Saturday, June 16, 2007


DOJ's Elston resigns

Another senior DOJ official, Michael Elston, has resigned. According to a DOJ anonymous source, Elston has accepted a job at a Washington law firm and his last day at the scandal-laden DOJ is next Friday.

McClatchy Washington Bureau:

Michael Elston, chief of staff to Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty, became the fifth department official to leave his post since the controversy over the firings rocked the nation's top law enforcement agency....
... Elston's name first surfaced when one of the fired U.S. attorneys, Bud Cummins of Arkansas, disclosed in March that Elston had phoned him to suggest that senior department officials would retaliate against the prosecutors if they discussed their firings publicly.
In an e-mail written to five of the ousted U.S. attorneys minutes after the Elston call, Cummins said of the conversation: "I was tempted to challenge him and say something movie-like such as `are you threatening ME???'"
The department denied that Elston was trying to intimidate or silence the dismissed U.S. attorneys.
Elston's name also showed up on numerous e-mails in which department officials weighed which U.S. attorneys to fire. In one e-mail, he was informed about how the department would deal with the fallout from the firings.
In recent testimony, the former interim U.S. attorney in Kansas City, Bradley Schlozman, disclosed that he sought approval from Elston before bringing indictments for voter-registration fraud against four workers for a liberal-leaning group [ACORN] just days before the 2006 election. Department policy discourages such prosecutions on the eve of elections.
Elston's boss, McNulty, announced recently that he would leave his job at the end of the summer.
Paul Kiel itemizes some of Elston's "hit jobs" at the DOJ :
-- He allegedly called three of the fired U.S. attorneys [Charlton, McKay, and Cummins] and made an implicit threat that the Justice Department would detail the reasons for their firings if they didn't stay quiet.
-- He allegedly rejected a large number of applicants to Justice Department positions because they were Democrats.
-- When Carol Lam, the former U.S. attorney for San Diego, asked to stay on the job longer in order to deal with some outstanding prosecutions (the expanding Duke Cunningham case among them), Elston told her not to think about her cases, that she should be gone in "weeks, not months" and said "these instructions were 'coming from the very highest levels of the government.'"
-- He called around to the U.S. attorneys whom he had placed on one of the draft firing lists to apologize when he discovered that his list would be turned over to Congress.
Let me get this straight: Schlozman fingered Elston in getting approval for the ACORN indictments by going over Craig Donsanto's head. As Corpus Juris explained, "...everyone agrees the indictments flew in the face of Donsanto's own manual, DoJ rules and long standing tradition." And now Elston plans to leave the DOJ. Uh-huh.

The rats are deserting the sinking ship at the Bush Administration's DOJ. Now if only the WH firewall, er, I mean AG Gonzales would resign. But don't hold your breath.

POSTSCRIPT: Background on the ACORN indictments are here and here and here.

UPDATE: WaPo adds a few details and a statement from Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY):
"Alberto Gonzales appears to be the last man standing, but he should have been the first to go," Schumer said. "Almost every official involved in the U.S. attorney firings is gone, but that doesn't change the simple fact that the buck stops with the attorney general."
Indeed.




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Thursday, May 10, 2007


House Judiciary Committee To Hear Gonzales

At 9:30 AM Eastern, Alberto Gonzales will begin his testimony to the full House Judiciary Committee. You can pick up the live webcast here. We have an office pool (we are calling it the pinhead defense pool) on how many times the Attorney General's memory fails him.

My question to him would be some thing like this. "Mr. Attorney General, could we arrange for you to see a specialist about your very serious memory problems?"




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Wednesday, May 2, 2007


Second Amendment Foundation Says Gonzales Should Resign

I read this press release and just couldn't believe it. The Second Amendment Foundation, a gun advocacy group, is calling for the resignation of Alberto Gonzales. It seems the AG is supporting a senate bill called the “Denying Firearms and Explosives to Dangerous Terrorists Act of 2007." The press release says that the bill would give the Attorney General discretionary authority to deny the purchase of a firearm or the issuance of a firearm license or permit to American citizens suspected of having terrorist connections.

“This bill,” said SAF founder Alan Gottlieb, “raises serious concerns about how someone becomes a ‘suspected terrorist.’ Nobody has explained how one gets their name on such a list, and worse, nobody knows how to get one’s name off such a list.

“The process by which someone may appeal the Attorney General’s arbitrary denial seems weak at best,” Gottlieb suggested, “and there is a greater concern. When did we decide as a nation that it is a good idea to give a cabinet member the power to deny someone’s constitutional right simply on suspicion, without a trial or anything approaching due process?

“...S. 1237 is loaded with red flags. It would allow an appointed bureaucrat the authority to suspend or cancel someone’s Second Amendment right without even being charged with a crime.

Attorney General Gonzales has no business asking for that kind of power over any tenet in the Bill of Rights,” Gottlieb said. “He took an oath to uphold the Constitution, not trample it. Perhaps it is time for him to go.” Emphasis added
I haven't read the bill. I don't know the answers to Gottlieb's objections. If you read the quote, however, you will notice that he isn't just advocating 2nd Amendment rights. He is also making strong 4th Amendment arguments. It strikes me that some people on the right are beginning to catch on. This administration has launched an assault on the individual freedoms we used to take for granted.




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