More evidence emerges in Attorneygate-Little Rock
The process alone was suspect: President Bush used provisions in the Patriot Act to install Griffin as an "interim attorney" even before Cummins had "resigned." Outrage only grew when it became clear that Griffin's resume largely consisted of partisan experience at the Republican National Committee and as part of the Bush 2000 Recount Team in Florida, often working directly with Rove. Griffin was also directly involved in purging the names of 70,000 voters in Arkansas, including soldiers who were flagged as suspect because they couldn't be reached at their voting address (they were deployed to Iraq).
Today's Washington Post has more evidence of the lengths the administration went to to install Griffin:
Two months before Bud Cummins was fired as U.S. attorney in Little Rock, a protege of presidential adviser Karl Rove was maneuvering with the Justice Department to take his place.
Last April, Tim Griffin, a Rove aide and longtime GOP operative, sent the attorney general's chief of staff a flattering letter about himself written by Cummins, the prosecutor he was trying to replace, internal e-mails released this week show. Rove and Harriet Miers, then the White House counsel, were keenly interested in putting him in the position, e-mails reveal.
New documents also show that Justice and White House officials were preparing for President Bush's approval of the appointment as early as last summer, five months before Griffin took the job. [...]
The e-mails show how D. Kyle Sampson, then the attorney general's chief of staff, and other Justice officials prepared to use a change in federal law to bypass input from Arkansas' two Democratic senators, who had expressed doubts about placing a former Republican National Committee operative in charge of a U.S. attorney's office. The evidence runs contrary to assurances from Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales that no such move had been planned.
"This was a very loyal soldier to the Republicans and the Bush administration, and they wanted to reward him," said Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.). "They had every right to do this, but it's the way they handled it, and the way they tried to cover their tracks and mislead Congress, that has turned this into a fiasco for them."


2 Comments:
Just yesterday Alberto Gonzales once again told us he is working tirelessly to be sure he has every American's back covered...especially our children. Should the alleged firing of six top performing U.S. Attorneys make us feel better?
I don’t know about anyone else but I’ve always been suspicious of the guy that seems to go out of his way to tell you he’s "got your back covered".
See a sarcastic visual that demonstrates how many Americans feel when the Attorney General reassures us that he's got our backs covered...here:
www.thoughttheater.com
As was pointed out today on NPR's Talk of the Nation by a Little Rock radio host, Bush and Rove want a partisan prosecutor in Little Rock to raise yet more specious investigations and indictments around the already thoroughly investigated past of Bill and Hillary Clinton. Bush's father tried to pressure federal prosecutors to do this while he was President, but they balked at partisan pressure.
It's time to impeach Bush at long last.
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