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Why Republicans Should Be Scared of Don Siegelman

Posted by Steven Reynolds, The All Spin Zone at 9:31 AM on March 28, 2008.


He can prove that the GOP prosecuted with little basis in fact, and that the prosecution was politically motivated.
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Siegelman

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Donald Siegelman has been freed from jail. As many know, Siegelman was Governor of Alabama and was prosecuted for giving a position on a Board in the state to a major contributor, Richard Scrushy. I suppose if we were doing a tit for tat thing, that would mean every major contributor President Bush appointed to Ambassadorships is up for investigation, but that’s not how the US DOJ was working under President Bush and Alberto Gonzales. Nope, they prosecuted only Democrats for that sort of thing, even when Senior preosecutors in their office counseled otherwise. Scott Horton in Harpers, over a year ago, noted, basically, that miscarriage of justice should be seen as obstruction of justice on the part of the Bush appointed US Attorneys.

A couple of interesting things here. First, Siegelman would not be released unless there were a strong possiblity his appeal would go through. From the Birmingham News:

The judges wrote that Siegelman met both requirements for an appeal bond: He is not a flight risk and his appeal raises a substantial question of law or fact likely to result in reversal or an order for a new trial.

“After thorough review of this complex and protracted record, we conclude Siegelman has satisfied the criteria set out in the statute, and has specifically met his burden of showing that his appeal raises substantial questions of law or fact,” the judges wrote.

It’s going to be overturned, and we should have an investigation, a real one, into the role of the Bush Administration, Karl Rove in particular, in the prosecution here. I’m guessing the motive behind this selective prosecution was that the GOP felt threatened in their electoral bastion, the deep south. Be that as it may, the GOP claims they had not political role here, that Siegelman was prosecuted on the merits. Then why the heck do they have to act as if this is so godalmighty important to them, to the extent that they’re protesting the judge’s order? They’re protesting a whole whale of a lot for folks who claim they had no interest in the case. From WSFA in Alabama:

The Alabama Republican Party is disappointed in today’s ruling by the 11th Circuit Court and their decision to release former Governor Don Siegelman pending his appeal of the 6 counts of bribery and the 1 count of obstruction for which he was convicted.
Representative Mike Hubbard (R-Auburn), Chairman of the Alabama Republican Party stated “the former Governor’s release pending appeal does not change the conviction by a jury of his peers. It would be premature to turn this development into anything other than a formality.”

Hey, the smart move here, in a case where the GOP claims no political involvement, is to make no comment period. Nobody claimed the GOP in Alabama is smart. Notice, Mr. Hubbard, Karl Rove is sitting there with his mouth zipped, hoping to hell that no emails surface that show his involvement. You should do the same, Mr. Hubbard.

Digg!

Tagged as: democrats, republicans, rove, corruption, alabama, siegelman

Steven Reynolds is a regular blogger for the All Spin Zone


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Dirty Tricks
Posted by: QQOblivion on Mar 28, 2008 10:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And don't forget the attempted murder against a whistleblower in this case, her car being run off the road and her house being mysteriously set on fire.

Then there is the TV blackout, during the airing of this story on 60 Minutes, at a major Alabama television station.

I'm sure there is more.
There always is when Karl Rove is involved.

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Seigleman's conviction should be overturned
Posted by: Quannah on Mar 28, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and Rove and the other Republic operatives who conspired (a crime, no?) to put him in prison should replace him there.

And some mistakenly think we don't have political prisoners in this country!

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can't wait
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Mar 28, 2008 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so many people are outraged by this, democrat and republican alike, I can't wait to se the shit hit the fan,and get all over bush and rove.

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» RE: can't wait Posted by: Sissy
A REAL Investigation?
Posted by: Sissy on Mar 28, 2008 12:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A real investigation by DOJ under this administration ain't gonna happen under the Texas Turd's watch folks. We're going to have to wait for real justice until these birds are out of our hair. Judge Mucasey is a dyed-in-the-wool minion of the present leadership and he has already shut down investigations into any republcian that might be in a little trouble. Case in point: Cong. Jerry Lewis who should be in prison right now for corruption but who has gotten a free pass thanks to the thugs running this country.

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» RE: A REAL Investigation? Posted by: Quannah
a good 3rd step
Posted by: comradebob on Mar 28, 2008 1:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After Gov. Siegelman is released today pending appeal, and after he testifies before the Judiciary Committee in May, it seems to me (depending on the facts which emerge) that the next most promising step might be starting impeachment inquiries in the House as to the Hon. Mark Fuller, US District Judge, who presided over Siegelman's "trial". I doubt it would take much pressure in that direction to start the incriminating witnesses singing, unless Judge Fuller is made of sterner stuff than most of W's political appointees... and once the singing begins in earnest, then we might finally see one K. Rove pinned like a specimen in a butterfly collection.

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Karl Rove's Pitchfork
Posted by: eskit on Mar 29, 2008 1:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm always glad to see Karl Rove in trouble. He's a real snake. Or buzzard, depending on your point of view. And speaking of Karl Rove, somebody added some animation to one of my songs and put it on youtube.com. Search for "Karl Rove's Pitchfork".

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» RE: Karl Rove's Pitchfork Posted by: Sissy
After the 60 Minutes blackout in
Posted by: cisc on Mar 29, 2008 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alabama did anyone see major MSM coverage other than Dan Abrams on Verdict? I would hate to see a prosecution begin just so w could pardon rove on his way out-but for Heavens sake when is enough? He should have gone to prison on Valerie Plame, he should have gone to prison on the erasure of the Whitehouse e-mails, he should have gone to prison right along side Gonzo in the initial DOJ US attorney firings. Siegelman has languished in jail while this kangaroo court conviction has totally eluded the MSM. The defense of EVERY criminal facing imprisonment in this country should be "well it was nothing compared to karl rove".

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Don't forget the hit on Eliot Spitzer
Posted by: Jim Swanson on Mar 29, 2008 7:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's not forget that Bush et al did the same thing to a sitting Democratic governor who was calling for investigation of major financial oversight problems. They targeted Governor Spitzer and didn't even have to go through the trial process to get rid of this threat to their mismanagement of our economy.
Shame, shame, shame on all the Democrats and Liberals who allowed this to happen simply because it involved SEX--one of the dirtiest words in the US. We want to believe that we are not human beings with sexual needs and desires.
Spitzer's only "crime" was to challenge the Republican mismanagement and financial wrongdoings.

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» RE: spitzer's real mistake Posted by: batteredup
Seriously? This about giving a job
Posted by: Ambercat on Mar 29, 2008 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to a campaign donor??? Why did I think it was about a set-up bribery charge? If this is the case they might as well roll the paddywagon up to every statehouse in America, to say nothing of every mayor's office and yes, the White House. In what world doesn't this happen? Does anyone think Tom Noe of Ohio Coingate fame got appointed to the state's university board of trustees because he was so qualifed (even our local paper, the Cleveland Plainly Republican, noted it was an unusual appointment for a guy without a college education)? No, everyone knew it was because he was one of the biggest Republican donors in the state. He's in prison now but not because of that; he's in prison because he was given more than $50 million of state workers' comp money to "invest" and chose rare coins, Beanie babies and George Bush collectible wall clocks as his "investments."

Seriously, I don't know of a city, state, country or federal office where someone isn't getting a job for someone who had done favours for someone. Hey, I grew up in Chicago! I know how it works.What was that line again? (pobably from Mike Royko): "We don't see nobody nobody sent."

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got my fingers crossed
Posted by: Grandma Crabby on Mar 29, 2008 10:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am very hopeful that this case will blow wide open. This has the potential to be HUGE! Of course, without coverage from the MSM it will blow over and God knows this is not as exciting as a black pastor saying 3 words.

The Bush administration's attempt to turn the US into a Stalin-like repressed state is epitomized by this case. This is one of the single WORST things they've done...to imprison a political rival on trumped up charges. We'll all end up in the gulag if someone as powerful as the governor of Alabama can end up in the clink just because Karl Rove ordered it done.

PLEASE, let this case explode. Dan Abrams on MSNBC seems to be the only one covering it. which is example number 10 billion on why the MSM SUCKS! This story makes Watergate pale in comparison. Oops, American Idol is on...gotta go!

VideoProductionTips = Learn Internet Video

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» RE: got my fingers crossed Posted by: willymack
» RE: got my fingers crossed Posted by: Quannah
Not Smart?
Posted by: Polenium on Apr 1, 2008 10:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The GOP are not clever, they are aggressive.
In the case of the "oh so dainty and oh so cowardly" Democrats, they win every time.
If the Democrats won't investigate Bush and Cheney for war crimes and multiply felonies, it's highly unlikely they will go to bat for Seligman.
Remember Iran Contra? After winning the White House, Clinton decided against having a real investigation because he didn't want to make the GOP angry. Now every living member of that conspiracy has full employment in the Bush White House.
Political partisanship is the greatest enemy of democracy and justice.

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