients reporting they were unable to obtain medical care because this company had ceased paying providers.

·  In January of 2005, Mark Anthony Kolowich, owner of World Express Rx, pled guilty to conspiracy to sell counterfeit pharmaceuticals, conspiracy to commit mail fraud and smuggle pharmaceuticals, and conspiracy to launder money.  Mr. Kolowich had run an Internet pharmacy Web site where customers could order prescription drugs without a valid prescription.  The judge called him the kingpin and architect of an illicit pharmaceutical ring that recruited many others to smuggle drugs across the United States -Mexico border at San Ysidro.

·  Another case.  In July 2005, Mrs. Lam brought a case against San Diego councilman Ralph Inzunza and Las Vegas lobbyist Lance Malone.  They were convicted on multiple counts of extortion, wire fraud conspiracy and wire fraud and were accused of trading money for efforts to repeal a law.

·  Then, in her most well-known case, in November of 2005, Ms. Lam secured a guilty plea from former Representative Randy `Duke’ Cunningham for taking more than $2 million in bribes in a criminal conspiracy case involving at least three defense contractors after he accepted cash and gifts and then tried to influence the Defense Department on behalf of donors.  He also pled guilty to a separate tax evasion violation for failing to disclose income in 2004.

Now, here is where it gets interesting.

Finally, 2 days before she left office — that would be around February 13 — Carol Lam announced indictments of Kyle `Dusty’ Foggo, a former top officer of the Central Intelligence Agency, and Brent Wilkes, a defense contractor accused of bribing Duke Cunningham and the prime benefactor of secret CIA contracts.

It is this latest incident, involving the ongoing investigations stemming from the Cunningham case, that has raised the most significant concerns about Carol Lam’s removal.

When I first came to the floor in January, I mentioned rumors were circulating around California that Carol Lam was pushed out because of her efforts in the Duke Cunningham case and subsequent investigations.

I have tried to be very careful about talking about these allegations because they are so serious and because, at the time, they were based on mere speculation.

  Despite recent materials coming to light, I want to continue to be very careful in talking about these allegations.

At the same time, I must say that today there are even more questions to be answered regarding what role public corruption cases played in the administration’s decisions about which U.S. attorneys to fire.

We have now learned that six of the eight fired U.S. attorneys were involved in public corruption cases.

The Washington Post noted this, I think, very well, as I will point out here on this chart:

·  David Iglesias, New Mexico — oversaw probes of State Democrats and alleges two Republican lawmakers pressured him about the case.  `He was respected by the Judiciary agencies and staff, complied with Department priorities’.

·  Daniel Bogden, Nevada — overall evaluation was very positive.  `Notable cases, opened a probe related to Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons, former Member of Congress.’

·  Paul Charlton, Arizona — opened preliminary probes of Representatives Jim Kolbe and Rick Renzi before November election.  `Well respected, established goals that were appropriate to meet the priorities of the Department.’

These are quotes from the official performance reports.  I am not making them up, and I am not taking them from any individual.  These are 27 people who go into an office and evaluate the performance of a U.S. attorney.  What did they say about notable cases?

·  Bud Cummins, Eastern Arkansas – `Cummins was very competent, highly regarded.’  That was his performance review.  He conducted probe related to Missouri Governor Roy Blunt, which he later closed without charges.

·  There is Carol Lam, Southern California, whom I have already mentioned.

·  John McKay, Western Washington — here is the job performance: `effective, well regarded, capable leader, established strategic goals that were appropriate.’  Here is the case:  Declined to intervene in disputed gubernatorial election, angry GOP. 

Those are the six.  In Carol Lam’s case, these allegations have become even more troubling.

Following the conviction of Duke Cunningham, in April 2006, Federal prosecutors in Carol Lam’s office began investigating whether Brent Wilkes, a defense contractor, and Kyle `Dusty’ Foggo, the third highest ranking official at the CIA, and others were involved in bribery and corruption.

Throughout the first week of May 2006, information began to surface in the press regarding this ongoing investigation.

Then, on May 10, 2006, Carol Lam quietly sent an urgent notice to officials at Main Justice to inform the Deputy Attorney General and the Attorney General she was about to execute search warrants on May 12 — that is 2 days later — to search the home and CIA office of Dusty Foggo.

The very next day, after she sent this internal notice, Department of Justice staff sent an e-mail to the White House that said this:

`Please call me to discuss the following:

`The real problem we have right now with Carol Lam that leads me to conclude that we should have somebody ready to be nominated on 11/18, the day her 4-year term expires.’

  The real problem we have right now with Carol Lam.  And that is the day after she notified Main Justice that she was executing two search warrants.

Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the complete e-mail be printed in the Record.

Mr. President, there could be a straightforward explanation for this e-mail that has nothing to do with public corruption cases Carol Lam was pursuing.  However, the timing looks really suspicious and it raises serious questions, questions that need to be answered.

Because if any U.S. attorney were removed because of a public corruption investigation or prosecution, this could very well comprise obstruction of justice.

I believe that irrespective of the intent behind the decision to fire Carol Lam and the other U.S. attorneys working on public corruption cases, such a removal sends a message to all other Federal prosecutors, whether intended or not, that creates a chilling effect.

Because of this, there should have been very careful consideration given to what steps should have been taken to ensure it was clear there was good reason to remove the prosecutor, that the office itself had a comprehensive plan in place to ensure no cases or investigations would be harmed or slowed in any way and that ongoing public corruption cases had absolutely nothing to do with the removal of the U.S. attorney.

However, in the case of Carol Lam and in the case of five other U.S. attorneys, the Administration failed to meet even these bare minimum standards.

I strongly believe that removal of a United States attorney who is involved in an ongoing public corruption case should occur only — only if there is a very good reason, and not simply `we could do better.’

Because of the public corruption cases and allegations that individuals were removed to put in politically connected young lawyers, another issue that must be examined is the appearance of politics impacting how U.S. attorneys are treated and what that means for the prosecution of justice.

As was reported in the McClatchy newspapers, former Federal prosecutors and defense lawyers have said:  `Allegations of political interference could undermine the reputation of U.S. attorneys as impartial enforcers of the law.’

  And, yes, I really agree with that.

One former Federal prosecutor said: `One of the things the Department has stood for was being apolitical.  Sure, politics does get involved in the appointment process, but this is just nuts.’

  He is right.  Yes, appointees are selected and nominated by the party in power.  But once an individual U.S. attorney takes that oath of office, he or she must be independent, objective, and must be free to pursue justice wherever the facts lead.

Bruce Fein, the former Associate Deputy Attorney General for the Reagan administration, said in an interview last week: `We expect the rule of law to be administered evenhandedly.  That’s what ties our country together and gives legitimacy to decisions by the court and to the government itself.  When it’s obvious that the prosecution function is being manipulated for political purposes, that undermines the entire rule of law.’

  In defending its actions, administration officials and others have tried to argue that both Presidents Reagan and Clinton fired all 93 U.S. attorneys when they came into office, and that is no different than what occurred in December.  Right?

  Wrong. The implication of this argument has been that it is not unheard of to fire U.S. attorneys in this manner, and that, at some level, it is commonplace.  Right?

  Wrong, it is not commonplace.  In fact, the Department of Justice and the White House knew that this was not commonplace and that comparing its actions to Reagan and Clinton was an inaccurate analogy.  A memo, written by Kyle Sampson on January 1, 2006, to the Counsel to the President, clearly stated:

`During the Reagan and Clinton Administrations, President Reagan and Clinton did not seek to remove and replace U.S. Attorneys they had appointed, whose four-year terms had expired, but instead permitted such U.S. Attorneys to serve indefinitely under the holdover provision.’ 

  That is a memo from the Attorney General’s Chief of Staff, Kyle Sampson, again, on January 1, 2006.

So they knew.  They knew that just to say President Reagan and President Clinton each formed a new team when they became President couldn’t be used as precedent because it was not accurate precedent.

Despite this, the administration and its defenders have continued to argue that firing U.S. attorneys was `entirely appropriate’ and that it was justified because executive branch appointees `serve at the pleasure of the President.’

In fact, this had never been done before.  In fact, as far as we have been able to find out so far, and they are still researching it — but the Congressional Research Service has told us that in the past 25 years, only two U.S. attorneys who served less than a full term have been fired.

Interestingly, this talking point about `serving at the pleasure of the President’ is repeated throughout the documents that have been released as to what the administration should say when asked about the firing of U.S. attorneys.  Specifically, it was listed in several versions of a memo that outlined the steps to be taken to execute the plan.

This, again, is a memo from the Chief of Staff to the Attorney General,:

`Step 3: Prepare to withstand political upheaval.’  We should expect that there will be `direct and indirect appeals of the Administration’s determination to seek these resignations….Recipients of such “appeals” must respond identically…U.S. attorneys serve at the pleasure of the President.’

To those to whom somebody appeals must reinforce this argument:  U.S. attorneys serve at the pleasure of the President.  That little statement is meant to cover, I am sorry to say, a multitude of sins.

  Of course, in the most literal sense, it is true:  executive branch employees serve at the pleasure of the President.  However, blind adherence and single-minded pursuit of this principle ignores that it is equally true that our Nation’s prosecutors must be independent, they must be objective, and they must pursue justice wherever the facts lead.

  And it ignores that our country is based on the principle of checks and balances.  Of course, in this instance this means that we must return Senate confirmation as a certainty to the law, and this is exactly what we do in S. 214 — we simply return the law to what it was before that unknown addition was added to the PATRIOT Act reauthorization without the knowledge of Senators.

Since January when this issue was first raised, the Department of Justice has repeatedly stated publicly that it did not intend to avoid Senate confirmation.

For example, before the Judiciary Committee on January 18, 2007, the Attorney General testified that `[DOJ] was fully committed to try and find presidentially appointed, Senate confirmed U.S. Attorneys for every position.’

  However, in e-mails and memos written by his staff, a strategy was outlined that does not show a commitment to Senate confirmation.

For example, on September 13, 2006, 3 months before the firing call on December 7, the Attorney General’s Chief of Staff sent an e-mail to Monica Goodling, liaison between the Department of Justice and the White House, suggesting that the Department use the new authority slipped into the PATRIOT Act reauthorization to facilitate firing U.S. attorneys and replacing them with new ones.

The e-mail said:

`I strongly recommend that as a matter of administration, we utilize the new statutory provisions that authorize the AG to make [U.S. attorney] appointments’.

Then, the inference is, by avoiding Senate confirmation, the e-mail goes on:

`[W]e can give far less deference to home state Senators and thereby get 1.) our preferred person appointed and 2.) do it far faster and more efficiently at less political costs to the White House.’

  This is only one example of discussions among White House and DOJ officials about the benefits of avoiding the Senate, especially when the home State Senators are Democrats. 

In another example there is an e-mail chain from December 2006 between the Department of Justice and the White House which discusses how to deal with the opposition of Arkansas’ Democratic Senators to the interim appointment of Tim Griffin.

I quote:

`I think we should gum this to death….The longer we can forestall [the Senators saying they will never support Griffin] the better.  We should run out the clock… `all of this should be done in “good faith,” of course.’

The e-mail went on to say:

`Our guy is in there so the status quo is good for us… pledge to desire a Senate-confirmed U.S. Attorney; and otherwise hunker down.’

  That is an e-mail that deserves a lot of questions.  In addition, in a November 15, 2006, memo regarding the plan to replace U.S. attorneys, `Step 2: Senator calls,’ outlines that for my State of California and for Michigan and Washington, the strategy was to have Bill Kelly from the White House call `the home State “Bush political lead,”‘ since there was no Republican home State Senators.

So while the Justice Department has said:  We consulted with home State Senators — that is true only if they were Republican.  If they were Democratic home State Senators they were not, in fact, called.

  I believe all of this adds up to a very complex and very serious situation that now has even more questions that need to be asked and answered under oath.

For example, we need to know:

·  Who from the White House was involved in these decisions?

·  Was the plan orchestrated by the White House?

·  Who made these determinations about who to fire and who was involved in the loyalty evaluation?

·  What other U.S. attorneys were targeted for dismissal?

·  We know there were several but their names have been redacted from the documents we have received.  We need to know who are they, whey were they on the list, and why did they come off the list?

·  What were the real reasons used to determine who would be fired, since the evaluations don’t line up with the EARS reports?

·  What role, if any, did open public corruption cases play in determining who would be fired?

·  What was the Attorney General’s role in the process?

·  What did he know and when did he know it?

·  How can he say he didn’t know what was going on with the firing of the U.S. attorneys, even though the White House did, and even though there are e-mails showing that he was consulted?

·  Was the change to the law in March of 2006 done in order to facilitate the wholesale replacement of all or a large number of U.S. attorneys without Senate confirmation?

·  We know that somebody suggested all 93 U.S. attorneys should be replaced, at one point.  My question is, was this done to facilitate that?

  These are just some of the questions I hope our committee will delve into as the investigation continues.

  Finally, in an e-mail that discussed avoiding the Senate confirmation process, the Attorney General’s Chief of Staff wrote:

`There is some risk that we’ll lose the authority [to appoint interim U.S. attorneys indefinitely], but if we don’t ever exercise it then what’s the point of having it?’

  Think about that:  There is some risk that we’ll lose the authority to appoint U.S. attorneys indefinitely, but if we don’t ever exercise it, then what is the point of having it?

I believe the time has come for the administration to lose that authority.

All these unanswered questions and allegations have demonstrated at the very least one real thing: the law must be returned to what it was prior to the reauthorization of the PATRIOT Act, and the bipartisan bill before the Senate would do just that.

Through negotiations with Senator Specter we are now considering legislation that would give the Attorney General authority to appoint an interim U.S. attorney but only for 120 days.  If after that time the President has not sent up a nominee to the Senate and had that nominee confirmed, then the authority to appoint an interim U.S. attorney will fall to the district court.

Given all we have learned in the past few months, I believe this is the least we can do to restore the public’s faith in an independent system of justice.  This bill will also help prevent any future abuse or appearance of politicization of U.S. attorney positions.

The legislation also makes it clear that the 120-day limitation applies to all the interim U.S. attorneys who are currently in place, including those who are the result of the Department’s actions in December.  These changes are in line with the way the law used to be and would simply be restoring the proper checks and balances that are needed in our system of government.

I urge my colleagues to oppose all amendments and pass a clean bill.

I have noted the distinguished ranking member of the committee is on the Senate floor.

Before I yield, I ask unanimous consent that the committee amendments be considered as original text for the purpose of further amendments.

I yield the floor.”

Prosecutor Purge – Feinstein Catches the DoJ in a Lie

The hearings on the fired US Attorneys today were riveting, and our own Senator Feinstein has been instrumental in beinging it about.  Today, she brought out some ammo in making her case that these prosecutors were fired for expressly political reasons.

The Justice Department’s alibi (today, at least) was that US Attorneys like Carol Lam were fired for performance-based issues, particularly their inability to speedily prosecute immigration and border cases as per Administration policy.  But Feinstein had an ace in the hole: a letter from the Justice Department, claiming that nto only was Carol Lam an exceptional prosecutor, but that she was FULLY implementing Administration policy of prosecuting immigration cases.  Feinstein’s statement is on the flip.

The Department has used the fact that I wrote a letter on June 15 to the Attorney General concerning the San Diego region, and in that I asked some questions: What are the guidelines for the U.S. Attorney Southern District of California? How do these guidelines differ from other border sections nationwide? I asked about immigration cases.

Here is the response that I got under cover of August 23, in a letter signed by Will Moschella. And I ask that both these letters be added to the record.

“That office [referring to Mrs. Lam’s office], is presently committing fully half of its Assistant U.S. Attorneys to prosecute criminal immigration cases. Prosecutions for alien smuggling in the Southern District under USC sections 1234 are rising sharply in Fiscal Year 2006. As of March 2006, the halfway point in the fiscal year, there were 342 alien smuggling cases filed in that jurisdiction. This compares favorable with the 484 alien smuggling prosecutions brought there during the entirety of Fiscal Year 2005.”

The letter goes on to essentially say that Mrs. Lam is cooperating; that they have reviewed it and the Department is satisfied.

This is a big deal, as it pretty much invalidates the Justice Department’s story.  And it’s refreshing to see Sen. Feinstein stick her neck out and wade into a controversial story.  The information that came out of today’s House and Senate hearings will be fodder for months, and Feinstein has been at the forefront of ensuring that this criminal enterprise being run out of the White House and the Justice Department is held accountable.