As anyone who has

As anyone who has paid a lick of attention to the U.S. Attorney scandal knows, it is just one example–perhaps the most egregious example–of the Bush Administration’s deep and widespread politicization of the Justice Department:

No other administration in contemporary times has had such a clear pattern of filling chief prosecutors’ jobs with its own staff members, said experts on U.S. attorney’s offices. Those experts said the emphasis in appointments traditionally has been on local roots and deference to home-state senators, whose support has been crucial to win confirmation of the nominees.

The pattern from Bush’s second term suggests that the dismissals were half of a two-pronged approach: While getting rid of prosecutors who did not adhere closely to administration priorities, such as rigorous enforcement of immigration violations and GOP allegations of voter fraud, White House and Justice officials also have seeded federal prosecutors’ offices with people on whom they can depend to carry out the administration’s agenda.