TPMMuckraker
U.S. Attorneys: July 2009

U.S. Attorneys

U.S. Attorney Fired Under Bush To Get Old Job Back

What better way to demonstrate a change from the bad old days of the politicized Justice Department than to appoint as US attorney one of the people who was fired from that job as part of the Bushies' purge?

The White House has announced that Daniel Bogden, who in late 2006 was fired by the Bush administration as U.S. attorney for the district of Nevada, has been re-nominated for that position.

"I'm extremely honored that President Obama has nominated me," Bogden told TPMmuckraker in a brief phone interview. "I appreciate the opportunity and I'm looking forward to my return to public service. and I certainly appreciate Senate Majority Leader Reid's recommending me for the position."

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (14) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (14)
Topics: George Bush, Kyle Sampson, U.S. Attorneys

Karl Rove

Emails Show Rove's Role In U.S. Attorney Firings

Karl Rove did his second and final day of testimony before Congress about his role in the U.S. attorney firings today. And we're getting more confirmation that that role was more extensive than he's yet let on.

The Washington Post and New York Times have obtained emails that offer glimpses into Rove's role in the firing of certain of the U.S. attorneys. They jibe closely with many similar emails that were released last year as part of a Justice Department inspector general report which essentially found that the firings were engineered by Rove and other White House officials.

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (30) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (44)
Topics: DOJ Office Of The Inspector General, George Bush, Harriet Miers, Justice Department, Karl Rove, U.S. Attorneys

John Conyers

Rep. Conyers On U.S. Attorney Investigation: 'We Have To Keep The Process Working'

Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said today that he's still pushing to question Bush administration officials about the U.S. attorney firings.

"All the breadcrumbs, as we call them, go right to the White House," Conyers said in a speech to the National Press Club this afternoon.

"We have to keep the process working," he said.

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (11)
Topics: Eric Holder, Harriet Miers, John Conyers, Josh Bolten, U.S. Attorneys

Alberto Gonzales

Texas Tech Announces Gonzales Hire

Texas Tech has officially announced the hiring of Alberto Gonzales.

The press release, which says Gonzales will work as both a recruiter and teach a junior-level course on "contemporary issues in the executive branch," makes no mention of Gonzo's involvement in the U.S. attorneys scandal (among other things) or his subsequent resignation. Instead, it ends with, "...and later was appointed Attorney General."

Nice.

Specifically, Gonzales will be responsible for "recruiting and retaining first generation and underrepresented students," and will help plan a leadership training program for minority and first generation students at both Texas Tech and Angelo State University. In addition to his class, he'll also guest lecture for other courses.

"His own upbringing in Houston as part of a migrant family with eight children makes him qualified to tell underrepresented Texas students that college is possible," said Kent Hance, chancellor of Texas Tech. "He will help Texas Tech and ASU prepare our students for success and to be future leaders in the State of Texas and beyond."

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (26) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)
Topics: Alberto Gonzales, U.S. Attorneys

Harriet Miers

Rove Testifies, But Next Steps In Probe Remain Murky

The news that Karl Rove has finally testified before lawyers for the House Judiciary committee about his role in the US Attorney firings and the prosecution of Don Siegelman represents, in one sense, the culmination of years-long battle. That fight has pitted Congress, determined to get to the bottom of the firings, against the Bush White House, which has dragged its feet at virtually every stage. And yet, the path from here to a full public accounting of what happened remains unclear at best.

Rove's deposition put a cap on a protracted legal standoff between the committee, chaired by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) and the Bush White House. Conyers, investigating the late 2006 firing of nine US Attorneys, had first subpoenaed Rove in 2007. Citing executive privilege, the White House refused to let Rove testify. That eventually prompted Congress to hold Rove in contempt, and ultimately to file a lawsuit seeking to compel Rove to testify. A district court ruled in Congress's favor last year, but the White House appealed that ruling, and Rove continued to be a no-show at several committee hearings to which he had been called to testify. Eventually, in March, lawyers for President Bush reached an agreement with the committee, securing Rove's and Harriet Miers' testimony. Even since then, though, it's taken over four months to arrange for Rove's sit-down. (Miers had hers last month.)

Read more »

PERMALINK | COMMENTS (8) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)
Topics: Don Siegelman, Harriet Miers, House Judiciary, John Conyers, Justice Department, Karl Rove, U.S. Attorneys

Featured at TPMMuckraker

Masthead

Recommended Reader Posts

Follow us!

Most Popular

TPM Stories Now Surging on