Today’s Must Read: The Washington Post interviews a former detainee in one of the CIA’s “black sites.”
This is comforting: al Qaeda’s back to where they were in the summer of 2001.
Problem solved: Walter Reed patients told to stop talking to the press.
The evidence builds that the administration fired a group of federal prosecutors in December just to install political loyalists in the spots.
Salon is reporting that two of the prosecutors were told as much when they asked why they were being forced out.
It’s a dirty job. But someone’s got to do it.
The San Diego US Attorney’s office has been pretty much singlehandedly cleaning up US politics over the last year and a half or so — mainly building out from the Duke Cunningham scandal but also following that trail of bread crumbs right to the heart of the CIA. Who knows whether that will continue now that the head of the office, Carol Lam, got axed for ‘performance’ issues that turned out not to exist. But the San Diego FBI office has also been a big part of the equation. And there’s so much muck out there, now the San Diego office is setting up an 800 number for people to report public corruption (the number is actually 877-662-7423).
âThe battle for honest services by our public officials cannot be won if only a few people are willing to be involved,â says San Diego FBI’s chief Dan Dzwilewski. âThe FBI needs the public’s help if we are going to continue to be successful in protecting citizens’ rights to honest services.â
In case you don’t remember, when news came out in January that Lam was getting canned in the midst of her continuing investigation of Wilkes and Foggo, he told the local paper, on the record, “I guarantee politics is involved.”
So this guy’s no shrinking violet.
Dan Gerstein responds: Yes, Lieberman was paying me when I published a piece in The Politico attacking his enemies. So what?
Yep, looks like there’s nothing to this US Attorney firing thing.
Paul Kiel told you yesterday about New Mexico US Attorney David Iglesias who said his firing was a “political fragging” and that he was holding a press conference today.
Here’s McClatchy just out on some of what he just told them …
The U.S. attorney from New Mexico who was recently fired by the Bush administration said Wednesday that he believes he was forced out because he refused to rush an indictment in an ongoing probe of local Democrats a month before November’s Congressional elections.
David Iglesias said two members of Congress separately called in mid October to inquire about the timing of an ongoing probe of a kickback scheme and appeared eager for an indictment to be issued on the eve of the elections in order to benefit the Republicans. He refused to name the members of Congress because he said he feared retaliation.
Two months later, on Dec. 7, Iglesias became one of six U.S. attorneys ordered to step down for what administration officials have termed “performance-related issues.” Two other U.S. attorneys also have been asked to resign.
Iglesias, who received a positive performance review before he was fired, said he suspected he was forced out because of his refusal to be pressured to hand down an indictment in the ongoing probe.
“I believe that because I didn’t play ball, so to speak, I was asked to resign,” said Iglesias, who officially stepped down Wednesday.
You still think Carol Lam wasn’t fired because she pushed the Duke-Wilkes-Foggo probe too far?
Update: So who were those two members of Congress? We’re trying to find out.
Later Update: Already got our first answer. Check here for more updates.
Is Hillary’s war vote and refusal to term it a mistake a big liability in a Dem primary?
Check out these poll numbers and let us know what you think.
Another flip-flop from Romney — this time on his attitude towards people of faith.
So who were those two members of Congress who called canned US Attorney David Iglesias trying to get him to indict Democrats before the November election? We’re on the phone making calls. And we’ve already got one denial.
Sen. Schumer (D-NY) calls Iglesias’s charges “extremely serious.”