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Buxom Wench
08-27-2007, 08:56 AM
Attorney General Gonzales Resigns

http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Politics/story?id=3421219&page=1

Controversy Plagued Top Law Enforcement Official
Aug 27, 2007—

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales stepped down from his post, amid a political firestorm after Congressional Democrats accused him of perjury.

The embattled attorney general had withstood months of criticism from both sides of the aisle in Congress. Lawmakers blasted Gonzales after his department's bungled firing of at least eight U.S. attorneys last year, accused him of misusing terrorist surveillance programs and most recently, Democrats charged that Gonzales had repeatedly lied to Congress under oath.

Fired U.S. Attorneys
Tension between Gonzales and Congress ratcheted up this spring, after details began emerging about last year's federal prosecutor firings. Gonzales' chief of staff and the department's White House liaison, who later admitted to having little prosecutorial experience themselves, were heavily involved in constructing the list of prosecutors to dismiss. Members of Congress questioned the motives behind the firings, alleging that they were politically motivated. Both of the officials later stepped down.

The attorney firings, which seemed to kick off a campaign seeking the attorney general's resignation, took a backseat to criticism over the Terrorist Surveillance Program and challenges to his sworn statements before Congress.

Terrorist Surveillance Program
In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on July 24, the attorney general dismissed then-Acting Attorney General James Comey's statement that a March 10, 2004 White House briefing with congressional leaders specifically addressed the Terrorist Surveillance Program, which allowed the government to use wiretaps without court authorization. A still-classified program, possibly related to TSP, was set to expire the following day.

Ashcroft Visit
It was shortly after that briefing that Gonzales, at the time White House counsel, along with then-White House chief of staff Andy Card, went to the hospital, apparently to ask then-Attorney General John Ashcroft to re-authorize the program, despite having ceded his powers to Comey while he recovered from surgery in the hospital's intensive care unit.

In May of this year, Comey recounted the run-in during dramatic testimony to Congress, saying he raced to the hospital to head off Gonzales and Card. "I was angry," Comey said. "I thought I had just witnessed an effort to take advantage of a very sick man who did not have the powers of the attorney general."

FBI Director Backs Comey
In a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee July 26, FBI Director Robert Mueller backed Comey's account.

In his first public comments about the now-infamous visit, Mueller confirmed to the panel that he and Comey scrambled to post agents outside Ashcroft's hospital room.

Mueller in his usual crisp, blunt style said, "I don't dispute what Mr. Comey said."

But the attorney general downplayed interpretations of the visit to Ashcroft.

Gonzales Explains
Describing why he and Card urgently needed to talk to Ashcroft, Gonzales testified July 24 that the attorney general could have reclaimed his powers, "and he could always reclaim that. There are no rules" against it.

Gonzales indicated that Ashcroft had previously authorized the program, noting, "From the inception, we believed that we had the approval of the attorney general of the United States for these activities."

He also noted that the White House briefing involved "other intelligence activities."

Possible Perjury Probe
Two Senators on the Senate Judiciary panel, Russ Feingold, D-Wisc., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., both also members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, jumped on that assertion, which has also been contradicted by two participants in the March 10, 2004 briefing -- Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.V., and Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif.

A letter from then-Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte to then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. also confirms that the March 10 meeting addressed the TSP.

On July 26, four Senate Democrats called for the Justice Department to assign a special prosecutor to investigate the apparent discrepancies.

"I believe it's perjury," Feingold said of Gonzales' July 24 testimony. "Not just misleading - perjury."

Specter Weighs In
The Senate Judiciary Committee's senior Republican, Pennsylvania's Arlen Specter, has publicly called for the attorney general's resignation. He also alluded to the possibility that the panel would examine whether Gonzales has lied to Congress, telling him at the July 24 hearing, "My suggestion to you is that you review your testimony very carefully."

"The chairman's already said that the committee's going to review your testimony very carefully to see if your credibility has been breached to the point of being actionable," Specter continued.

But Specter did not join in on his colleagues' latest move.

'A Little Bit of Don Quixote'
"Do I support Senator Schumer's request for a special prosecutor? No," Specter said. "I think Senator Schumer has made a practice of politicizing this matter."

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

Ysobelle
08-27-2007, 11:45 AM
I'm VERY glad to hear this. I am.

But that thudding sound you hear? That's my head hitting my keyboard repeatedly.

Cyranno DeBoberac
08-27-2007, 11:49 AM
I'm surprised they didn't put this announcement off until friday afternoon where they could bury it in the Labor Day Weekend news cycle.

Maybe that's too obvious, even for them.

Buxom Wench
08-27-2007, 11:51 AM
I'm surprised they didn't put this announcement off until friday afternoon where they could bury it in the Labor Day Weekend news cycle.

Maybe that's too obvious, even for them.

Hard to bury it when he just made a statement at a press conference.

Cyranno DeBoberac
08-27-2007, 11:55 AM
Hard to bury it when he just made a statement at a press conference.

Yes, I know. My point being that I'm surprised the press conference wasn't on Friday afternoon instead.

That's the time that is traditionally known as "Take Out The Trash Day", when people make announcements of things that they would rather minimize the impact of the news coverage of.

A Friday before a holiday weekend is a particularly good day for that kind of thing.

Maybe they figured that Michael Vick pleading guilty in court on the same day would provide sufficient cover.

Pathos
08-27-2007, 12:03 PM
At least now no one can claim the Democratic congress has failed to achieve anything.

8-)

Capt. Stamina
08-27-2007, 12:05 PM
I guess Vick pleading guilty wasn't enough to shove this to the back pages [/sarcasm]

Now can we get a real AG who can start investigating congress for corruption, graft, and treason; and actually make some convictions for a change.

Holly
08-27-2007, 02:10 PM
Now can we get a real AG who can start investigating congress for corruption, graft, and treason; and actually make some convictions for a change.

awww see Pathos, the congress DID do something.....

*snort...giggles*

Ysobelle
08-28-2007, 05:45 AM
Yes, I know. My point being that I'm surprised the press conference wasn't on Friday afternoon instead.

That's the time that is traditionally known as "Take Out The Trash Day", when people make announcements of things that they would rather minimize the impact of the news coverage of.




Like funding for PBS and new sex ed studies and potential scandals with the WH CoS?