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The Daily Muck
Former CIA Official Pleads Not Guilty
"A former top CIA official pleaded not guilty Monday to new charges that he pushed a proposed government contract worth at least $100 million for his best friend in return for lavish vacations, private jet flights and a lucrative job offer. The indictment, returned last week, replaced charges brought in February against Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, who resigned from the spy agency a year ago, and defense contractor Brent Wilkes. Foggo and Wilkes now face 30 wide-ranging counts of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering. Each faces more than 20 years in prison if convicted, prosecutors said." (Associated Press)
Wilkes Looks to Public Opinion
"Most criminal defense attorneys insist that clients steer clear of the news media and keep their mouths shut to avoid statements that could come back to haunt them in court. Not Mark Geragos. The day his client, former Poway defense contractor Brent Wilkes, pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from the Randy “Duke” Cunningham congressional bribery scandal, Geragos' office released an emotional statement by Wilkes declaring innocence and predicting vindication. Wilkes lambasted prosecutors for political motivations and media leaks. He lamented the impact of the sensational allegations on his children. Essentially, he went from a name in the news to a real person with feelings." (San Diego Union-Tribune)
Lawmaker to Challenge FBI Raids
"Rep. William Jefferson says the FBI crossed the line when it raided his congressional office and wants a federal appeals court to order the return of documents. Jefferson, D-La., says the raid last year was unconstitutional because it trampled on congressional independence. His lawyers are scheduled to argue that point Tuesday before a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit." (Associated Press)
Giuliani Firm Lobbied for Clients
"Energy companies, FBI agents, a media tycoon and even a candlemaker: Rudy Giuliani's firm has lobbied for them all and dozens more in Washington, opening the door to a wide range of potential conflicts of interest should he become president. If Giuliani were elected, his administration would be on the receiving end of regulatory requests, contract bids and policy proposals by the same clients of his Houston firm, Bracewell & Giuliani, that have contributed toward his personal net worth of millions of dollars." (Associated Press)
Support Erodes for Doolittle
"Political support for Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.) is beginning to erode, with Republicans in his district predicting he will face a credible primary challenger next year if his legal woes continue and he does not abandon his vow to run for re-election. Originally silent or supportive following an FBI raid of Doolittle’s Virginia home last month, a growing number of Republican activists in the Sacramento-area 4th district have decided they can no longer support the Congressman and are beginning to explore backing other candidates." (Roll Call)
US Divulges New Details on Released Gitmo Inmates
"The Pentagon on Monday released the names of six former Guantanamo detainees who U.S. officials say re-emerged as Islamist fighters in Afghanistan after their release from the U.S. military prision in Cuba. The Defense Department said three of those released from the prison for suspected militants resurfaced as senior Islamist fighters in Afghanistan while a fourth was later identified as having been a Taliban deputy defense minister." (Reuters)
Padilla Trial is Shaded by Spectre of Al Qaeda
"In opening arguments Monday in the terrorism conspiracy trial of Jose Padilla and two codefendants, a federal prosecutor mentioned Al Qaeda 91 times in little more than an hour in what defense attorneys cast as a scare tactic to link their clients to extremist Islam. 'We will prove that Jose Padilla became an Al Qaeda trainee who provided the ultimate support — himself,' Assistant U.S. Atty. Brian Frazier said in his opening statement. He said the defendants were 'members of a secret organization, a terrorism support cell, based right here in South Florida.' Defense lawyers countered that the government's equation of this case with murderous attacks waged by Al Qaeda was a deliberate misrepresentation inspired by the absence of any evidence against Padilla, Adham Amin Hassoun or Kifah Wael Jayyousi." (LA Times)
Guantanamo Detainees's Suit Challenges Fairness of Military's Repeat Hearings
"The military system of determining whether detainees are properly held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, includes an unusual practice: If Pentagon officials disagree with the result of a hearing, they order a second one, or even a third, until they approve of the finding. These "do-overs," as some critics call them, are among the most controversial parts of the military’s system of determining whether detainees are enemy combatants, and the fairness of the repeat hearings is at the center of a pivotal federal appeals court case." (NY Times)
Marine Refused Staff's Advice On Iraq Deaths
"A Marine Corps officer testified Monday that a commander in Iraq rejected recommendations from two subordinates that he investigate accusations that marines in his battalion deliberately killed a group of civilians in Haditha in late 2005. Maj. Samuel H. Carrasco, the operations officer for the Third Battalion, First Marines at the time, testified in a military hearing here that the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Jeffrey R. Chessani, forcefully dismissed advice from staff officers to look into whether marines he supervised had killed the civilians in violation of the laws of war." (NY Times)
A Casualty of War: MySpace
"The Defense Department began blocking access on its computers to YouTube, MySpace and 11 other Web sites yesterday, severing some of the most popular ties linking U.S. troops in combat areas to their far-flung relatives and friends, and depriving soldiers of a favorite diversion from the boredom of overseas duty. The banned Web sites include some of the Internet's most popular destinations for social networking and sharing photographs, videos and audio recordings. Soldiers and their families frequent the sites to exchange notes, swap pictures and share recorded messages -- a form of digital communication that, along with e-mail, has largely replaced the much-anticipated mail call of previous wars." (Washington Post)
New Detainees Strain Iraq's Jails
"The capture of thousands of new suspects under the three-month-old Baghdad security plan has overwhelmed the Iraqi government's detention system, forcing hundreds of people into overcrowded facilities, according to Iraqi and Western officials. Nearly 20,000 people were in Iraqi-run prisons, detention camps, police stations and other holding cells as of the end of March, according to a U.N. report issued last month, an increase of more than 3,500 from the end of January. The U.S. military said late last week that it was holding about 19,500 detainees, up more than 3,000 since the U.S. and Iraqi governments began implementing the security plan in mid-February." (Washington Post)
DHS report: Shirlington Limo Should Not Have Gotten Contract
"A Washington transportation company that was questioned in the Randy “Duke” Cunningham investigation should not have been awarded its contract with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the department’s internal watchdog said. In a report obtained by The Hill, the department’s inspector general says Shirlington Limousine and Transportation Inc. was not qualified to receive the contract and instead was given an unfair advantage over its competitors by DHS officials. DHS’s procurement office, the report says, 'awarded the contract to a non-responsible contractor.'" (The Hill)

Comments (10)
Anonymous wrote on May 15, 2007 10:04 AM:Do a quick search on Flickr and see the huge number of pictures that come back from soldiers, foreign service officers and mercenary/contractors.
OIF (Operation Iraqi Freedom) yields many.
Mrs Panstreppon wrote on May 15, 2007 10:11 AM:If Brent Wilkes was stiffing charities to funnel money he raised to the Dukester, public opinion won't be so favorable.
I wrote about the Wilkes Foundation and the San Diego Tribute to Heroes Gala in the TPM Cafe (link below) and had lots of questions.
bobh wrote on May 15, 2007 10:43 AM:Is there a way we could get their internet usage records...phone records...legally?
Richard L. Adlof wrote on May 15, 2007 10:58 AM:Foggo grouses that what he did can't be wrong . . . The Congress folk woulda told him if it were . . . The Duke-tir is totally a stand up guy.
paul wrote on May 15, 2007 11:17 AM:Those two Guantanamo stories together form a really scathing package. In one, it appears that the military tries suspected combatants again and again (in stacked "hearings") until the presiding officers find the result their superiors want. In the other, the pentagon reports that close to 10% of the people who have -- unlikely as it may seem -- been exonerated by these kangaroo courts turned out to be terrorists after all, and returned to the armed struggle against US interests after their release. (Well, to be fair, the pentagon only claims proof that some of those people opposed the US by force of arms before spending their time as guests of His Incompetency's Government.)
Usually errors of omission or commission are bad enough by themselves. But the management of Guantanamo has managed to combine them both with a vengeance.
Mrs Panstreppon wrote on May 15, 2007 11:28 AM:bobh@May 15, 2007 10:43 AM
Whose phone records do you want to get?
Last year sometime, John Aravois of Americablog and Wesley Clark teamed up to demand that the sale of cell phone records be made illegal. Not me.
I think we should get up a fund to buy the cell phone records of all of the crooks in Washington DC on a monthly bases just so we have fighting chance to figure out what the corrupt bastards were up to.
The crooks in Washington DC would spy on me if they wanted to, law or no law.
Mrs Panstreppon wrote on May 15, 2007 11:34 AM:Hey! Why am I the only one in the United States writing about Curt Weldon lobbying the WH on behalf of the Bangladesh military (link below)?
Weldon supposedly represented the "Global Alliance for Homeland Security" when he visited Dhaka in March. The only Global Alliance for Homeland Security I found registered anywhere listed an apartment in Woddside Queens, NYC as its address.
Isn't this the same sort of shady foreign undertaking that got Weldon put under investigation?
Speaking of the Weldon investigation, will the grand jury return an indictment of Weldon during our lifetime?
Mrs Panstreppon wrote on May 15, 2007 11:35 AM:Hey! Why am I the only one in the United States writing about Curt Weldon lobbying the WH on behalf of the Bangladesh military (link below)?
Weldon supposedly represented the "Global Alliance for Homeland Security" when he visited Dhaka in March. The only Global Alliance for Homeland Security I found registered anywhere listed an apartment in Woddside Queens, NYC as its address.
Isn't this the same sort of shady foreign undertaking that got Weldon put under investigation?
Speaking of the Weldon investigation, will the grand jury return an indictment of Weldon during our lifetime?
SLOUCH wrote on May 15, 2007 12:05 PM:paul (the one in the comments above, not Paul Kiel)
One big question of the Gitmo stories is whether the "resurfaced" insurgents were truly bad guys BEFORE internment, or if five years in the new Bay of Pigs turned them bad.
secret code: nation, as in nothing embarasses me more about MY nation than Gitmo does.
parrot wrote on May 15, 2007 1:55 PM:Yes, one does wonder what madman would think that locking one up without trial for five years would breed a respect for the United States. Must be the shock and awe theory of politcal bullying at work. I mean, these guys, the guys doing the bullying, maybe they'd be cowed by being tortured and abused for five years. No doubt it is shocking to them when that fails to work on someone else...