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The Daily Muck

State GOP Official Pushed Voter Fraud Issue
"For weeks, it was unclear who whined to the White House last year that not enough voter fraud cases were being prosecuted in Milwaukee. Sources tell No Quarter that Rick Wiley, then the executive director of the state GOP, directed a staffer in 2005 to prepare a 30-page report on election abuses in Wisconsin so Wiley could pass it along to a top White House official. 'The report was prepared for Karl Rove,' said a source with knowledge of the situation. 'Rick wanted it so he could give it to Karl Rove.'" (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

Scandal Puts Spotlight on Christian Law School
"Regent University School of Law, founded by televangelist Pat Robertson to provide "Christian leadership to change the world," has worked hard in its two-decade history to upgrade its reputation, fighting past years when a majority of its graduates couldn't pass the bar exam and leading up to recent victories over Ivy League teams in national law student competitions. But even in its darker days, Regent has had no better friend than the Bush administration. Graduates of the law school have been among the most influential of the more than 150 Regent University alumni hired to federal government positions since President Bush took office in 2001, according to a university website." (Boston Globe)

Attorney Inquiry Touches a Pillar of New Mexico
"The seat of federal justice in Albuquerque is named for Senator Pete V. Domenici, a former mayor and native son who has showered New Mexico with federal money during his decades in Washington and was rewarded by having his name adorn the United States courthouse. But a brief telephone call last year from Mr. Domenici to a federal prosecutor, David C. Iglesias, has become a central element of a Congressional inquiry into the dismissal of Mr. Iglesias and seven other United States attorneys." (NY Times)

Deputies to a US Attorney Step Down
"Rachel K. Paulose’s swearing in on March 9 as the United States attorney in Minneapolis stirred debate in local legal circles because of the ceremonial trappings. But the complaints about Ms. Paulose’s investiture seem mild in comparison with the uproar ignited on Thursday, when three of her top deputies stepped down from their leadership positions." (NY Times)

Gonzales Crams for a Senate Grilling
"Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has virtually wiped his public schedule clean to bone up for his long-awaited April 17 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee—a session widely seen as a crucial test as to whether he will survive the U.S. attorney mess. But even his own closest advisers are nervous about whether he is up to the task." (Newsweek)

White House Looked Past Alarms on Kerik
"When former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani urged President Bush to make Bernard B. Kerik the next secretary of homeland security, it did not take White House aides long to compile an extensive dossier of damaging information about the would-be Cabinet officer. Several White House aides tried to raise red flags. But the normal investigation process was short-circuited." (Washington Post)

Giuliani: More Trouble for Kerik
"Presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani recent apologies for nominating Bernard Kerik have not staunched the flow of embarrassing revelations. New questions have surfaced about why Kerik's nomination was withdrawn less than a week after it was announced. " (Newsweek)

Guantanamo Detainees Resume Hunger Strike
"Terrorism suspects at a maximum-security prison at the U.S. Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have resumed a mass hunger strike to protest the conditions of their confinement, detainees' lawyers said Sunday. The on-again, off-again action involving at least 20 prisoners over the last few months started after more than 170 of the 385 men currently detained at Guantanamo were moved to the newest and harshest facility, Camp 6." (LA Times)

Soldier Recounts Abuse at Walter Reed
"Two months before Mario Alberto Echeverri administered a sleep disorder test to an Army corporal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the medical technician had been arrested for fondling the groin of a U.S. Park Police officer. Seventeen months before, Echeverri had been observed touching a Walter Reed patient inappropriately and was warned against such behavior. Two years before, he had been accused of improperly touching a patient at a private sleep center in Gaithersburg." (Washington Post)

Army is Cracking Down on Deserters
"Army prosecutions of desertion and other unauthorized absences have risen sharply in the last four years, resulting in thousands more negative discharges and prison time for both junior soldiers and combat-tested veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Army records show. The increased prosecutions are meant to serve as a deterrent to a growing number of soldiers who are ambivalent about heading — or heading back — to Iraq and may be looking for a way out, several Army lawyers said in interviews." (NY Times)

Frosh Calls for Ethics Overhaul
"Seeking to fulfill their campaign promises, Rep. Baron Hill (D-Ind.) and several of his party’s most vulnerable freshmen quietly introduced a bill before the Easter recess to eliminate the ethics committee and replace it with an independent outside commission made up of former Members who are not lobbyists." (Roll Call)

Building Influence
"The Lewis Group of Companies in Southern California has built thousands of homes and dozens of shopping centers, office buildings and industrial parks from the San Gabriel Valley to the High Desert. But the Upland-based company has helped shape more than the region's physical landscape. The political presence of the Lewis Group in the Inland Empire is unmistakable. During the past six years, the company and its top executives have given nearly $2.3 million to political campaigns and causes ranging from city council races to the area's representatives in Congress." (San Bernadino Sun)

Kontogiannis an Enigmatic Figure in Cunningham Case
"An alleged co-conspirator in the sordid bribery tale of Randy Cunningham remains an enigmatic yet key figure in what federal officials have said is the single-largest case of congressional corruption in U.S. history. The alleged co-conspirator, New York businessman Thomas Kontogiannis, has so far escaped indictment despite being accused of having helped to steer more than $500,000 in illicit money to the former North County Republican congressman ---- who now resides in an Arizona prison." (North County Times)


Comments (5)

uncle vester wrote on April 9, 2007 10:16 AM:

and the band plays on...

code: salt- for their self-inflicted wounds?

commenter wrote on April 9, 2007 10:23 AM:

'Frosh'?

mbbsdphil wrote on April 9, 2007 10:45 AM:

Complaints about inadequate law enforcement would have gone directly to the US Attorney, his or her boss, the Attorney General, the President, even local members of Congress who could influence budgets or priorities. Where are the records of those e-mails and phone calls?

Only policital or campaign issues would have gone to Karl Rove. Odds seem high that among those many closed-door speeches given by Karl or his deputies, the political use of US Attorneys was promised. The governor of Milwaukee was complaining he wasn't getting his share of the loot.

mbbsdphil wrote on April 9, 2007 10:59 AM:

Ironically, the Milwaukee governor and Mr. Rove might have been playing by the rules: using gwb43.com to communicate about using USA's for politically-inspired "election fraud" cases against Democrats. It's just that other rule they were breaking, about corrupt influencing the election process.

A tad worse, I would say, than poll taxes, mailing notices that an election was on the wrong day, or parking state patrol cars along the route to the polling booths only in African American neighborhoods. This all seems, oh, so RICO.

Jake in Milwaukee wrote on April 9, 2007 12:31 PM:

In 2002, it was revealed that the pension plan for Milwaukee County employees was altered by the county board and the county executive's office in 1999. As a result, county employees (including the board and the county executive) were eligible for banked, unused sick leave, sometimes amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars in "backdrop" payments at retirement. A retirement spree ensued and it cost the county millions. A right-wing outfit, Citizens for Responsible Government, immediately began pushing for recalls of both the county executive and the county board. In the end, the Democratic-leaning County Executive resigned after CRG obtained more than enough signatures for a recall. He was replaced in a special election by Republican Scott Walker. Half the board was recalled after all was said and done. Since then, Walker has employed a decidedly right wing policy of underfunding, budget cuts and tax cuts in Milwaukee county government, leading to the deterioration of our court services, parks, public transportation system, and city beautification.

I'm not making the point that the pension scam should have gone unpunished; it was a significant scandal at the time which cost taxpayers here over $100 million. However, I felt then and feel now that CRG was too organized and too well-funded to have sprung up out of nowhere like they did. They employed a well-organized recall effort that effectively toppled a 20-year county government in less than six months.

The recalls in Milwaukee coincided with recalls across the country, including that of Gray Davis in California. I'm curious if the White House strategy of consolidating power also involved the use of recalls.

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