Editors’ Blog - 2007
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03.17.07 | 9:30 am
Kyle Sampson may have

Kyle Sampson may have resigned as Alberto Gonzales’ chief of staff, but he’s showing signs of not being willing to be scapegoated for the entire U.S. Attorney scandal.

As Paul notes, Sampson’s lawyer, former Bush Administration official Bradford Berenson, released a statement late Friday that includes this rat-jumping-ship gem:

The fact that the White House and Justice Department had been discussing this subject for several years was well-known to a number of other senior officials at the Department, including others who were involved in preparing the Department’s testimony to Congress.

Sen. Schumer said this week that Sampson would not become the next Scooter Libby, a fall guy for a scheme hatched at the highest levels of the Bush Administration. Sampson seems to be saying the same thing.

03.17.07 | 9:38 am
A sex scandal too

A sex scandal, too? It’s a muckraker’s dream.

03.17.07 | 10:43 am
Helen Thomas keeps her

Helen Thomas keeps her front row seat in the new White House briefing room.

03.17.07 | 10:45 am
Newsweek poll Fifty-eight percent

Newsweek poll: “Fifty-eight percent of those surveyed-–including 45 percent of Republicans-–say the ouster of the federal prosecutors was driven by political concerns.”

03.17.07 | 11:04 am
Take a look at

Take a look at what the U.S. attorney scandal has wrought by way of media coverage in Pittsburgh–and consider the implications for every federal prosecutor in the country. As Bud Cummins wrote yesterday in an email to TPMmuckraker, “Once the public detects partisanship in one important decision, they will follow the natural inclination to question every decision made, whether there is a connection or not.” [Thanks to TPM Reader NW for the tip.]

03.17.07 | 11:25 am
Think Progress has a

Think Progress has a good catch, from NPR:

According to Justice Department sources, after Kyle Sampson resigned as the attorney general’s chief of staff on Monday, he was going to work as a lawyer in the legislative section of the department’s environment division. The Justice Department started to set up a new office for Sampson in that section, and he only resigned from the department on Tuesday, when the scandal surrounding eight fired U.S. Attorneys continued to grow.

Yup. Mistakes were made.

03.17.07 | 11:36 am
The most interesting testimony

The most interesting testimony in yesterday’s House committee hearing on the CIA leak case came not from Valerie Plame Wilson but from James Knodell, director of the White House security office, who testified that the White House had neither undertaken an internal investigation into the leak nor taken disciplinary action against the leakers. Here’s a copy of the letter committee Chairman Henry Waxman sent to White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten following the hearing.

03.17.07 | 11:55 am
Some new news on

Some new news on the Kyle Sampson front. Remember, Sampson is Alberto Gonzales’s former Chief of Staff who resigned on Monday. The following is a statement from Mr. Sampson’s lawyer, Bradford Berenson …

“Kyle did not resign because he had misled anyone at the Justice Department or withheld information concerning the replacement of the U.S. Attorneys. He resigned because, as Chief of Staff, he felt he had let the Attorney General down in failing to appreciate the need for and organize a more effective response to the unfounded accusations that the replacements were improper.”

“The fact that the White House and Justice Department had been discussing this subject since the election was well-known to a number of other senior officials at the Department, including others who were involved in preparing the Department’s testimony to Congress. If this background was not called to Mr. McNulty or Mr. Moschella’s attention, it was not because any of these individuals deliberately withheld it from them but rather because no one focused on it at the time. The focus of preparation efforts was on why the U.S. Attorneys had been replaced, not how.”

Update: Compare and contrast with Sampson’s very similar, yet significantly different, statement out last night. – PK

03.17.07 | 7:07 pm
Is the attorney general

Is the attorney general apologizing for saying the purged U.S. attorneys were canned for “performance-related reasons”?

As I mentioned earlier, that’s what McClatchy reported yesterday, and the AP has a similar report today on what transpired during a conference call between Gonzales and all the U.S. attorneys on Friday:

During the conference call, planned as a pep talk to raise morale at a Justice Department tainted by the firings and the FBI’s misuse of the Patriot Act, Gonzales apologized for how the dismissals were handled and for suggesting there were problems with the prosecutors’ job performances.

Without more information, it’s hard to know what that means. Is he abandoning the Administration’s defense that the prosecutors were removed for legitimate job performance reasons? Or is he saying that the Justice Department did act based on performance concerns but shouldn’t have shredded the prosecutors’ reputations in the process of defending the move? Since this was a “pep talk,” I suspect it’s the latter.

03.17.07 | 8:04 pm
Some nice press from

Some nice press from the LA Times for TPM and TPMmuckraker’s coverage of the US Attorney Purge.