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The Daily Muck

Critics Doubt Official Looking Into Rove
"Even as Special Counsel Scott J. Bloch moved forward with plans for a sweeping probe of the Bush administration, several advocacy groups complained that his ties to the administration and to conservative groups, as well as his record on gay rights and whistle-blowers, made him the wrong man for the job. 'There is a serious question as to whether Bloch will just provide cover for an administration that is covering for him,' said Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a Democratic-leaning group." (LA Times)

Gonzales Watch: AG to Meet with Angry Senator
"Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has set up a meeting with Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, who has accused Gonzales of lying to him about plans to replace a U.S. attorney in his state. Pryor's communications director, Michael Teague, told U.S. News that Gonzales's office called Pryor late Monday and scheduled a meeting for Wednesday morning." (US News)

More GOP Senators Critical of Gonzales
"Despite vocal backing from President Bush, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales faced new doubts yesterday within his own party about whether he should stay on the job amid strong criticism about his handling of the dismissal of eight U.S. attorneys. Several Senate Republicans spoke out against Gonzales for the first time, voicing deep concerns about his performance before the Judiciary Committee last week." (Washington Post)

The Pentagon's Chronic Neglect of Iraq Vets
"When the Walter Reed scandal exploded in the media in February, bringing wide attention to inadequate care for veterans at the Army's flagship hospital, Defense Department officials expressed shock and claimed ignorance. But Salon has learned that the Defense Department had been conducting monthly focus group discussions with soldiers treated at Walter Reed since before the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq had even begun, and that it continued to do so as wounded veterans of those conflicts arrived at the facility." (Salon)

Pentagon to End Talon Data-Grabbing Program
"Less than two weeks after being sworn in as undersecretary of defense for intelligence, James R. Clapper Jr. is moving to end the controversial Talon electronic data program, which collected and circulated unverified reports about people and organizations that allegedly threaten Defense Department facilities. Clapper, a former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, 'has assessed the results of the Talon program and does not believe they merit continuing the program as currently constituted, particularly in light of its image in Congress and the media,' according to a statement released in his name yesterday by a Pentagon spokesman." (Washington Post)

Cost Hidden for Feeney Trip
"Lobbyist Jack Abramoff treated Rep. Tom Feeney and others to a Scotland trip in 2003 that began with a trans-Atlantic flight on a private jet and featured twice-daily golf at world-famous locales. New court documents released Tuesday show Abramoff's expenses for the luxury trip averaged about $20,000 per person for each of the eight people who went, not the $5,000 Feeney estimated in the travel report he filed in Congress." (St. Petersburg Times)

Ex-House Aide Snared in Abramoff Probe
"A former congressional aide pleaded guilty Tuesday to accepting tens of thousands of dollars in gifts from lobbyist Jack Abramoff in an influence-peddling scandal that has touched the White House, Interior Department and congressional Republicans. Mark Zachares was the 11th person to be convicted in the Justice Department probe. Zachares admitted engaging in official acts on Abramoff's behalf while working for Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, who chaired the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee." (Houston Chronicle)

Davis Defends Rice, Parts Ways with Waxman
"The ranking member of the House Government Reform Committee said he could not support the decision of the panel’s chairman to subpoena the secretary of state, marking the first time this year that he has broken with the committee’s top Democrat on a significant committee issue. 'Subpoenaing Secretary [Condoleezza] Rice to discuss the Iraq-uranium issue is duplicative of multiple investigations that have already been concluded,' said Rep. Tom Davis (R-VA)." (The Hill)

Tillman's Brother Lashes Out
"The brother of Army Ranger Pat Tillman accused the Pentagon and the Bush administration Tuesday of deliberately concealing the circumstances of the former football star's friendly fire death in Afghanistan in an attempt to avoid embarrassment. Speaking publicly for the first time since his brother was killed in Afghanistan three years ago, Kevin Tillman at a congressional hearing accused Army and administration officials of exploiting his brother's death to shift attention away from the detainee abuses at the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, which at the time was about to become a public relations nightmare for the military." (LA Times)

US Charges Canadian Detainee With Murder
"The Pentagon on Tuesday formally charged a Canadian citizen being held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, with murder for allegedly killing a U.S. Army medic during fighting in Afghanistan. The charge sets the stage for his trial by a military commission. Omar Khadr, now 20, was just 15 on July 27, 2002, when he allegedly threw a grenade at U.S. soldiers who'd attacked a suspected al-Qaida compound near Khost, Afghanistan." (McClatchy Newspapers)

State Seeks Limit on "RoboCalls" in Campaign
"State investigators here are still trying to figure out who sabotaged Scott Kleeb’s campaign for Congress last November with a barrage of automated telephone calls to voters. The unauthorized calls, officials said, distorted Mr. Kleeb’s views and even used a recording of his voice — sometimes arriving in the middle of the night — with the greeting: 'Hi, this is Scott Kleeb!'" (NY Times)


Comments (12)

Richard L. Adlof wrote on April 25, 2007 9:50 AM:

So the L.A. Times is declaring morality and ethics 'ideals associated with the Democratic Party . . . What next? Is 'family values' going to the party's next tag-line just because Democratic Party members don't divorce their wives on their sick beds to marry the office trollop or stalk then fondle barmaids in parking structures?

Anonymous wrote on April 25, 2007 10:05 AM:

Please stay on top of this story. Block is a Loyal Bushie of the first order, with a long and decorated career as a footsoldier in the wingnut army. It's painfully obvious that this is a whitewash designed to preempt Congress' ability to undertake any meaningful investigation of Rove's malfeasance.

YouFascinateMe wrote on April 25, 2007 10:16 AM:

"The appearance of law must be upheld,
especially while it's being broken."

Boss Tweed, Gangs of New York

Richard L. Adlof wrote on April 25, 2007 10:20 AM:

If Gonzales' meeting with Pryor goes as well as as his testimony, we can expect the Torture Czar's head displayed up on a pike outside the Senate offices . . . Unless the fruits from a little warrantless wire-tapping provides Pryor a reason to reconsider.

Oh to be an insect-shaped electronic monitoring device on the wall for this meeting . . .

Richard L. Adlof wrote on April 25, 2007 10:23 AM:

Inquiry: What has Rice and friends have on Davis?

bordersmuggler wrote on April 25, 2007 10:51 AM:

"The agency... will focus on... whether the White House improperly used Republican National Committee e-mail accounts for official business.

Many of those e-mails are now missing, and Bloch has said his agency will probably join the effort to find them."

Find them, so that they never see the light of day.

Helen Rainier wrote on April 25, 2007 11:28 AM:

This is another one of those "I don't believe it" situations -- particularly in light of the fact that Bloch himself is currently under investigation. So, if I have this straight, a guy who is under investigation is going to investigate someone else who has had to testify under oath.

PJ White wrote on April 25, 2007 11:29 AM:

Bloch is just another fox guarding the hen house. The Bush Cabal has already shown us 6 long years of it monitoring itself. Bloch will just give them a clean bill of health. Hire a special prosecutor.

SC: boat as in put them all on a slow boat to China.

SLOUCH wrote on April 25, 2007 12:11 PM:

Like the majority of the TPM audience, after six years of this horsesh*t I really thought they could no longer surprise me, but that Murder Charge story is possibly the most outrageous thing I've ever read in my life. It's really hard to believe, but I'm pretty certain that I've never been more embarrassed of my country's government than I am at this moment.

If I hadn't already, I'd turn in my stripes and go AWOL today, and anyone who called me a traitor or a coward would lose their @#!&*@# head.

Bob Mournighan wrote on April 25, 2007 12:13 PM:

Rove and the AG may wind up being "Teflon dons" the way this is playing out.
BUT, who put the squash on Patrick Fitzgerald to not proceed with anymore indictments in his District?? Obstruction of Justice comes to mind, among others.
"Evangelist" Pat Robertson is pulling strings with his cadre of robots from Regent "University",
another carpet to look under.
SC: meat

jzap wrote on April 25, 2007 2:09 PM:


From the NYT:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/25/washington/25bloch.html?pagewanted=print

But the head of the Office of
Special Counsel, Scott J. Bloch, is
himself under investigation by the
inspector general of the Office of
Personnel Management over
accusations of politicizing his
agency. . . .

A group of employees who work for
Mr. Bloch has filed a complaint
saying he tried to dismantle the
agency, illegally barred employees
from talking to the news media and
reduced a backlog of whistle-blower
complaints by simply discarding old
cases.

nrglaw wrote on April 27, 2007 2:52 PM:

"There is a serious question as to whether Bloch will just provide cover for an administration that is covering for him,' said Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a Democratic-leaning group." (LA Times)

Why is Sloan being so circumspect about this? There is no 'serious' doubt. Seems to me there is no doubt at all and the whole business (as skillions of posters have already said) is an obvious whitewash, aside from allowing Dana Perino to say that she "won't comment on an ongoing investigation.

Perino gets my weekly chubris (chutzpah + hubris) award.

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