Mar 25 2007
I Didn’t Care Before; I Do Now
The firing of the federal prosecutors that happened recently meant nothing to me.
That is, until I read this article this morning. In particular, I found this part interesting:
Last week, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said he was not involved in any discussions about the impending dismissals of U.S. attorneys.
On Friday night, however, the Justice Department revealed Gonzales’ participation in a Nov. 27 meeting where such plans were discussed.
The firings of eight prosecutors has since led to a political firestorm and calls for his ouster.
At that meeting, the attorney general and at least five top Justice Department officials discussed a five-step plan for carrying out the firings of the prosecutors, Gonzales’ aides said late Friday.
There, Gonzales signed off on the plan, which was drafted by his chief of staff, Kyle Sampson. Sampson resigned last week.
Another Justice aide closely involved in the dismissals, White House liaison Monica Goodling, has also taken a leave of absence, two officials said.
The five-step plan approved by Gonzales involved notifying Republican home-state senators of the impending dismissals, preparing for potential political upheaval, naming replacements and submitting them to the Senate for confirmation.
Six of the eight prosecutors who were ultimately ordered to resign are named in the plan.
The department released more than 280 documents Friday night, including e-mails, calendar pages and memos to try to satisfy Congress’ demands for details on how the firings were handled - and whether they were politically motivated. There are no other meetings on the calendar pages released between that Nov. 27 and Dec. 7, when the attorneys were fired, to indicate Gonzales participated in other discussions on the matter, Justice spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos said.
Scolinos said it was not immediately clear whether Gonzales gave his final approval to begin the firings at that meeting. Scolinos also said Gonzales was not involved in the process of selecting which prosecutors would be asked to resign.
While I don’t find the firing of prosecutors particularly interesting in any way, I do find it interesting that Gonzales clearly lied about his role and there’s documentation to prove it. There’s quite a lot of activity with regards to these prosecutorrs with his name on it that proves he actually did know what was going on and helped develop a strategy to deal with the fallout.
In other words, the man in charge of law enforcement in this country was caught lying. Blatantly. Obviously.
I really don’t get how anyone supports these folks. They’re seriously pathological.
via MyWay


March 25th, 2007 at 10:46 pm
Gonzalez is a puppet of the current administration in every way. The least he could have done was grow a pair and say right out that he was involved in all this. When you are captain of the ship you take responsibility for what happens under your command. He obviously has never followed this policy at any point in his career. He is what we call a “tool”.