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"This all sounds rather fantastic—even more insidious than the enemies list days of the Nixon era."

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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 12:56 AM
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"This all sounds rather fantastic—even more insidious than the enemies list days of the Nixon era."
Tracking Political Prosecutions
BY Scott Horton
PUBLISHED September 22, 2007

In the last two weeks, two sources, one of them inside of the Justice Department, have told me that a scheme was hatched in the upper echelons of the Bush Administration shortly after it took office in 2001 or early in 2002. The project identified John Edwards and Hillary Clinton as likely Democratic challengers to President Bush, and identified prominent trial lawyers around the United States as the likely financial vehicle for Edward’s rise. It directed that their campaign finance records be fly-specked, and that offenses not be treated as administrative matters but rather as serious criminal offenses.

The scheme contemplated among other things that raids be staged on the law offices involved, and that the records seized not be limited to campaign finance—there was an acute interest in all politically oriented documents, in order to seize valuable intelligence on strategic planning from the enemy camp.

This all sounds rather fantastic—even more insidious than the enemies list days of the Nixon era. It is precisely the sort of crude harassment that a primitive dictatorship would use against its enemies—like Alexander Lukashenko in today’s Belarus, for instance. But as the descriptions were passed to me, I instantly recognized the pattern described recently in a case which has made the headlines in Michigan involving a prominent lawyer there, and a second case in Los Angeles. According to one source, the number of these cases is at least five and they are scattered about the country. One case, described to me in some detail, closely matches the pattern in Michigan and Los Angeles and occurred in the south on the Gulf of Mexico.

Why, I wondered, would the attorneys involved not scream bloody murder about this? Then it struck me. The threat of criminal investigation and prosecution is devastating to their law practices. Of course, they would keep it completely secret. And that silence has made the entire scheme possible. I am told that these cases involved the attorneys general personally—both John Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzales—that their go-ahead was needed to stage the raids. And that in each case, the greatest concern within the political pirates commanding the operation has been that the public would get wind of the bigger picture. It was essential to pull it off that each case be viewed as something standing all on its own, and that the fact that there was a politically motivated project be obscured.

The key factor here is that all the cases involve campaign finance violations which are of a rather mundane nature. And in each case the FEC violations have been hyped into something quite preposterous. The political angle, I am told, is simple: make trial attorney’s money radioactive. Dry up the source. Take out a key element of the Democrats’ campaign finance strategy.

This looks very suspiciously like a Rove strategy.

And this bring us back to the key unanswered questions about Rove’s involvement in the process of directing political prosecutions...


Continued @ http://www.harpers.org/archive/2007/09/hbc-90001266



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rwenos Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 01:02 AM
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1. What a Laugh
As a trial lawyer myself, I find it quite funny the Pubs have demonized "Democrat Trial Lawyers." I've worked both defense and plaintiff, baby. For every liberal Democratic trial lawyer, there's a starchy, silk-stocking Republican TRIAL LAWYER on the other side of the case, billing an insurance company or corporation $350 an hour.

I point this out to Pub defense lawyers I know all the time. "Where would you guys be if it weren't for us, filing those lawsuits for our poor plaintiff clients? Slinging hash? Driving a truck.?

I'd wager dollars to donuts that Pubbie trial lawyers grease the national Republican Party AT LEAST as much (and probably much more) than Democratic trial lawyers contribute to the Dems.
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IndyOp Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 10:15 AM
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5. Thanks for sharing a great comeback re: "Dem Trial Lawyers" - for every Dem
who is trying to make the corporations behave ethically, there is a Rethug who is protecting the corporate elite.

Damn good point! :hi:
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pa28 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 01:26 AM
Response to Original message
2. Law enforcement as political henchmen?
Sounds about right. I'll be waiting for CBS CNN and Fox to crack this story wide open.

:sarcasm:
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leveymg Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 01:32 AM
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3. "Worse than Watergate." So, what's changed since 1974 that Impeachment is now "off the table"?
Edited on Tue Sep-25-07 01:34 AM by leveymg
Does Bush have to burn down the Capitol and an original copy of the Constitution before Congress finally does anything to stop him?


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notadmblnd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-25-07 05:18 AM
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4. this must be related to the Geoffery Fieger case
Jeff said he was looking forward to seeing them in court.

Fieger, partner indicted on campaign finance charges
August 24, 2007

By ZACHARY GORCHOW and JOHN WISELY

FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS

Attorney Geoffrey Fieger and one of his law partners have been indicted by the U.S. government, which accused the pair of making $127,000 in illegal campaign contributions to the 2004 presidential campaign of John Edwards.

The indictment was unsealed today at the U.S. District Court in Detroit and accuses Fieger and Vernon Johnson of violating the $2,000 per election federal limit on individual contributions to presidential candidates.


http://freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/arti...6/70824041/1001

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