TPMMuckraker
October 5, 2008 - October 11, 2008

Alaska

Monegan: Palin Aide Knew Of Top Cop's Sexual Harassment Rap

Aside from what it says about Sarah and Todd Palin, the Trooper-Gate report also appears to paint Mike Tibbles -- the governor's former chief of staff, who's now running Ted Stevens' Senate re-election campaign -- as shockingly incompetent. And that's the best case scenario for Sarah Palin.

To explain: Steve Branchflower writes on page 113 of the report that Walt Monegan told him about a conversation between Monegan and Tibbles, shortly after Palin was inaugurated as governor in January 2007. According to Monegan, Tibbles asked Monegan to consider hiring Chuck Kopp, formerly the police chief of Kenai, for a job in the public safety department.

As a result, said Monegan, he met with Kopp. When Monegan asked Kopp whether there was anything in Kopp's background that Monegan should be aware of before hiring him, Kopp revealed that, as Kenai police chief, he had been reprimanded over a sexual harassment allegation, though he maintained that it was bogus.

Monegan told Branchflower that the next day, he talked to Tibbles. "I disclosed what Chuck had told me," said Monegan. Tibbles responded that, in that case, they had "better steer clear from [Kopp] for a while."

But in a separate part of the report (page 43) that we noted earlier, Branchflower writes that in July 2008, Kopp was hired as public safety commissioner -- replacing Monegan -- after being interviewed for the job by two Palin aides for just 30 minutes, and without speaking directly to the governor about it at all.

Just two weeks later, Branchflower writes, Kopp resigned the post, when the sexual harrassment reprimand surfaced. Adds Branchflower: "Apparently, that was a fact that the governor's office did not know about when Mr. Kopp was offered the commissioner's job."

Indeed, at the time, the governor's office said publicly that at the time Kopp was hired, the governor knew of the allegation but understood it to be baseless, and was unaware of the letter of reprimand.

But the report suggests that Tibbles -- who, just four days before Kopp's hiring, was announced as Stevens' campaign manager -- did know about the reprimand, because Monegan had told him about it back in January 2007.

In other words, if Branchflower is correct, Tibbles failed to pass on to his colleagues in the governor's office his knowledge of Kopp's reprimand, setting them up to hire for a high-profile position a man with a significant black mark on his record.

It's also possible, of course, that Branchflower has erred in writing that the governor's office didn't know about Kopp's reprimand when it hired him. Perhaps Tibbles did pass along the information, but Palin and her aides, in their haste to find a replacement for Monegan, decided to overlook it and hire Kopp anyway, trusting that the issue would not resurface.

Tibbles did not immediately respond to a detailed request for comment.

So either Palin's chief of staff was jaw-droppingly incompetent, or she knowingly hired as the state's top law enforcement official a man who had been reprimanded for sexual harassment, then lied to the press about it. Neither alternative is flattering.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (8) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Report: Firing Wooten Wouldn't Have Made Palins Safer

As we noted last night, the Trooper-Gate report found that Sarah Palin's claims that she feared Mike Wooten were unfounded. But the subject of Palin's alleged concern for her own and her family's safety deserves more attention.

The McCain-Palin campaign has argued that the Palins were acting merely to "protect their family" in going after Wooten.

But in the report, Branchflower disposes of that argument:

Assuming that Trooper Wooten was ever inclined to attack Governor Palin or a family member, logic dictates that getting him fired would accomplish nothing to eliminate the potential for harm to her or her family. On the contrary, it might just precipitate some retaliatory conduct on his part. Causing Wooten to loose (sic) his job would not have de-escalated the situation, or provided her or her family with greater security.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (13) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Palin Never Interviewed Monegan's Replacement

Here's some evidence from the Trooper-Gate report about just how eager Sarah Palin was to get rid of Walt Monegan as public safety commissioner.

Steve Branchflower found that Palin never interviewed Monegan's replacement, the appropriately named Chuck Kopp, for the job of top law enforcement officer in the state. Rather, she left the task to deputies, who conducted just one 30-minute interview.

Writes Branchflower: "Governor Palin did not speak to Mr. Kopp before he was appointed to his new job."

And as we already knew, Kopp served just two weeks in the job, before resigning after news reports surfaced showing that he had been reprimanded in connection with a past sexual harassment complaint.

Of course, the report found that Palin was within her rights to fire Monegan, since, as a legal matter, the governor can fire state officials for any reason, or none at all.

But that doesn't mean that, as a question of governance, it wasn't a rash, poorly thought-out move, done for reasons of personal pique rather than a concern for the public interest.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

For Palin, A Picture of Wooten Is Worth A Thousand Words

Here's a funny note from the report that brings home the depths of Sarah Palin's antipathy toward Mike Wooten:

Shortly before the annual celebration of Police Memorial Day on May 15, 2008, Commissioner Monegan had dropped off a color photograph at Governor Palin's Anchorage office with a request that she sign and present it at the ceremony. The photograph was of an Alaska State Trooper who was dressed in a formal uniform, saluting. He was standing in front of the police memorial located in front of the crime lab at AST headquarters in Anchorage, partially obscured by a flagpole. The picture to be signed by the Governor was to be used as a poster to be displayed in various Trooper Detachments around the state.

Shortly after he returned to his office from dropping off the photograph, he received a call from Kris Perry, Governor Palin's Director of her Anchorage office who asked [according to Walt Monegan's testimony] "Why did you send a poster over here that has a picture of Mike Wooten on it?" Until that moment, Commissioner Monegan never realized it was indeed a photograph of Trooper Wooten. Governor Palin cancelled her appearance and sent Lieutenant Governor Parnell in her place.

Monegan's eventual replacement as Public Safety Commissioner, Charles Kopp, testified that Palin aide Frank Bailey later called him and told him the administration was thinking about replacing Monegan as commissioner. When Kopp asked why, Bailey cited the incident with the Wooten photograph as one reason, among several, for the governor's displeasure with Monegan.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
Topics: Alaska, Mike Wooten, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Monegan's "Ominous Feeling" After Meeting With Todd

Walt Monegan told Steve Branchflower about what he was thinking directly after a meeting with Todd Palin, in which the "First Gentleman" had given him a stack of files about Mike Wooten's record, and had asked Monegan to look into whether Wooten had been appropriately disciplined:

Well, on the drive back as i was reflecting on the meeting -- drive back to the office, I was thinking that in essence they certainly didn't like the idea that Wooten was still employed. And they wanted severe discipline, probably termination, and that -- and if this was going to build, I had this kind of ominous feeling that I may not be long for this job if I -- if I didn't somehow respond accordingly.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Stonewalling By Key Witnesses Proved Effective

The Trooper-Gate report provides an answer to something we were asking ourselves earlier this week.

It was announced, just days before Steve Branchflower was scheduled to wrap things up, that several top Palin aides would reverse course and honor subpoenas issued in the investigation, after resisting them for weeks. But would Branchflower, we wondered, have enough time to depose those key witnesses and include their testimony in his report?

The answer: no.

Branchflower writes:

On October 6, 2008 Attorney General Talis Coberg announced that some of the ... employees have decided they wish to honor their subpoenas and provide information about this case to the Legislative Council. Given that last minute decision, and in view of the publication date of October 10, 2008 for this report, it has not been possible to inculde any such information herein. It is anticipated that the additional information will be submitted to the Legislative Council in a separate report prepared by the employees and/or the Attorney General.

It's impossible to know what additional information these witnesses would have provided Branchflower. And he made clear that, even without them, he had enough information to draw firm conclusions.

Still, it's certainly plausible that with input from Palin's top lieutenants about the pressure they may have been under to pursue the Wooten matter, the report would have been even more damning.

In that limited regard, the Palin camp's stonewalling appears to have worked.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate, subpoena

Alaska

Trooper-Gate Report Came In Under Budget

From the start, the McCain-Palin camp's major strategy in defending Sarah Palin on Trooper-Gate has been to argue that the investigation is a partisan witch-hunt run by supporters of Barack Obama, designed to inflict maximum political damage on the governor.

But most partisan witch-hunts don't end up spending only 75 percent of their allotted budget.

Sen. Hollis French, who was overseeing the probe, told the Anchorage Daily News last night that the investigation ended up costing only $75,000. When legislators voted to launch it in July, they had authorized spending up to $100,000.

The paper reports that Steve Branchflower, the investigator, will be paid $45,000, and the additional $30,000 went to "expenses such as copying, court reporting and transcribing, and managing computer files."

Of course, the fact that the report's release date was moved up by three weeks, to ensure it didn't appear on the eve of the election, may have been one reason why it came in under budget.

Still, Branchflower left $25,000 on the table. That's not exactly the move of 21st-century Ken Starr, a comparison made by Palin's lawyer.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (1) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Palin "Failed To Act"

Here's a key excerpt from the Trooper-Gate report about the nature of Sarah Palin's abuse of power, in regard to her failure to rein in her husband's efforts to pressure state employees to fire Mike Wooten:

[Sarah Palin] had the authority and power to require Mr. Palin to cease contacting subordinates, but she failed to act.

Such impermissible and repeated contacts create conflicts of interests for subordinate employees, who must choose to either please a superior or run the risk of facing that superior's displeasure and the possible consequences of such displeasure. This was one of the very reasons the Ethics Act was promulgated by the Legislature.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (6) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Trooper-Gate Report: McCain Campaign Statement

Here's a statement from the McCain-Palin camp on the report.

"Today's report shows that the Governor acted within her proper and lawful authority in the reassignment of Walt Monegan," said Palin spokeswoman Meg Stapelton. "The report also illustrates what we've known all along: this was a partisan led inquiry run by Obama supporters and the Palins were completely justified in their concern regarding Trooper Wooten given his violent and rogue behavior. Lacking evidence to support the original Monegan allegation, the Legislative Council seriously overreached, making a tortured argument to find fault without basis in law or fact. The Governor is looking forward to cooperating with the Personnel Board and continuing her conversation with the American people regarding the important issues facing the country."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (59) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)
Topics: Alaska, John McCain, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Sarah Palin

Palin's Claims She Feared Wooten Were Bogus

Here's another interesting finding, that belies a key claim made by Governor Palin in her defense against the Trooper-Gate allegations.

"Governor Palin has stated publically that she and her family feared Trooper Wooten. Yet the evidence presented has been inconsistent with such claims of fear."
...

"I conclude that such claims of fear were not bona fide and were offered to provide cover for the Palin's real motivation: to get Trooper Wooten fired for personal family related reasons."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (12) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (15)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Sarah Palin Pursued "Personal Agenda" in Seeking To Get Trooper Fired

Here's another of the report's key conclusions:

"The evidence supports the conclusion that Governor Palin, at the least, engaged in "official action" by her inaction if not her active participation or assistance to her husband in attempting to get Trooper Wooten fired [and there is evidence of her active participation]. She knowingly, as that term is defined in the above statutes, permitted Todd Palin to use the Governor's office and the resources of the Governor's office, including access to state employees, to continue to contact subordinate state employees, in an effort to find some way to get Trooper Wooten fired."

...

"Governor Palin knowingly permitted a situation to continue where impermissible pressure was placed on several subordinates in order to advance a personal agenda, to wit: To get Trooper Michael Wooten fired.''

In other words, the investigators appear to have concluded that Palin's improper conduct was not the firing of Monegan, which, as governor, she had a right to do for essentially any reason. Rather, it was the improper pressure placed on subordinates in her effort, conducted largely through her husband, to get Mike Wooten fired.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (8) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Monegan: Todd Palin Was "Venting"

About that meeting between Todd Palin and Walt Monegan, arranged by Todd Palin:

Monegan described to investgators that Todd Palin recounted to him the evidence against Wooten that had came out in the 2005 internal trooper probe -- including that Wooten tasered his stepson and drank while driving a patrol car.

Said Monegan: "He told me ... this guy shouldn't be a trooper."

Monegan added:

"My impression initially was that he's venting. I mean, there was a complaint, the troopers investigated it and they came up with a conclusion, and that he was not happy with he conclusion.

And often, having been a cop for a long time, that actually happens a lot in divorce cases."


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Tom DeLay, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Todd Palin, First Gentleman

Here's a funny note on the airs that the Palin administration appears to have put on after coming into office.

Monegan's secretary told Branchflower that she received a call in December 2006 from a Palin aide, asking to set up a meeting between Monegan and "the First Gentleman."

"At that time." said the secretary, "I was not familar with the term 'First Gentleman'...so I kept asking her 'who?', and eventually she said, 'Todd Palin,' and I said, 'oh okay.'"

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Todd Palin Pressured Wasilla Police Chief Not To Hire Wooten

The report reveals that four days after Sarah Palin was elected governor in November 2006, Todd Palin called John Glass, who was then the chief of the Wasilla Police Department and shortly afterwards became a deputy public safety commissioner for the state, working under Walt Monegan.

There were two vacant spots on the Wasilla PD at the time. Todd Palin told Glass that he did not want Wooten hired as a Wasilla officer, and that he should be fired as a state trooper.

Wooten was not hired by Glass.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (10) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Trooper-Gate Report Finds Palin Abused Power in Firing Monegan

The just-released Trooper-Gate report finds that Sarah Palin abused her power in the affair by pressuring subordinates to fire Mike Wooten, thereby violating an Alaska law holding that "each public officer holds office as a public trust, and any effort to benefit a personal or financial interest through official action is a violation of that trust." *

It also finds that Monegan's "refusal to fire Trooper Mike Wooten" -- who was embroiled in a family dispute with the Palins -- "was not the sole reason [Monegan] by Governor Sarah Paln" but "it was likely a contributing factor". Still, the firing was a proper exercise of Palin's authority to hire and fire executive branch department heads.

In addition, the report found that the office of Attorney General Talis Colberg failed to substantially comply with the legislature's written request for information about the case in the form of emails.

* This sentence has been updated from an earlier version.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (140) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (22)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Alaska

Lawmakers To Release Trooper-Gate Report

The legislative council voted 12-0 to release the Trooper-Gate report, according to the Anchorage Daily News.

Legislators had been in a closed door meeting all day.

We'll let you know about its findings once we have a copy.

Update: Here's the report.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (80) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (12)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate, U.S. Attorneys

Ted Stevens

Colin Powell Vouches for "Sterling" Sen. Stevens

After nearly forty years in the Senate, there probably aren't many people in Washington that Ted Stevens doesn't know.

Sen. Dan Inouye of Hawaii testified yesterday, and today the defense continued its parade of character witnesses, calling former Secretary of State Colin Powell to the stand, who testified to Stevens' "sterling" character.

From The Hill:

On the stand, Powell called Stevens "a master appropriator" and "a great defender of Alaska's interests." He said the senator's reputation could be summed up in one word: "sterling."

"With Sen. Stevens, I always had a guy who could tell me when I was off-base, tell me when I had no clothes on -- figuratively," he said.

In the late 1980s, Powell said he worked long hours with Stevens, sometimes until "2 or 3 in the morning," as they worked with Democrats to find ways to support freedom fighters in Latin America. Powell described Stevens as a tough but practical appropriator who forced him to have his facts straight when making a request for more money, including in the late 1980s when the government was trying to build up the Army.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (40) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Ted Stevens

Voting

McCain Camp Tying Obama To ACORN

The McCain campaign is stepping up its efforts to make an issue out of ACORN's voter registration activities -- and one of its new moves is to tie Barack Obama to the beleaguered community organizing group.

On a conference call with reporters this afternoon, McCain campaign manager Rick Davis raised the specter of massive voter fraud enabling an Obama victory November 4th.

"We don't want to see battleground states turn on ACORN," he said. "We want to make sure not one of these states are (sic) stolen."

Davis continued: "You don't file fake registrations if you're not going to use them to cast fake ballots."

There's little backing to support that contention. According to experts, false registrations almost never result in fraudulent votes, but rather are the result of canvassers artificially juicing their numbers in order to earn a bigger bonus. Tony Romo, for instance, is highly unlikely to try to show up to vote in Las Vegas.

So it bears repeating: despite reports in several swing states that ACORN has submitted fraudulent registration forms in the hundreds, and even perhaps the thousands, there's scant evidence that the group's lapses could significantly affect the integrity of the vote.

But for the McCain campaign, the point of touting the ACORN story is in part to tag Obama as tied to a supposedly radical, lawless community organization that works on behalf of minorities.

Davis noted that Obama had acted as a lawyer for ACORN, and had taught classes to ACORN community organizers. He also asserted that the Obama campaign had paid $800,000 to an ACORN subsidiary to canvass voters in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas during the primary.

Those claims are all technically true, though they deliberately exaggerate the closeness of the relationship between Obama and ACORN.

Davis also pointed reporters to a website, obamaacorntree.com, detailing the connections between the two.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (11) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: ACORN, Barack Obama, Rick Davis, Voting

Voting

Double and Triple Checking in Swing States Could Lead to Voters Blocked from Polls

As state officials scramble to rebut claims of voter purging and blocked registrations made in a recent report, they're also revealing their missteps. Officials in two swing states have admitted that they are double -- and sometimes triple -- checking new voter registrations, which could lead to eligible voters voters being turned away from polls.

In North Carolina, one of the states fingered in the New York Times investigation published yesterday, Gary Bartlett, director of the Board of Elections defended his state's handling of new voter registrations, claiming the BOE was verifying both drivers license numbers and social security numbers if new voters provide both on their application.

In Indiana, a swing state that has also had a large uptick in requests to the SSA for voter registration verifications, Matt Tusing, the deputy secretary of state and a Republican, told the Indianapolis Star that Indiana officials have been verifying the Social Security number on every card, as wells as running checks with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, the Department of Correction and death records.

"Some states don't check against all those sources," he told the paper.

In both cases, that's far more verification than is required under federal law, and the superfluous checking of both numbers could lead to eligible vote registrations not being verified -- something that could disproportionately affect Democrats, who have registered in higher numbers this year.

According to the Help America Vote Act of 2002, states must exhaust checks in their own identification databases -- like drivers licenses and ID cards -- before turning to the often unreliable federal database with the Social Security Administration. Yesterday's Times report alleges that states like Colorado have been improperly relying on the SSA to verify voter registrations.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (10) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)
Topics: Voting

Alaska

Alaska Lawmakers Could be Meeting For A While

Sounds like the members of the Legislative Council in Alaska, who are meeting behind closed doors to vote on whether to release the Trooper-Gate report to the public, could be there a while.

A source who's at the state legislative building where the meeting is taking place reported moments ago that the lawmakers just ordered lunch.

And the Anchorage Daily News adds:

Two lawmakers who've stepped out of the meeting briefly say it could be hours.

Senate President Lyda Green, a Wasilla Republican, and Rep. Peggy Wilson of Wrangell said the session is moving slowly.

How slow? Wilson was asked.

"Slooowwww," she said.

During the public portion of the meeting, Wilson said that she had not yet had a chance to read the report -- which centers on the firing by Governor Sarah Palin of the state's former public safety commissioner -- and suggested that she would therefore be reluctant to release it publicly today.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (20) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Voting

Big GOP Pollster Behind Oregon Calls

So yesterday we reported on a possible push poll being conducted in Oregon by a company called Western Wats. A caller told one Oregon woman we spoke to about tax increases being supported by Democratic Senate candidate Jeff Merkley, then asked whether the information made her less likely to support Merkley -- who's in a tight race with Republican incumbent Gordon Smith.

Western Wats had told us yesterday that its client was NMB Research, who did not return our call. But today, Stacey Jenkins of Western Wats called back to say that, after speaking again with their client, Western Wats had been authorized to tell us that the client is in fact Public Opinion Strategies (POS), a well-known GOP polling firm. POS, Jenkins said, had asked Western Wats yesterday to give us the name NMB Research as the client.

Jenkins could not answer why POS had directed Western Wats to give what appears to be misleading or incomplete information to a news organization.

A representative for POS did not immediately make available to TPMmuckraker anyone who could provide more information, or clarify the relationship between POS and NMB Research, but pledged to do so.

POS is a major GOP polling firm, founded by respected veteran pollsters Bill McInturff, Glen Bolger, and Neil Newhouse. Its involvement may indicate that the call was not part of a push poll, but rather an effort to test negative messages with a sample group of voters, for research purposes -- a possibility we suggested yesterday.

We'll keep you posted as we learn more.

Late Update: Public Opinion Strategies sent the following statement to TPMmuckraker this afternoon:

NMB Research is a separate legal entity with a separate office set up by the members of Public Opinion Strategies. It was established to comply with coordination rules of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act. NMB is retained by a number of clients involved in public policy research, issue advocacy, and independent expenditure campaigns. The establishment of NMB ensures compliance with the coordination rules of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act.

Neither Public Opinion Strategies nor NMB Research engages in push polling, voter ID, or GOTV programs.

We've contacted Neil Newhouse, a founder and senior pollster with the firm, to ask specifically about the Oregon call we reported on yesterday, and as always, will keep you posted.

Later Update: Neil Newhouse emails to say: "The poll was done by NMB and included more than 20 questions, including some message testing regarding Jeff Merkley."

He adds: "It was not a push poll, but a standard message-testing survey."

In other words, the call was designed to test which negative message about Merkley voting for tax increases would be most effective with Oregon voters.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)
Topics: Voting

Alaska

Trooper-Gate Session Begins: GOP Legislator Sounds Reluctant To Release Report

The Alaska Legislative Council has been begun its meeting. It will soon go into a private executive session to hear a briefing from Steve Branchflower on his findings in the Trooper-Gate investigation, and to vote on whether to release his full report to the public.

At TPMmuckraker, we've been listening on streaming audio to the public portion of the session. And already it looks like it could be a struggle to get a yes vote on releasing the report.

A Republican member of the council, Rep. Peggy Wilson, said that the report -- which runs to 1000 pages, including evidence -- was so long that she hadn't yet had time to read it, and therefore didn't feel comfortable moving forward.

So it doesn't sound like Rep. Wilson will vote for releasing the report today. Whether her GOP colleagues feel similarly will determine what we find out today.

We'll keep you posted...

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (30) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (12)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Norm Coleman

Coleman Assures Constituents He Dresses Himself

No one dresses Norm Coleman, except Norm Coleman . . . and maybe, sometimes, Mrs. Coleman.

At least that's what the senator, who finally faced the media at a press conference today, says amid reports that he received pricey suits as gifts from political contributor and local businessman, Nasser Kazeminy.

"While I have answered honestly the question about suits and jobs - I will say as clearly as I can. Nobody except my wife or me bought my suits," Coleman said this morning according to text of the statement released by his campaign.

"If my friends have shared gifts with me and my family - or I have shared gifts with them - if they rose to the level of having to be reported - they were reported."

Well thanks, for the non-specific denial Norm, but we weren't asking if they were reported, we were asking if Kazeminy did in fact buy you suits from Nieman Marcus.

Coleman and his staff's bizarre refusal to directly answer questions about whether Kazeminy bought him suits has been documented on tape and turned what seemed like a relatively small impropriety into what local bloggers have affectionately dubbed, "Suit Gate."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Norm Coleman

Alaska

Release Of Trooper-Gate Report Hangs On GOP Cooperation

So today's the day for Steve Branchflower to release his report into Trooper-Gate to the Alaska legislative council.

But it's worth pointing out that, thanks to GOP resistance, Branchflower's findings may not be made public today.

The legislative council will meet in private at 1pm EST to receive a briefing from Branchflower on his findings. The council will then vote on whether to make the 253-page report public. The legislators, who have already picked up copies of the report, have signed confidentiality agreements promising not to show anyone, including their staff, unless authorized to do so by a vote of the council.

It's by no means clear which way that vote will go. The council comprises 10 Republicans and 4 Democrats. It had voted unanimously in July to launch the investigation, but since Governor Palin was named as John McCain's running mate, many Republican members of the legislature have fallen into line behind the McCain camp's effort to quash the probe. Last month, Rep. John Coghill, a Republican from North Pole who is on the council, charged that the investigation had been inappropriately politicized and called for the removal of Sen. Hollis French, the Anchorage Democrat running the probe. And shortly after, six GOP legislators filed suit to halt the investigation entirely. (The suit was dismissed yesterday by the state Supreme Court.)

The Anchorage Daily News also reports:

Branchflower also produced a separate volume, roughly twice as large as his report, that's expected to remain confidential because it contains exhibits with personnel information that cannot legally be released, according to legislative council staff.

Palin's lawyer, Thomas Van Flein, tried to preemptively discredit the report, telling the ADN that it won't be comprehensive because Branchflower didn't interview Palin or her chief of staff, Mike Tibbles.

"They didn't even try to interview the governor. You want to know why she reassigned Monegan, it would be nice to talk to her. They didn't even try," Van Flein said. "It's a report that's going to be half-done at best. And anything that's half-done will likely be half-baked."

In response, Hollis French told the paper that he wrote a letter to Van Flein last month asking to set up the interview.

In addition, the New York Times has new details on the pressure that was brought by Palin's office on Walt Monegan in regard to Mike Wooten, the trooper who was embroiled in a bitter family dispute with the Palins.

It reports:

In all, the commissioner and his aides were contacted about Trooper Wooten three dozen times over 19 months by the governor, her husband and seven administration officials, interviews and documents show.

In one of those instances, Monegan received a call from an aide to Palin, who was concerned that Wooten was assigned to work at a state fair the governor planned to attend. Wooten, says the paper, "had indeed volunteered for duty at the fairgrounds -- in full costume as "Safety Bear," the troopers' child-friendly mascot."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (69) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (11)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Voting

States Deny Problems with Voter Registration

States reached out to reassure voters yesterday, after a story in the New York Times said that tens of thousands of voters were being blocked from registering or purged from state rolls.

Colorado, one of the states named in the story, has said they will review the process that has removed an estimated 37,000 voters from the state registry, but denied that the number was accurate.

"I have no idea where they got the numbers from," Colorado's Secretary of State Mike Coffman, a Republican, told the Denver Post.

Other states expressed confusion over the report and denied that they had widespread problems with their procedures.

Nevada's Secretary of State, a Democrat, assured Nevadans that, "any suggestion that eligible voters will be denied their right to participate in this election on Nov. 4 is false."

Michigan elections director Chris Thomas has said that only 11,000 voters were removed from Michigan rolls, a figure dramatically different than the 33,000 estimate in the Times report.

But it's important to note that both Michigan and Colorado repeatedly declined the Times request to make voter purge files public so they could be compared to the Times research compiled from state records. Both states also failed to respond to requests for comment on the story, days before it was published, but then provided their own sets of numbers on Thursday.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)
Topics: Voting

Alaska

Palin Exonerated -- By McCain-Palin Campaign!

The McCain-Palin campaign, with an eye on the possible release today of the Alaska legislature's report on Trooper-Gate, last night unveiled its own "report" into the matter. And guess what? It clears Sarah Palin of any wrongdoing!

Campaign officials wrote:

The following document will prove Walt Monegan's dismissal was a result of his insubordination and budgetary clashes with Governor Palin and her administration. Trooper Wooten is a separate issue.

The use of the word "dismissal" is noteworthy. Lately, the campaign had seemed to settle on the story that Monegan was not dismissed, but rather was asked to take a new assignment, and quit instead of doing so. Todd Palin told the same thing in written answers to Steve Branchflower, the legislature's investigator, according to news reports yesterday.

The campaign's report blames Andrew Halcro, a blogger and political rival of Governor Palin, for conspiring with Jim Wooten -- the trooper whose ongoing dispute with the Palin family is at the center of the affair -- to make it appear that Palin fired public safety commissioner Walt Monegan because Monegan refused to fire Wooten.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (11) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

The Daily Muck

The Daily Muck

Seventeen Guantanamo detainees remain trapped in a precedent-setting legal battle over war powers -- imprisoned by mistake and ordered released, but not yet free to go. The Bush administration appealed this week's ruling that it cannot hold the men any longer, and while the lawyers work out the details, the men will languish in prison a little longer. The men, Uighur Muslims from a restive region in the far west of China, were captured -- or possibly sold -- in Afghanistan in 2001. A judge cleared them for release in 2004, but the U.S., with its eye for irony, kept them in prison because of fears that China might torture them. (China gave assurances yesterday that it has no such intentions.) (ProPublica/AP)

It doesn't look good for the lawyers attempting to pin money laundering on two associates of former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. On Wednesday, they lost a bid to replace the trial's judge. The judge had indicated in August that he thought the prosecution had no case, reasoning that, like a corner store, the money laundering law accepted only cash, not checks. (Austin-American Statesman)

The stakes are high in this election, and a Washington watchdog group wants to know how good a gambler McCain is. McCain hasn't reported his winnings on federal disclosure forms, which the organization, Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility, claims merits a Senate ethics inquiry. The McCain campaign says no dice. (Politico)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (1) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: The Daily Muck

Sarah Palin

Palin on Personnel: Sometimes It Gets Personal, Sometimes It Gets Political

Here at TPMmuckraker, we've been closely following Sarah Palin's various personnel decisions from her time as governor of Alaska for quite a while, but we had no idea how tough those decisions had been until we heard it from Sarah herself.

In an interview with Greta van Susteren, Palin called personnel decisions her most "agonizing" work as governor and quipped: "Sometimes it gets personal, sometimes it gets political."

We couldn't have said it better ourselves.

Transcript after the jump.

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (13) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Ted Stevens

Inouye on Stevens: He'd Never Tell a Lie

Sen. Ted Stevens' motion-to-dismiss prone attorneys kicked off their defense today calling Hawaiian Sen. Dan Inouye to the stand.

Inouye testified as a character witness, telling the jury that he's "never heard of [Stevens] lying under oath."

Inouye, a senator for 45 years, has been a longtime friend of Stevens. He is apparently known as "Uncle Dan" to Stevens' children and called a "brother" by Stevens, the AP reports.

Whether or not Stevens will take the stand remains to be seen. Former Secretary of State Colin Powell is expected to testify tomorrow.



PERMALINK | COMMENTS (8) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)
Topics: Alaska, Ted Stevens

Voting

Anti-Dem Push-Polling In Oregon Senate Race?

Is Gordon Smith, Oregon's Republican senator who's in a tight reelection race, using push polls to turn voters against his Democratic opponent?

Kay Phillips, of Cottage Grove, Oregon told TPMmuckraker that last night she received a call about the race. After responding to some standard polling questions, including how she intended to vote in the Senate race and the presidential race, Phillips says she was then asked whether her opinion of Jeff Merkley, Smith's Democratic opponent, would change if she knew about tax increases he had supported. The caller then read six instances of tax increases, asking after each one whether she would change her opinion. The call lasted about 5-6 minutes, Phillips said.

At the start of the conversation, Phillips said, the caller told her she was calling with Western Wats. When, at the end of the call, Phillips the caller to repeat her affiliation, the caller spelled out the name, according to Phillips.

It's worth noting that political campaigns sometimes make similar calls to test negative messages, rather than to deceptively sway the opinions of large numbers of voters. Message testing calls are typically -- though not necessarily -- longer than 5-6 minutes, and conducted on a far smaller scale than push polls, since they seek only to target a representative sample of the electorate.

A spokesman for Western Wats, a Utah-based market research firm, confirmed to TPMmuckraker that his firm was conducting calls on the Oregon Senate race, and named NMB Research as the client, would not give additional information, citing a non-disclosure agreement.

Western Wats may ring a bell for TPM readers. Last fall, the New Hampshire Attorney General launched an investigation after voters in that state and Iowa reported receiving calls from the firm, informing them of Mitt Romney's Mormon faith, and praising John McCain's military record. As of August, the investigation was still ongoing.

NMB Research did not immediately return a call for comment. According to campaign disclosure records, the Virginia-based firm was paid $13,000 by the National Republican Campaign Committee to conduct "generic survey" in January.

Calls by TPMmuckraker to Smith's campaign, and to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which also conducts polling on Senate races, were not immediately returned.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (19) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)
Topics: Voting

Voting

Missteps Lead to Blocked Voters in Swing States

On Monday, the Social Security Administration sent out a curious press release asking six states -- four of which, Ohio, Indiana, Nevada and North Carolina, are swing states -- to review their voter registration verification procedure.

When TPMmuckraker called to see what was behind the out-of-character notification, Mark Lassiter, the SSA's press officer told us that those states had been requesting an inordinately high number of checks for voter's registrations from the SSA. For instance, the relatively large state of California only requested 410,000 verifications of voter's registrations based on social security numbers, while the significantly less populous Georgia requested almost 2 million.

The discrepancies seem to be a result of different states interpretation of a new federal law: the Help America Vote Act passed in 2002. HAVA says that states must exhaust checks in their own identification databases -- like drivers licenses and ID cards -- before turning to the often unreliable federal database with the Social Security Administration. Instead, states like those mentioned above have been improperly relying on the SSA to verify voter registrations.

The apparent violations of HAVA aren't necessarily nefarious. Nevada's uptick in SSA checks was apparently due to county clerks entering social security numbers and driver's license number in the wrong fields, state officials told the New York Times , whose inquiries into federal voter registration verification numbers directly preceded the SSA's press release.

The Times investigation also mentioned two more swing states where voters are being affected due to the bending of federal law.

In Michigan and Colorado, they have purged eligible voters from rolls within 90 days of the election -- which is only allowed if voters die, move out of the state or are declared unfit to vote.

According to the voter purge estimates, 37,000 voters were removed from Colorado's voter registration database in just three weeks this summer -- a number that seems inexplicable give only 2,400 deaths and 5,100 out of state moves in that time period. Similar questions have been raised in Michigan, where 33,00 voters re removed in August, though there had only been 7,100 deaths and 4,400 out of state moves.

The misapplication of federal law could lead to massive problems on Election Day and disproportionally affect Democrats, who have been registering in higher numbers this year. The thought of widespread confusion and disenfranchisement on Nov. 4 has spurred many to action and put the spotlight on the storied battle between Democrats and the GOP over the existence of voter fraud.

In Ohio, the Secretary of State (a Democrat) and the Ohio GOP are battling in federal court over the release of a list of voter registrations verified by the SSA, according to the Times. The GOP seeks to force voters who don't resolve discrepancies in their registration to vote via provisional ballot -- which are notorious for not being counted because they need extra verification.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (6) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Voting

Alaska

Court Throws Out GOP Effort to Quash Trooper-Gate

The Alaska Supreme Court has rejected the effort by Republican legislators to quash the Trooper-Gate investigation, affirming the decision of a lower court last week.

Details from the ruling to follow...

Update: The court wrote: "The order of the superior court issued on October 2, 2008 granting the Motion to Dismiss is AFFIRMED. An opinion will follow."

The ruling was provided to TPMmuckraker by Peter Maassen, the attorney for the legislators overseeing the investigation, who are named as defendants in the case.

Independent investigator Steve Branchflower is scheduled to release his report -- which centers on the firing by Governor Palin of former public safety commissioner Walt Monegan -- at a legislative hearing tomorrow.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (57) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (27)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Voting

McCain Camp's Anti-ACORN Campaign Goes Nationwide

It looks like the effort by the McCain campaign and the Republican party to make an issue out of ACORN's voter registration activities has gone national.

We've seen reports from several states in recent days that the group, which works to register low-income and minority voters, has submitted flawed or fraudulent voter registration forms -- though it's by no means clear how widespread the problem is.

But that's not stopping the McCain team. At a town-hall meeting in Wisconsin today, when supporters began to chant the group's name in derision, the Arizona senator seized the moment to go on the attack.

"You've seen the allegations, the multiple registrations under the same name, the more registered voters than the population, these are serious allegations, my friends, and they must be investigated, and they must be investigated immediately and they must be stopped before November the fourth, so Americans will not -- will not -- be deprived of a fair process in this election.

The Republican National Committee is also flogging the story. Under the headline "You Can't Make This Stuff Up", its website lists various cases of potential voter fraud, and links to a GOP press release noting that ACORN employees are under investigation in Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

And this morning, Fox News interviewed a Domino's Pizza employee in Ohio, who said that he had been asked by an ACORN canvasser to fill out multiple registration forms. The story appeared on the front page of the New York Post this morning.

The Republican effort to raise the specter of voter fraud, with ACORN at the center, is being carried out on the local level as well. After Nevada investigators raided ACORN's Las Vegas office Tuesday, Nevada's Republican senator, John Ensign immediately called on the Bush administration to close a loophole through which the group, which works to register low-income and minority voters, is eligible to receive federal housing funds through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

No one has been charged in the raid, which was part of an investigation apparently being led by Democratic secretary of state, Ross Miller. But there are suggestions that it was prompted in part by GOP complaints. Tory Mazzola, a spokesman for Ensign, quickly ended a call without responding, after being asked by TPMmuckraker whether Ensign's office had complained to state authorities about potential voter fraud by ACORN in advance of the raid. And as we reported this morning, the head of the state Republican party told TPMmuckraker that the state party had indeed expressed concerns about the issue to Miller's office over the summer. Miller's office has said that the raid was prompted by evidence that ACORN has submitted fraudulent voter registration forms.

Meanwhile, Missouri Republicans, led by former senator Jack Danforth, yesterday accused ACORN of filing thousands of false forms with election officials in the Show Me state. Danforth, who garnered a reputation as a bipartisan statesman during his tenure the Senate, is helping to lead a nationwide effort by the McCain campaign to raise concerns about voter fraud. On a September conference call with reporters, Danforth highlighted reports of faulty registration forms in Michigan, Colorado, and other states, and tried to link ACORN to Barack Obama, pointing out that the group's political action committee affiliated had endorsed the Demcrat.

And in New Mexico -- where David Iglesias was fired as U.S. attorney in 2006 in large part for failing to respond with sufficient alacrity to complaints about voter fraud lodged by GOP elected officials -- the FBI has opened a preliminary investigation into 1400 potentially fraudulent registration forms filed at a county election office in Albuquerque. ACORN is active in the area. A Republican state legislator told the Wall Street Journal that even if fraud is rare, "every fraudulent vote cast cancels out a legitimate one."

ACORN may have been lax, at best, in its procedures for gathering registration forms. But aside from the GOP's continuing inability to pinpoint the scale of the problem, it's also worth noting that, as the Wall Street Journal puts it, "a fake registration doesn't necessarily mean an ineligible vote is tallied. Officials say canvassers sometimes make up registered names to impress bosses or earn bonuses, but that doesn't result in anyone ineligible casting a vote."

But by shrieking about voter fraud, the McCain camp hopes to make voting officials more willing to place restrictions in the path of voters on election day, potentially causing delays and confusion at the polls, and reducing overall turnout. And it seeks to discredit any Obama victory by raising the suggestion that it was aided by the votes of ineligible voters.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (46) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (13)
Topics: ACORN, John McCain, Voting

Voting

Nevada GOP Contacted State About ACORN Before Raid

The Nevada Republican Party raised concerns with the Secretary of State's office about potential voter fraud in ACORN's voter registration efforts before Tuesday's raid by state authorities on ACORN's Las Vegas office, according to the party's executive director.

Zachary Moyle told TPMmuckraker that the state party has long seen ACORN's voter registration work as a "red flag," and that the contact with the
office of Democratic Secretary of State Ross Miller, which took the lead in ordering the raid, occurred over the summer. Moyle stressed that it's far from unusual for the GOP to raise concerns over voter fraud, and said that it has also been working closely with the Clark County registrar of voters on the issue.

The Secretary of State's office has said in an affidavit that the raid was triggered by evidence that ACORN has filed fraudulent registration forms, though it has not yet said how widespread the problem is.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (10) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)
Topics: ACORN, Voting

Ted Stevens

Stevens' Prosecution To Call One More Witness

Looks like the government has another chance to redeem its bungled prosecution of Sen. Ted Stevens.

Judge Emmet Sullivan announced this morning that the prosecution will be able to call one more witness, Dave Anderson, a former VECO employee who worked on Stevens home renovations, the AP reports. The allowance should offset the judge's ruling yesterday that excluded a portion of VECO's records that reference Anderson work on Stevens' home. The judge also ruled he would be instructing the jury that the government knowingly used false evidence in its case.

The decision delays the defense's case, which was set to begin today. Former Secretary of State Colin Powell and Hawaii Sen. Daniel Inouye are expected to testify for the defense.

Late update: Anderson has been a character around Alaska scandal for a while.

According to Anchorage Daily News' coverage of his testimony, Anderson was working "10 hours a day, six days a week," on Stevens' renovations -- and so was contractor Robert Williams. Anderson's testimony compensates for the excluded evidence of VECO records.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: Alaska, Ted Stevens, Veco

Alaska

Todd Palin Waged Campaign To Get Trooper Fired

Todd Palin spoke to over a dozen state officials, both before and after his wife became governor, in his effort to get state trooper Mike Wooten fired. But he says he never pressured Walt Monegan to remove Wooten.

That's what Todd Palin told independent investigator Steve Branchflower, according to a sworn affidavit released to reporters by the McCain campaign and Palins' lawyer.

In his statement, Todd Palin made clear that he carried a grudge against Wooten, a state trooper who was embroiled in a family dispute with the Palins, during and after a messy divorce from Sarah Palin's sister.

"I had hundreds of conversations and communications about Trooper Wooten over the last several years with my family, with friends, with colleagues, and with just about everyone I could -- including government officials," Palin said.

"I talked about Wooten so much over the years that my wife told me to stop talking about it with her."

But he also said: "My concerns ... were not why Monegan was reassigned," adding that to the best of his knowledge, Monegan, the state's former public safety commissioner, incurred the governor's displeasure because of "budget issues and failure to fill trooper vacancies."

The move by the Palin camp to release the affidavit, in advance of the legislative hearing tomorrow at which Branchflower is scheduled to unveil his finished report, appears to have raised some eyebrows.

State Senate President Lyda Green, a Republican but frequent Palin critic, told ABCNews.com: "The McCain campaign should not be releasing these documents."

The state's Supreme Court is scheduled to rule today on a GOP suit to quash the investigation, after a lower court threw out the effort last week.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (13) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (7)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

The Daily Muck

The Daily Muck

The prosecution has rested in the federal corruption trial of Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), just thirteen days and infinite calls for a mistrial later. The last day for the prosecution brought emails from a neighbor of Stevens about the work at Stevens' Girdwood home, an attempt to show that Stevens was more involved with the work than he previously has claimed. But the prosecution didn't go out on a high note. In yet another motion for a mistrial launched by the defense, the judge threw out key evidence from the prosecution, though he did say the trial would continue. (AP)

Washington treated Wall Street to more tongue lashings yesterday with no less a person than President Bush scolding AIG for its $440, 000 spree at the St. Regis resort. (All this through a spokesperson of course.) The insurance firm tried to fend off critics, saying that the binge was long planned and promising to re-evaluate its spending "in light of the new circumstances in which we are all operating." Good thing too, because there was another party planned for independent brokers at the Ritz Carlton next week. Meanwhile, the federal government decided the failing insurance business could use another $37.8 billion. (AP/Bloomberg)

Alaska could call in the IRS to see if Sarah Palin owes the state back-taxes on per diem payments she used to cover the cost of commuting from Juneau, the governor's official residence, to Anchorage, where her home town of Wasilla is located. The state sets aside an allowance to reimburse officials for work-related travel, but the rules change if it seems like the person has made their home elsewhere. (Anchorage Daily News)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: The Daily Muck

Ted Stevens

Judge Throws Out Key Evidence in Stevens Trial

The judge in the Ted Stevens trial today threw out two major pieces of evidence, after it was revealed that prosecutors failed to provide the defense with crucial information.

According to Politico:

Judge Sullivan is throwing out a portion of the business records from Veco Corp., whose former CEO, Bill Allen, allegedly spent $188,000 renovating Stevens' home in Girdwood, Alaska. Two former Veco employees, Rocky Williams and Dave Anderson, are on the company's records as having spent significant time working on Stevens' home in late 2000 and early 2001.

But prosecutors never presented testimony from Williams, who was suppose to be the foreman on the home project, and instead shepherded him out of Washington right before the trial started, all without informing Stevens' attorneys.

And Anderson told the grand jury that he was in Portland, Ore., not Alaska, in late 2000, when Veco's records have him as working on Stevens' home. Prosecutors knew that Anderson had told the grand jury that and did not tell the defense team.

So Judge Sullivan excluded the portion of Veco's records that reference Anderson and Williams' work on Stevens' home, and he will instruct the jury that the government knowingly used false evidence in its case.


And:
Judge Sullivan will also exclude all evidence from a 1999 car swap between Allen and Stevens in which Stevens got a new Land Rover from Allen in return for a beat-up 1964 Mustang and some cash.

Prosecutors failed to turn over to Stevens' defense team a copy of the check which Allen used to pay for the Land Rover. Defense counsel alleged that they their case had been hurt when they cross-examined Allen over the transaction, which they only did because -- they asserted -- they didn't have Allen's original check.


Tomorrow, Stevens' lawyers are expected to offer a motion for a mistrial, based on prosecutorial misconduct.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (32) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)
Topics: Alaska, Bill Allen, Ted Stevens, Veco

Voting

What's Behind The ACORN Raid?

Yesterday, we told you about the raid conducted by Nevada state authorities on the Las Vegas office of ACORN.

The office of Democratic Secretary of State Ross Miller has been telling reporters that the raid was prompted by complaints by Clark County officials about fraudulent voting forms being submitted by the group, which works to register low-income voters. An affidavit released by the state today described forms being received with the same name, as well as with fraudulent addresses and with personal information that did not match state records.

But the state has still not said how many such forms were submitted. Bob Walsh, a spokesman for the Secretary of State, told TPMmuckraker that the office is working to answer that question.

In a statement released yesterday, ACORN called the raid a "bogus attack" and asserted that it has "BENT OVER BACKWARDS to identify fraud and to encourage the Board of Elections to prosecute fraud."

But we're still puzzled by something: Republicans have a long history of clashing with ACORN, whose mission to register low-income and minority voters serves the cause of Democrats. So it's not clear what, beyond the immediate allegations, prompted Miller, a Democrat, to launch a high-profile raid of a major voter registration organization four weeks before election day.

According to Walsh, Miller, who has a background as a prosecutor, has always made law and order a priority. And ACORN does have a history of being less than fastidious about preventing small-scale fraud by canvassers who are paid per registration form they bring in. So perhaps this is nothing more than a state official being vigilant in upholding the law.

As more facts become clear, we'll keep you posted.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (6) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
Topics: Voting

Voting

Montana GOP Backs Off Voter Challenges

Score one for democracy.

The Montana GOP announced last night that it's backing off its challenge to the legitimacy of thousands of voter registrations filed in predominantly Democratic areas of the state, which we told you about earlier this week.

In a letter to the head of the elections office of Missoula county -- the county with the largest number of challenged voters -- which was released to reporters last night, GOP chair Jacob Eaton wrote that the challenges were made in "good faith" but added:

"As a disabled combat veteran who has fought Al Queada (sic) to defend this country and our democracy and who has voted absentee en route to a war zone, I regret that my actions have been perceived as such."

It had been reported that the list of challenged voters -- which was based on discrepancies between addresses listed on registration forms and those obtained from a U.S. postal service database -- included a member of the Army Reserve about to deploy to Kuwait, and an 86-year old Second World War hero.

A spokesman for the secretary of state's office told The Missoulian that no one has ever complained to the secretary's office of widespread voter fraud based on inaccurate voter addresses.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (18)
Topics: Voting

John McCain

McCain Pushing Lockheed-Made Weapons for Taiwan, Despite Advisers' Ties

It looks like John McCain's foreign policy advisers are back in the news -- and not in a good way.

Yesterday, McCain issued a statement urging the Bush administration to enlarge a $6 billion package of military equipment for Taiwan, announced earlier this week. McCain wants submarines and F-16 aircraft added to the package.

But as the Washington Post notes, the lobbying firm run by Randy Scheunemann, McCain's top foreign policy adviser, in June renewed a $200,00 contract to lobby on behalf of Taiwan. And in 2005, Scheunemann had personally signed the original contract between his firm, Orion Strategies, and the Taiwanese government. (Scheunemann took a leave of absence from the firm to work on McCain's campaign.)

The Post reports:

The McCain campaign did not respond to a request for comment on whether Randy Scheunemann, his foreign policy coordinator, had a role in drafting the statement or if he had recused himself.

But that's not the only potential conflict of interest here. As Think Progress points out, Scheuenemann has also lobbied for Lockheed Martin, which makes the F-16s that make McCain wants to give to Taiwan.

And here's something else worth noting. Another McCain foreign policy adviser, Bruce Jackson, is a former Lockheed vice president.

Jackson is a close Scheunemann ally, who was at Lockheed until 2002, during the period when, according to Senate disclosure forms, Scheuenemann lobbied for the arms contractor. The two men have worked together closely since then on efforts to expand NATO into eastern Europe.

In an interview, Jackson told TPMmuckraker that he has no financial stake in Lockheed, and has not spoken to McCain about the Taiwan arms package. He described his advisory role in the campaign as informal, and focused mostly on human-rights issues.

Still, Scheunemann's and Jackson's ties to Taiwan and Lockheed serve as a reminder of the influence of lobbyist and former corporate executives in McCain's campaign -- and of the ways in which the senator's bellicose foreign policy is often in sync with their interests.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)
Topics: John McCain, Randy Scheunemann

Norm Coleman

Norm Coleman Gets Pressed on Suits

As we told you yesterday, the newest skeletons in Sen. Norm Coleman's political -- and literal -- closet are Nieman Marcus suits supposedly bought for Coleman by a political contributor.

And as we mentioned in a late update, Coleman was confronted by a member of the Minnesota press as he exited a cafe. Well it turns out the kerfuffle was caught on tape.

Take a look:

Late update: This just went up a few minutes ago. It's a pretty baffling press conference. To wit, Coleman's press flak repeats the phrase "the Senator has reported every gift he has ever received," NINE times in just under 4 minutes of questioning. This would have been a totally adequate response if the reporters had been asking him whether Coleman reported the gifts on his financial disclosure forms. . . but they were after something far simpler: Did the Senator ever receive a gift of suits?

You have to watch:

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (20) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (26)
Topics: Norm Coleman

Justice Department Wants To Keep Gitmo Uighurs Behind Bars

Yesterday, a federal judge ordered the release of 17 detainees -- ethnic Uighurs from western China who were captured during fighting in Afghanistan -- being held at Guantanamo Bay. It was the first time a court had ordered the release of any detainees from Guantanamo.

But in a statement released last night, the Department of Justice said that the ruling "presents serious national security and separation of powers concerns" and announced that DOJ is filing an emergency appeal to ensure the men stay behind bars.

The statement also alleged that the men "have admitted to receiving weapons training at camps in Afghanistan." But this summer, a panel of judges found that the evidence on which that conclusion was based came from classified documents that "do not state (or, in most instances, even describe) the sources or rationales for those statements."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (10) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)
Topics:

Trooper-Gate

Trooper-Gate Probe Could Carry Weight, After All

It looked a couple weeks ago as if the McCain campaign's effort to shut down Trooper-Gate had largely succeeded.

But not so fast. Steve Branchflower, the independent investigator on the case, will release his report Friday, and, as the Anchorage Daily News notes, he will have heard from almost every key witness -- with the important exception of Governor Palin herself. As a result, says the paper, Branchflower "appears to have the makings of a fairly complete account."

Over the weekend, a judge ruled that seven witnesses, all government employees, must comply with subpoenas to testify. Those witnesses have made plans to answer Branchflower's questions this week, under oath. And it was announced Monday night that Todd Palin will, through his lawyer, provide written answers to questions.

Walt Monegan, the former public safety commissioner whose firing by Governor Palin is at the center of the inquiry, told the ADN that he spent nearly a day answering Branchflower's questions, and also handed over some documents.

A legislative panel will meet at 1pm EST Friday, to receive Branchflower's report. But the GOP effort to resist the probe has one more lifeline. Lawyers for a group of Republican legislators will try at 7pm EST today to convince the state Supreme Court to halt the probe, after a lower court rejected their suit last week. Stay tuned...

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (13) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (26)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

The Daily Muck

The Daily Muck

The easily de-railable federal corruption trial of Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) was thrown off course briefly yet again -- this time by questionable head movements. Judge Emmet Sullivan chastised the personal attorney of former VECO CEO Bill Allen for allegedly signaling to his client by making "nodding" motions at Allen to tell him to answer a question either with a yes or no while he was testifying. The government, Allen, and the attorney in question denied that any "nodding" -- or as Judge Sullivan called it "borderline obstruction of justice" -- was taking place. (Roll Call)

Your company's so close to the red that it receives an $85 billion bailout and what do you do to recoup? Go to the spa, of course. Shortly after the Fed gave the go ahead to rescue American International Group, company executives beat it to the swanky St. Regis resort, spending nearly half a million dollars -- and $23,000 at the spa alone. In the words of an incredulous Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD): "They spent another $10,000 dollars for -- I don't know what this is, leisure dining. Bars?" (The Gavel)

Seventeen Guantanamo detainees were ordered to be set free yesterday, a mere four years after a judge first declared them safe for release. The U.S. had said it could not return the Uighur Muslim prisoners to China because they might be tortured. The detainees will be released in the U.S., into the care of supporters. (New York Times)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)
Topics: The Daily Muck

Voting

State Official: "Tony Romo Is Not Registered To Vote in the State of Nevada."

We're starting to get a little more information about the raid on ACORN's Las Vegas offices conducted by Nevada authorities earlier today.

FoxNews.com reports that, according to Bob Walsh, a spokesman with the Nevada Secretary of State's office, the raid was prompted by ongoing complaints that ACORN, which works to register low income voters, was submitting registrations with erroneous information, including non-existent and false names, and duplicates.

But it's still unclear how many of these fraudulent forms were submitted.

Secretary of State Ross Miller told Fox that the flawed registrations included the names of Dallas Cowboys football players. "Tony Romo is not registered to vote in the state of Nevada, and anybody trying to pose as Terrell Owens won't be able to cast a ballot on Nov. 4," Miller said.

Miller added that no ACORN employees or canvassers have been arrested or charged in connection with the raid.

A month ago, state and federal authorities launched a joint task force to investigate voter-fraud complaints.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (16) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: ACORN, Voting

Voting

GOP County Chair v. Michigan Messenger: The Complaint

Last week, the chair of the Macomb County Republican Party in Michigan filed a defamation suit against the Michigan Messenger, over a story in which he is quoted as stating his party plans to challenge voters whose names and addresses appear on foreclosure lists.

We got our hands on a copy of the suit, and we invite you to take a look. We'll be continuing to bring you updates on this story as it develops.


PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
Topics: Voting

Norm Coleman

The Senator's New Clothes

Does Senator Norm Coleman pay for any of his personal expenses?

In what is becoming a clear pattern, reports show that his political contributors have paid for an array of Coleman's basic expenses, including his rent, his utility bills, his trips to the Bahamas, and -- in the latest revelation -- even his clothes.

From Harper's:

I've been told by two sources that [local businessman and political contributor Nasser] Kazeminy has in the past covered the bills for Coleman's lavish clothing purchases at Nieman Marcus in Minneapolis. The sources were not certain of the dates of the purchases; if they were made before Coleman joined the Senate in 2003, he obviously would not be required to report it under senate rules. But having a private businessman pay for your clothing is never a good idea if you're a public official (Coleman was mayor of St. Paul from 1994 to 2002).

Oddly, the Coleman camp didn't issue a denial to Harper's inquiries, stating only, "[a]s required, any gift Norm Coleman has received from his friends has been fully reported."

Late update: Coleman gave a slightly more heated denial to the Kazeminy clothing question to a Pioneer Press reporter, who caught the incumbent senator as he was heading out of a cafe in Fergus Falls, MN:

"First of all, every gift I've ever received has been reported, ok. But the idea of responding to the things bloggers throw out is something I'm not going to get into. There are very awful things that are said about people on the blogs," he said.

[Reporter Dave] Orrick then asked for a simple yes or no answer on the suit question.

"That's the answer, period. You can read it in the answer," he said.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (20) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: Norm Coleman

Voting

Nevada ACORN Office Raided By State Authorities

Nevada investigators today raided the offices of ACORN -- a group that works to register minorities and low-income people to vote -- looking for evidence of voter fraud, reports the Associated Press.

The Association of Community Organizations for Reform (ACORN) is accused of submitting multiple voter registrations with false and duplicate names, according to a spokesman at the office of Secretary of State Ross Miller, a Democrat.

Two months ago, state and federal authorities formed a joint task force to pursue charges of election fraud in Nevada.

We're looking into the question of how much credible evidence exists of ACORN's involvement in significant voting fraud, and will keep you posted.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (13) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: Voting

Bill Allen

Bill Allen's Millions Focus of Cross Examination

With the juicy audio recordings between Sen. Ted Stevens and former VECO CEO Bill Allen concluding Allen's direct testimony, the once-close-friend of the 84-year-old senator took the stand for cross examination.

From Roll Call:

Under cross-examination by Stevens' attorney Brendan Sullivan, Allen acknowledged that the week after he was first contacted by the FBI, he sold VECO for about $380 million to contracting giant CH2M Hill. He also acknowledged that his plea agreement with the government suggested that prosecutors would view his cooperation as VECO's cooperation.

About $70 million of the sale price was held back because of concerns about legal liability the company might have faced because of the ongoing investigation, as well as potential tax and environmental issues that are more routine in such sales, Allen said.

We already knew that the defense would be making this argument. Just a few weeks ago, they claimed that Allen's government cooperation would mean he received a windfall of $40 million from the company that bought Allen's oil pipeline company, VECO. The claim was disputed by the company itself in subsequent filings.

But, in general, Allen's soft fall from grace, despite guilty pleas on conspiracy and bribery have been well documented.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alaska, Bill Allen, Ted Stevens, Veco

Henry Waxman

Waxman To Probe Fannie and Freddie

In response to concerted requests from Republicans, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), who chairs the House Oversight Committee, announced today that the committee will hold hearings into the failure of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Waxman's low-key announcement -- "the request we've received from the minority will be pursued," he said -- came at a hearing with executives of AIG, as part of a committee investigation into the failed insurer. Yesterday, GOP members of the committee launched a campaign to discredit Waxman's broader investigation into corporate misdeeds, including at AIG.

Republicans had also called on Waxman to look into Fannie and Freddie, who, unlike many other corporations implicated in the current financial crisis, have closer ties to Democrats than to the GOP, by some assessments.

At a hearing yesterday, Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia, the ranking Republican on the committee, said of Fannie and Freddie: "They seem to be at the epicenter of the crisis, and yet the chairman continues to focus on issues, such as executive compensation, that generate headlines but neither get to the root of the problem nor move us any closer to a solution. We'd hate to think the millions of dollars Fannie and Freddie executives contributed to Democratic congressional candidates also contributed to the reluctance to investigate this aspect of the crisis."

Republicans also called, at this morning's hearing, for Attorney General Michael Mukasey to appoint a special prosecutor to look into Fannie and Freddie.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Bailout, Henry Waxman, Michael Mukasey

Voting

Wisc. AG's Office Denies Voter Reg. Suit is Political

The Wisconsin attorney general's office is standing firmly by its claim that Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen's suit against the Government Accountability Board is not political -- despite an audio recording discovered yesterday of Van Hollen promising action on voter fraud to a Republican audience, weeks before he filed suit.

"It's a very good and compelling speech that reiterates what he's been talking about for two years," Kevin St. John, a spokesman from the AG's office told WisPolitics.com, the site that originally discovered the audio of Van Hollen's speech at the Republican National Convention on Sept. 4.

"You'll be hearing much more from the Department of Justice in the coming months about doing what we can to make sure that those people who have illegally and illegitimately registered to vote, don't have the opportunity on election day to show up and take away your vote by casting one that is not legal," Van Hollen says in the audio recording from the RNC.

St. John pointed to a letter (pdf) Van Hollen sent to the GAB -- which oversees state elections -- on August 27, which states that he will be pushing for the board to meet HAVA compliances in demanding that they verify all of the voter registrations filed since January 2006.

"The Attorney General has given many public statements about the right to vote and to enforce the law," St. John said to WisPolitics.com. "Illegal voting is wrong and the Attorney General's office should work within the powers of the office to enforce the law and protect the right to vote."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (3) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Voting, voter fraud

The Daily Muck

The Daily Muck

The Federal Communications Commission has initiated an investigation into the possibility that media networks and military analysts broke identification sponsorship rules to present a rosier picture of the Iraq war. A New York Times article last April showed that media military commentators were frequently fed information in private meetings with top White House and Pentagon officials. Two democratic congressmen sent letters to the F.C.C. requesting a probe last spring. (Wall Street Journal)

The Securities and Exchange Commission may have unfairly conducted an insider trading investigation, according to a federal report. During the investigation of the hedge fund Pequot Capital Management, an S.E.C. lawyer was axed after he tried to interview a top executive connected to the case. The report recommends disciplinary action against the commission's director of enforcement and two supervisors. The S.E.C.'s record is already under fire from critics who say it lapsed in its oversight role, leading to the current Wall Street collapse. (New York Times)

Democrats have joined the chorus of critics of new F.B.I. rules governing when the agency can lay the groundwork for an investigation. Under the new regulations, scheduled to go into effect Dec. 1, agents do not need supervisor approval or evidence of a crime to launch an assessment. Watchdog groups have said that the new rules would also permit widespread racial profiling. Democrats, including House Judiciary Chair John Conyers (D-MI) have asked that implementation be delayed to allow the new administration to evaluate them. (UPI)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (1) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: The Daily Muck

Alaska

Todd Palin To Answer Questions in Trooper-Gate Probe. Kind Of.

So it looks like Todd Palin will answer questions in the Alaska legislature's Trooper-Gate investigation after all. But there's a catch.

According to representatives of the McCain-Palin campaign speaking at an Anchorage press conference last night, the First Dude will respond to questions from independent investigator Steve Branchflower, but only in writing, and with the answers funneled through his lawyer.

The campaign argued that his written responses would satisfy the subpoena issued by the legislature to Todd Palin. In response, Sen. Hollis French, the Democratic lawmaker overseeing the probe, told the Anchorage Daily News that the full Senate would decide whether Todd Palin is really off the hook. Resisting a subpoena can be punished with jail time.

It was announced over the weekend that seven other subpoened witnesses, all of whom work for the Palin administration, will testify in person this week.

Branchflower is expected to wrap up his investigation late this week, and release a report shortly thereafter.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (18) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Todd Palin, Trooper-Gate

Voting

Montana GOP Targets WWII Hero in Voter Challenge

Last week, we noted the announcement by the Montana Republican party that it's challenging the voter registrations of over 6000 voters, mostly in Democratic-leaning counties.

The GOP has presented the move as an effort to combat fraud. For all the challenged voters, says the party, there were discrepancies between the address under which they registered to vote, and a U.S. postal service address database.

But two registered Montana voters, along with the state Democratic party, this morning filed suit with a federal court to stop the challenges, calling the GOP move "a transparent and very likely unsuccessful attempt" to discourage voters from turning out.

It's already clear that the list of challenged voters includes a good number of people who are hardly prime suspects for voter fraud.

In an opinion piece published yesterday in the Montana Standard, the state's GOP lieutenant governor, John Bohlinger, noted that one voter who's being challenged is Frank St. Pierre, a World War II veteran who helped save thousands of Allied troops in Dunkirk, and happened to move across town recently*. Bohlinger called the effort to challenge St. Pierre "an utter disgrace."

And as we told you earlier today, the list also includes Kevin Furey, a former Democratic state representative who's an army reserve officer about to deploy to Kuwait. (The GOP has since backed down on that one.)

Also appearing on the list are Matt Gouras of the Associated Press, who has been covering the presidential race in Montana, and Alden Downing, a former reporter for the local NBC affiliate who's now serving as communications director for GOP gubernatorial candidate Roy Brown. That's according to Matt Singer, who heads Forward Montana, a progressive activist group based in Missoula that obtained a copy of challenged voters in Missoula county -- and appears on it himself. (This afternoon, the group unveiled a website that allows users to search the lists of challenged voters from Missoula and Lewis and Clark counties. Additional counties will be added as the information becomes available, said Singer.)

On Saturday, John Brueggeman, a Republican state legislator, spoke out against the challenges, telling the Great Falls Tribune: "I can't think we'll do anything but irreparable harm to our party" with independent voters who may be targeted.

But that same day, the state GOP chair informed a local paper that the voter-challenge party is just getting started. "These counties are the beginning, not the end," Jake Eaton told the Billings Gazette. "We're looking at this across the state."

* This sentence has been corrected from an earlier version.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (15) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (16)
Topics: Voting

House Judiciary

Court Delays Miers and Bolten Congressional Testimony

Monday did not bring good news for the House Judiciary Committee. A federal appeals court has delayed the testimony of Harriet Miers and Josh Bolten, in the latest ruling (pdf) in the epic back and forth between the executive and legislative branches. The decision pushes the issue into the next administration.

From the AP:

Time will run out on this year's congressional session before the battle between two branches of government can be resolved, according to the ruling by a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

The ruling essentially pushes any resolution on the politically charged case until next year.
"The present dispute is of potentially great significance for the balance of power between the legislative and executive branches," wrote the panel of judges, two of whom were appointed by Republicans.

Still, the judges wrote, "Even if expedited, this controversy will not be fully and finally resolved by the judicial branch ... before the 110th Congress ends on January 3, 2009. At that time, the 110th House of Representatives will cease to exist as a legal entity, and the subpoenas it has issued will expire."

HJC Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) has already indicated that the committee will appeal, but did not give a timeline.

"While the delay caused by this incorrect decision is unfortunate, at the end of the day, I believe Judge Bates' decision will be affirmed and that Harriet Miers and other key witness will appear before the House Judiciary Committee, and that we will get to the bottom of the Bush administration's disgraceful politicization of the Justice Department," said Conyers in a statement.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (35) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (11)
Topics: Harriet Miers, House Judiciary, Josh Bolten

Ted Stevens

More in the Adventures of Bill and Ted

Despite recent snafus, Sen. Ted Stevens' trial continues today, with tapes of phone conversations between Stevens and former VECO CEO Bill Allen being played for the jury.

"I think they're probably listening to this conversation right now," Stevens presciently says in one of the recordings.

"We might have to pay a fine and spend a little time in jail," he continues in the recordings from the fall of 2006, the AP reports. "I hope it doesn't come to that."

The friendship between Stevens and the former VECO CEO was laid out in Allen's testimony against the seven-term senator from Alaska last week. Allen himself pleaded guilty to three counts of bribery and conspiracy in 2007.

"Ted, I love you, you know," Allen said in one of the tapes, illustrating how close the two once were.

"Let's get through this and get back to our boot camps again," Stevens said, referring to trips the friends would take together, The Hill recounts from the trial today.

While seeming to contradict the 84-year-old senator's defense -- that he was unaware that he was not being billed for over $250,000 in gifts and home renovations -- many of the recordings are tinged with pathos given Allen's testimony against Stevens.

"Let's stick this thing out together, OK?" Stevens says during one conversation mentioned by the AP.

"I don't think we've done anything wrong," Stevens told Allen in another recorded conversation where he tried to cheer up his longtime friend and encourage him to have a positive attitude and to get some exercise, according to McClatchy. "I can't think of a thing of anything we've done that's wrong."

Late update: More highlights from the Stevens' audio bonanza, include multiple F-Bombs from the geriatric incumbent senator; a rundown of his sleep schedule and the lessons learned from Martha Stewart.

But don't take our word for it! Listen for yourself:

Ted Stevens Talks with Bill Allen, Fall 2006
Audio Exhibit 1

Audio Exhibit 2

Audio Exhibit 3

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (5) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alaska, Bill Allen, Ted Stevens, Veco

Voting

Audio Recordings Reveal WI AG Promised Action Over Fraud at RNC

New audio uncovered by the Wisconsin news site Wispolitics.com, reveals that during a speech at the Republican National Convention, Wisconsin's attorney general, J.B. Van Hollen promised action on voter fraud.

At the time of the statement, Van Hollen hadn't filed suit against the Government Accountability Board -- which oversees state elections -- demanding that they verify all of the voter registrations filed since January 2006. As a result, his statement at the RNC stands in sharp contrast to his claims that the suit is not politically motivated.

"There was no discussion with anybody involved in leadership with the Republican Party (or the McCain campaign) about this lawsuit before it was brought," Van Hollen said earlier last month.

"We're out there fighting to make sure that within the context of 'little-L,' liberal voter registration law that we have in the state of Wisconsin, that even though in the context of that law we can't prevent everybody from voting who isn't entitled to vote and preserve the right for everybody who is entitled to vote, to vote, but we are going to do our best, as the lawyers for the state of Wisconsin, as the defenders and protectors of the law of the state of Wisconsin, of the people who are there to defend your right to have your vote matter," Van Hollen said on September 4th at the RNC.

"We are out there front and center everyday and you'll be hearing much more from the Department of Justice in the coming months about doing what we can to make sure that those people who have illegally and illegitimately registered to vote, don't have the opportunity on election day to show up and take away your vote by casting one that is not legal," he continued.

Joe Wineke, chair of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin was distressed at the audio of Van Hollen's statements.

"If JB Van Hollen is claiming this lawsuit isn't political, then why did he discuss it with the RPW Chair at a partisan political convention and then send signals to fellow Republicans that he was mobilizing the Department of Justice to take action?," said Wineke in a press release.

Listen to a portion of the audio of Van Hollen's speech here.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (13)
Topics: Voting

Voting

Indiana Republicans Making Voting Harder for Blacks

Indiana is one of the key red states that Barack Obama has unexpectedly put in play this year. So it's not surprising that the GOP is pulling out all the stops to keep it in their column -- including, predictably, launching an effort to make it much harder for African-Americans to vote.

In a nutshell, here's what's happened so far. The details get a little intricate, but stay with us here:

To win Indiana, Obama would likely need a big turnout from three low-income, heavily African-American cities, in the northern part of Lake County, near Chicago. Those three cities -- Gary, Hammond, and East Chicago -- together comprise more than 40 percent of the county's population. But under Indiana law, early voting can take place only in the county clerk's main office, which for Lake County is in Crown Point, more than an hour's drive from those cities.

As a result, on September 23, the county board of elections, on a 3-2 party-line vote, approved the opening of satellite early-voting centers in the the three cities. (State law specifically gives elections boards the authority to approve satellite voting centers, and early voting occurred at the centers in advance of the Democratic primary in May.)

But Republicans argue that the decision is unfair to voters in other parts of the state, many of whom would still need to travel to their county seat to vote early. Last week, the county GOP challenged the move, arguing that the centers can only be approved through a unanimous vote of the election board, and asking for a restraining order on early voting. Superior Court Judge Calvin Hawkins -- a recent appointee of the state's GOP governor, Mitch Daniels -- issued the order Friday.

Within hours, a federal judge had vacated that decision, and announced a hearing this Thursday to resolve the issue.

Democrats had hoped to open the satellite voting stations today, but have agreed to hold off until the issue is resolved. They have said that if the restraining order is not upheld on Thursday, they plan to open the centers the following day. But whatever happens, almost a week of easier access to the polls for many of the county's low-income residents has been lost.

Lake County has been in the news already this year in the context of voting. On primary night, the mayor of Gary, an Obama supporter, said publicly that his city had "delivered" for Obama, and did not release vote totals until unusually late in the night, leading to suspicions that the results were deliberately delayed to deny Hillary Clinton the chance to claim victory that night.

But it's worth pointing out that this may not be the only tactic in the Indiana Republicans' bag of vote-suppression tricks. The party chair in Marion County -- which contains Indianapolis, the state's other Democratic stronghold -- last week refused to rule out using foreclosure records as a basis for challenging voters. A GOP official in Michigan last month was quoted by an online news site saying that similar plans were in the works for one key county in that state, though he later back-tracked amid the ensuing furor, and is now suing the site for libel.

Of course, in recent weeks we've seen a range of other possible Republican vote-suppression tactics. Among other examples, in Montana, the state GOP last week used discrepancies in listed addresses to challenge the eligibility of more than 6000 voters, mostly in Democratic-leaning areas -- including at least one member of the military who's about to deploy to Kuwait. The party has now said it plans to issue more challenges.

And a flyer circulating in African-American neighborhoods of Philadelphia last week, whose authorship is unknown, falsely asserted that voters with outstanding warrants or unpaid parking tickets could be arrested at the polls.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (15) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (28)
Topics: Voting

The Daily Muck

The Daily Muck

The Alaska Supreme Court will hear the case brought by Republican legislators and the state attorney general against the legislature's inquiry into Sarah Palin's firing of Walt Monegan, the former state police chief. The suit, dismissed by the Superior Court last week, argues that the Trooper-Gate investigation has become overly politicized. The legislature's investigation, launched in July in a unanimous, bipartisan vote, is scheduled to release its report at the end of this week. (Bloomburg)

Attorney General Michael Mukasey released new rules to regulate FBI investigations, drawing fire from a civil liberties group that says that the changes will allow racial profiling to become part of policy. Under the new regulations, preliminary investigations can begin with far less evidence up front, and include a person's race or ethnicity as part of the considerations. The original standards are a legacy of the 1970s, when the government spied on figures such as Martin Luther King, Jr. (Press Release)

The French case known as "Angolagate" begins today, with 42 people facing charges of $790 million in arms trafficking during Angola's civil war. Among the accused are the son of former president Francois Mitterand and a former interior minister. Half a million people died in Angola's domestic conflict. (AFP)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
Topics: The Daily Muck

Ted Stevens

Stevens' Lawyers Move to Throw Out Trial. . . Again

If the headline seems familiar, it should. Just last week, Sen. Ted Stevens' attorneys lost a motion for a mistrial. By our count, this is the fourth attempt by the defense to toss out the case against the seven-term senator, but we could have missed a few along the way.

From the AP:

"Until today, defense counsel have refrained from alleging intentional misconduct by the government," [Stevens'] lawyers wrote in court papers. "We can no longer do so in good conscience."

. . .The latest mid-trial motion to end the trial says the newly disclosed documents show Allen originally told investigators that he believed Stevens would have paid for work on a mountain cabin if billed -- proof, the defense says, that the senator never intended to hide anything.

Rather than turn over the first statement to the defense as required by rules of evidence, the government "intentionally procured from Allen a contradictory statement" and then "concealed its actions" from the court, the defense papers say.

Late update: It's important to note that the prosecution is stepping up to make sure their "human error" that led to last week's defense attempt for a mistrial, is being properly investigated. The government requested an internal probe with the Justice Deparment's internal investigators (Office of Professional Responsibility) to look into their delay in turning over FBI reports to opposing counsel.

Late late update: Judge Emmet Sullivan said the trial would go on today as planned, with the jury hearing recorded phone calls between Stevens and Allen. Sullivan ordered the prosecution to file a formal response by the end of the day in response to the defense's motion, the AP reports.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (0) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Topics: Alaska, Bill Allen, Ted Stevens, Veco

Alaska

State Employees Will Honor Trooper-Gate Subpoenas

On the heels of the dismissal of the Alaska attorney general's suit to quash subpoenas issued in the legislature's Trooper-Gate investigation, seven subpoenaed state employees who had previously said they would not cooperate with the probe have now agreed to testify.

From the Anchorage Daily News:

"Despite my initial concerns about the subpoenas, we respect the court's decision to defer to the Legislature," [Alaska Attorney General Talis] Colberg said. "We are working with Senator Hollis French to arrange for the testimony of the seven state employee plaintiffs."

French has said they still expect the investigation's report to be completed by this Friday.

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (25) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (15)
Topics: Alaska, Sarah Palin, Trooper-Gate

Featured at TPMMuckraker

Masthead

Recommended Reader Posts

Follow us!

Most Popular

TPM Stories Now Surging on