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Was Spitzer's Scandal a Justice Department Sting All Along?

Posted by Lindsay Beyerstein, Majikthise at 7:25 AM on March 18, 2008.


Spitzer needed to go, but it wasn't the federal government's place to force him out.
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Am I the only one who is appalled that the Justice Department forced Eliot Spitzer out of office?

Sources: Lawyers for Spitzer negotiate possible plea deal

5:32 PM EDT, March 11, 2008

Lawyers for Gov. Eliot Spitzer are negotiating a possible plea deal with federal prosectuors stemming from his alleged involvement with a prostitution ring, sources said.

Several sources said that the one serious bargaining chip that Spitzer has to possibly avoid being charged with a serious felony, such as money laundering or avoiding federal currency rules, is to work out a deal in which he would give up the governorship. In return, prosecutors would assure him that he only would have to plead at most to a misdemeanor or even less and be in effect guaranteed that he would not have to go to prison. [Newsday]

If the foregoing is true, you could describe the same scenario another way: Federal law enforcement approached the sitting governor of New York and threatened to charge him with felonies unless he resigned his office.

The spin is that Spitzer used his office as a bargaining chip, but it takes two parties to negotiate. It doesn't matter who made the opening bid. If it's true that the feds offered anything in exchange for Spitzer's resignation, we have proof that this was a political sting all along.

For whatever reason, Spitzer's prompt resignation was very important to the feds. It was so important to them that they may have been willing to give up on some rather serious charges to get Spitzer out of power. If the DOJ was dispassionately pursuing justice, wouldn't it have cared more about the alleged felonies than about whether a damaged governor stayed in office?

How could the Justice Department to enter into such negotiations? Resignation is a political decision, not a matter of criminal justice.

I'm glad Spitzer resigned. His behavior was reckless and selfish and self-indulgent and hypocritical. He betrayed the people, his party, and his family. He made himself the object of ridicule. Spitzer's hold on power was contingent upon his squeaky clean image. When he lost that reputation, it was all over. (By contrast, if Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno got caught with a hooker, I wouldn't demand his resignation. Bruno's constituents didn't elect him as a righteous instrument of justice.)

Spitzer needed to go, but it wasn't the federal government's place to force him out.

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Tagged as: prostitution, justice department, new york, spitzer

Lindsay Beyerstein a New York writer blogging at Majikthise.


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View:
Spitzer was
Posted by: charemor1 on Mar 18, 2008 7:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Spitzer was also a victim of the Bush administration's ability to spy on American citizens and to use that information to remove those who disagree with them.

Will you be next? Will I? Only Dubya knows.

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» RE: Spitzer was Posted by: EncinoM
We gave Bush the power...
Posted by: motamanx on Mar 18, 2008 7:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and he used it just as we suspected he would.

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Why THAT would MEAN
Posted by: JSquercia on Mar 18, 2008 8:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why THAT would MEAN the Justice Department is being used for Political Purposes and to spy on political opponents . There was a time when a group of Republican Senators found this to be so repugnent that the went to the President and asked him to resign . No more my friends today's Republican's think only of the Party and the next election . They give scant rift to the Constitution and even denigrate the role of the very Congess in which they serve in obedience to the code of Party Above All .
I forget what show I saw it on but a former Reagan Administration official said this all came about thanks to Newt Gingrich . I believe it has been aided and abetted by the end of the fairness doctrine and the rise of Right Wing Talk Radio which constantly inflames the passions of their listeners while feeding them False Information aka LIES .That is why so many STILL believe Saddam HAD WMD's and cooperated with Al queda and was involved in 911 .

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» This could all be useful Posted by: hurricane hugo
It was a Plea Baragin
Posted by: EncinoM on Mar 18, 2008 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It happens all the time, people in power with much to lose are offered a chance to avoid the mebrassment of a trial if they give up some power.

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» RE: It was a Plea Baragin Posted by: beatles64
Targeted political hatchet job?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 18, 2008 9:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's another prostitution case, involving the Republican judge who presided over another political hatchet job, the targeting of Qwest CEO Nacchio over his refusal to cooperate with the NSA illegal spying plan prior to 9/11:

Another One: Top Federal Judge Linked to Prostitution Ring, ABC, Mar 14

Let's see if this judge, a Republican appointed by Bush Sr., also goes the way of Spitzer. Sex scandals and politics - it's the norm in the U.S.

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Equal Justice Under the Law
Posted by: tomad51 on Mar 18, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am aware that at least two Congressmen were involved in similar sex scandals and yet they continue in office. And, a Senator who was also caught in a sex scandal who continues in office. Would that the DOJ exercised the law equally. These three individuals are Republican. If justice isn't equal, then what is it?

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» RE: qual Justice Under the Law Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: qual Justice Under the Law Posted by: davesilvan
Phil E. Drifter
Posted by: davesilvan on Mar 19, 2008 4:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, if this were cut n' dry and he were paying hookers (which are against the law) then I say nail his balls to the wall.

But it's not about hookers, it's about 'high priced call girls' which, as far as I know, are legal because they don't promise any 'services' other than accompaniment to events and functions.

What they did together, we may never know, but since he crumbled it's a good bet he's guilty of something, and if i were a resident of NY, i'd want him removed from office.

Anything you do while in public office while attempting to keep the public unaware of it is pretty questionable. If he were doing nothing wrong, the public should have known about it as it happened. But that's now how the Fed works, they wait until they have plenty of evidence to unseat you, then present it at the worst possible time, but it's not to say they're wrong. But think of what kind of government we'd have if the GOP weren't blackmailing everyone.

They used Noriega, then put him in prison for life.

They used Osama bin Laden in the middle east in the 80s, then blamed him for 9/11; he's now missing, I think he's dead.

They used Saddam to further unrest in the middle east (they sold him chem/bio warfare agents), then they invaded his country and had him executed for gassing 153 people in 1983. (What about the thousands of murders that have occurred since the US invaded, both US lives and Iraqi?)

Deep inside though I wonder if we should hold Bush accountable for this 'illegal' war because, bottom line is he's crippling people who still believe in the invisible sky fairy. And we don't need any more of them around. Stupid religion. (i mean all of them, not just Islamic.)

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