
Police documents released this week in the Jim Greer alleged fraud case make the Republican Party of Florida out to be a fairly ugly, sexist place to work.
A while back, we noted the allegation that Greer became jealous of Meredith O'Rourke, a top fundraiser for Gov. Charlie Crist, after Greer became FL GOP chair in 2007 and saw she O'Rourke making $30,000 per month in fundraising fees. Greer allegedly tried to convince her to give him a share of her profits, and, when she refused, he cut off her access to Crist.
The new documents include a police summary of investigators' interview with O'Rourke in which she describes Greer making "inappropriate sexually related comments in her presence."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)As the allegations that polling firm Research 2000 produced bogus or flawed data continue to rock the political world, it's worth taking a moment to look at the somewhat unorthodox background of the man behind R2K, Del Ali.
"I consider myself a political scientist," Ali told TPMmuckraker in an interview today. "If you want to call me a statistical wiz, I am not."
Ali's academic history is primarily in recreation. He graduated from the University of Maryland with a BS in Recreation (Public Health) in 1983, according to a university spokesman. Records show he also got an MA in Recreation from Maryland in 1991.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)The House Ethics Committee, in its probe of sexual harassment allegations made against former Rep. Eric Massa (D-NY), has interviewed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Politico reports, likely about how much House leaders knew about the allegations and how they responded.
Politico also reports that the committee will release its report on the investigation soon.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)When defending her highly criticized immigration law, Gov. Jan Brewer (R) often lists the myriad problems she says undocumented immigrants bring to her state. In an interview on Fox News last week, for example, she claimed: "We cannot afford all this illegal immigration and everything that comes with it, everything from the crime and to the drugs and the kidnappings and the extortion and the beheadings ..."
There's no better way, it seems, to make the case for strict anti-immigration laws than to claim that undocumented immigrants are pouring into the country to decapitate innocent Americans.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)In response to the lawsuit filed by Daily Kos against him this week, Research 2000 president Del Ali is accusing Kos of owing him money "in the six figure category" and of using "Kos bloggers posing as statisticians" to slander R2K.
"Every charge against my company and myself are pure lies, plain and simple and the motives as to why Kos is doing it will be revealed in the legal process and not before that," Ali writes in a lengthy, at times discursive statement to TPMmuckraker, which you can read in full below.
(Kos, by the way, has said he paid for all the polling he received.)
He also delves into the statistical analysis at the heart of the dispute, which Kos says proves R2K's polls are fraudulent. It was written by three so-called "statistics wizards" who contacted Kos after finding what they call extreme anomalies in R2K's poll data.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)Portland Police Chief Michael Reese just released a statement on the Al Gore sexual assault allegations saying there were "procedural issues" with the original investigation that merited re-opening the case.
"In reviewing this case, we have determined there were procedural issues with the 2009 investigation that merit re-opening the case," Reese said. "There should have been command level review at the time on the specifics of this case and decisions on whether the investigation should go forward."
Remember, the police declined to pursue an investigation of the 2006 incident after a 2009 interview with the woman who accused Gore of sexual assault, Molly Hagerty. At the time they cited "insufficient evidence." But now Reese appears to be saying that call should have been made at a higher level of the department.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Prosecutors Wednesday released hundreds of pages of documents of evidence in the fraud case against former Florida GOP chair Jim Greer.
A couple highlights:
According to a female party official who spoke to investigators, Greer organized a men-only trip to the Bahamas with major donors and "women were involved and paid." Gov. Charlie Crist, who was on the same trip and hand-picked Greer for the top GOP job in 2007, said today that the charge there were escorts or other paid women involved is "absurdly false."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)When Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed the state's sweeping, and controversial, immigration law earlier this year, she also signed an executive order requiring that law enforcement officers get additional training on how to avoid racial profiling.
Today, the hour-long training video the state created was released to the public. Surprisingly, it mainly focuses on how to avoid the public appearance that the law's enforcement amounts to racial profiling.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)Wednesday night the Portland Police Bureau announced it is re-opening an investigation into allegations that Al Gore sexually assaulted a massage therapist in 2006, following the public revelation of the accusation last week by the National Enquirer.
The police had declined to pursue an investigation after interviewing the woman for the first time in 2009, citing insufficient evidence.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Prosecutors in the Rod Blagojevich trial have released some classic audio of a recorded conversation between the former Illinois governor and Doug Scofield, a political advisor and former deputy governor, from the day after Barack Obama won the Presidential election.
In a candid conversation, Blagojevich and Scofield discussed the governor's strategy for filling the vacant Senate seat, and the governor utters the now-infamous phrase: "I've got this thing and it's fucking golden."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)Arizona, as part of its new immigration law, today released an hour-long training video that will be shown to law enforcement officers to train them in how not to engage in racial profiling.
The first chapter of the video, titled "Racial Profiling," focuses on how to defend oneself against the inevitable charges of racial profiling from critics of the new law.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)Via Greg Sargent, Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos has now sued polling firm Research 2000 for allegedly "fraudulently manufacturing phony results."
Kos' lawyer, Adam Bonin, confirmed to TPMmuckraker that the suit was filed late yesterday. Del Ali of Research 2000, who has vehemently denied Kos' claims, told us this morning that he has not yet seen the suit. (For more on the backstory, check out our past coverage.)
The suit, which you can read below, alleges breach of contract, unfair business practices, breach of implied warranty, intentional misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, constructive fraud, and conversion.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)By definition, the 11 eleven alleged secret agents arrested this week were clearly not the best that Russian intelligence has to offer: they got caught.
But perhaps the most striking thread running through the two complaints filed by federal prosecutors this week is the sheer incompetence of the alleged espionage operation. It was, in fact, so incompetent that the American government couldn't even charge the alleged spies with espionage, having to rely solely on charges that the spies acted as unregistered foreign agents and laundered money in order to hold them.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)Texas-based Anadarko owes BP more than $272 million for its share of cleanup and response costs in the Gulf, according to a bill that was sent by BP and obtained by TPMMuckraker.
Anadarko owns a 25 percent stake in BP's Deepwater Horizon, and BP wants Anadarko to pay for 25 percent of costs. Those costs include money BP has spent to drill the relief wells and stage other spill response efforts, plus reimbursements to the federal government, damages to equipment and claims paid to those hurt by the leak.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)The Financial Times reported this morning that Anadarko, the U.S.-based company that owns 25 percent of the Deepwater Horizon's lease, had a say in the rig's design and got regular updates on its operation from BP.
The news could complicate Anadarko's attempt to prove that BP caused the blowout by acting negligently. If Anadarko can prove gross negligence or willfull misconduct, it can get off the hook for its share of cleanup and response costs.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Research 2000 President Del Ali tells TPMmuckraker in an email that the explosive claim by Daily Kos Tuesday that the firm fabricated poll data has dealt a "fatal" blow to his business, and, "Several long time clients who believe in us have stated that even after we are cleared and criminal sanctions are imposed on Kos, that they can not do business with us due to perception."
It's not clear how Kos' accusing the firm of making up data would result in "criminal sanctions," but the charge is another sign of Ali amping up his pushback against Kos since the allegations were initially leveled.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)The lawyer for Daily Kos is not mincing words when it comes to accusing Research 2000 of outright fraud in its poll data.
"He handed Daily Kos fiction and claimed it was fact and got us to put our name on it," said Attorney Adam Bonin of R2K president Del Ali.
In an interview with TPMmuckraker, Bonin, of the firm Cozen O'Connor in Philadelphia, says he will file suit against Research 2000 in the next week in the Northern District of California, where Kos is based. The suit will allege "breach of contract, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and a number of other counts." It will seek damages for "the amount that was paid for this polling, and ... things like reputational harm and punitive damages." Ali and his attorney have forcefully denied the allegations.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)Research 2000 President Del Ali, responding to the allegation today by Daily Kos that his firm provided bogus poll data, tells TPMmuckraker in an email, "I will tell you unequivocally that we conducted EVERY poll properly for the Daily Kos."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)Calling into question years worth of polls, Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas said today his site will sue pollster Research 2000 after a statistical analysis showed that R2K allegedly "fabricated or manipulated" poll data commissioned by Kos.
Two weeks ago, after Kos dropped R2K for inaccuracy, a group of three of what Kos calls "statistics wizards" began looking at some of the firm's data and found a number of "extreme anomalies" that they claim may be the result of some kind of randomizer.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (8)The Supreme Court has ordered a lower court to take a new look at the controversial conviction of former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman in the wake of its ruling last week narrowing the scope of a key public corruption statute that was used in the Siegelman case.
Siegelman was convicted in 2006 on charges of bribery and honest services fraud, the statute that was limited by the court last week. Siegelman was found to have given former HealthSouth executive Richard Scrushy a seat on a state board regulating hospitals in exchange for $500,000 in donations to a state lottery campaign.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)A study by the Government Accountability Office has found seven instances of improper burrowing -- political appointees shifting to career civil servant positions in a given agency -- during the Bush Administration, though none of the seven occurred close to the 2008 presidential election.
Regular TPMmuckraker readers will remember our reporting on burrowing back in late 2008 when several Bush Administration officials made eyebrow-raising shifts to career positions.
The GAO did an exhaustive study of these so-called "conversions" from political to career positions between May 2005 and May 2009. It found 139 conversions in that period, with the most -- 32 -- occurring at the Justice Department, and the second-most, 17, occurring at the Department of Homeland Security. The GAO found the vast majority, 117, followed "fair and open competition" and proper procedures to ensure that the conversions were justified.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)The police department in Hemet, California, says that a fire today at an evidence storage building may be the seventh attempted attack in a six-month string of incidents targeting the local police.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)The Justice Department announced today that 11 people have been charged with spying for Russia, 10 of whom were arrested in Manhattan, Boston; Yonkers, NY; Montclair, NJ; and Arlington, VA.
The DOJ alleges that the people were allegedly "carrying out long-term, 'deep-cover' assignments in the United States on behalf of the Russian Federation." The purpose of this assignment, according to the FBI, is "to become sufficiently 'Americanized' such that they can gather information about the U.S. for Russia, and can successfully recruit sources who are in, or are able to infiltrate, United States policy-making circles."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)Wealthy Florida investor and Democratic Senate candidate Jeff Greene suggested last week that the Koran includes "crazy stuff" -- and his opponent is having a field day with it.
On Friday, Greene and his self-funded campaign was the subject of a Washington Post profile. Since then, Rep. Kendrick Meek, Greene's opponent in Florida's Democratic Senate primary, has hit Greene over and over with candid moments from the piece, subtly calling him both a religious bigot (Greene said the Koran includes "all kinds of this crazy stuff" within earshot of the Post reporter) and a misogynist (Greene called former good friend Heidi Fleiss "a businesswoman," too).
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)The State reports today that the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division -- a state agency with subpoena power -- is investigating Senate candidate Alvin Greene's finances.
Investigators will focus on how Greene, an unemployed veteran, came up with the $10,440 filing fee to run for the office. Greene won the Democratic nomination earlier this month without campaigning.
In fairness, Barack Obama never said he wanted to quit Blackwater. But it's still notable that the troubled firm made famous by helping to fight George W. Bush's wars has become a permanent part of the U.S. foreign policy tableau, with news of two big contracts issued to the firm by the Obama Administration in recent weeks.
CIA chief Leon Panetta, whose agency's $100 million contract with Blackwater for security in Afghanistan was recently revealed, explained on ABC Sunday (emphasis ours):
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)The Portland Police Bureau have released audio of the 2009 interview with a massage therapist who alleges Al Gore assaulted her at a Portland hotel in 2006.
We detailed the allegations and the woman's interview here.
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Disgraced politicians never die, they just fade away. Or get a show on CNN.
TPM has covered many a politician over the years who's been brought down by his own malfeasance, and recently some of them have re-entered the spotlight in one way or another. So where do infamous politicians go after their political careers have been ruined? Well, some go to trial, some go to prison, and apparently some enter the retail industry.
Here's a look at where some of TPM's favorite scandal-makers are now...
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