"After a thorough reading of the
report it would not be unreasonable to conclude as I have that there was
a cover-up at high levels of our government and, it appears to have been
substantial and coordinated...The question is why? And that question
regrettably will go unanswered. Unlike some other cover-ups, this one
succeeded.” – Independent Counsel David M. Barrett on the censoring
of The Barrett Report.
If you have been experiencing a sneaking
suspicion that there is a lot of one-sided interest where investigations
into political malfeasance are concerned at the US Justice Department,
you’re not alone. From the aggressive prosecution of ‘Scooter’ Libby for
having a bad memory to the powder-puff prosecution of Sandy Berger for
stealing and then destroying unique documents related to terrorism and
9/11 from the National Archive, it seems that the catalyst for a
thorough investigation – at least where politicians are concerned – is
directly influenced by which political party the alleged offender
belongs to.
Much to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s
dismay, the "culture of corruption” is an equal opportunity enticement.
For every Duke Cunningham there is a William Jefferson and for every one
Tom Delay who resigns from office there are two Diane Feinsteins who
refuse to do so. Point being, a good many politicians walk a fine line
between pushing the ethical envelope and crossing the line into illegal
activity.
The authority that is supposed to hold
everyone accountable to the laws of the land – politicians and citizens
alike – is the
United States Justice Department. Under the direction of the United
States Attorney General, the USJD is supposed to "ensure fair and
impartial administration of justice for all Americans.” This empowers
the USJD with the awesome responsibility of holding our elected
officials accountable for any misdeeds that violate the laws of our
country.
But the Office of the US Attorney General
is a cabinet level department, an appointed position, thus it is a
political office, albeit a professional political office. Further, the
administrators of this department are chosen and appointed by the
president. Mid-level positions through the clerical ranks are
administered by the Office of the US Attorney General making them
more prone to political favoritism the further up the professional food
chain you go.
Recent events bring light to the
political aspect of the US Justice Department in part because of the
aggressive prosecution of some politicos alleged to have broken the law
and the passive concern and almost disinterest in prosecuting others,
the divining factor seeming to be the perpetrator’s political
affiliation.
The Barrett Report
In January of 2006, Independent Counsel David Barrett released what
is commonly referred to as
The Barrett Report, an investigation into the facts surrounding the
allegation that former Clinton Administration Housing Secretary Henry
Cisneros failed to pay income taxes on "hush money" payments he made to
a mistress. The allegations, if proven to be true and successfully
prosecuted, would have found Cisneros convicted of 18 felony counts
charging conspiracy, obstruction of justice, fraud and perjury.
Cisneros pled guilty to a misdemeanor
count of lying to the FBI (a division of the USJD) about the cash
payments and accepted a plea bargain (authorized by the USJD) in the
form of a $10,000 fine instead of facing the potential 90-year prison
sentence his conviction would have required.
The authority to investigate and
prosecute this case – before Independent Counsel Barrett was seated –
fell upon Lee Radek, the head of the Justice Departments’ Public
Integrity Unit, a division that is charged with investigating and
prosecuting allegations of criminal misconduct by public officials.
Radek was elevated to his post by Jo Ann Harris, Justice Department
Criminal Division Chief, who was appointed to her post by President
Clinton.
To paint Radek as a
political operative wouldn’t be a stretch.
▪ Radek’s family was politically
connected to the Clinton-Gore campaigns through financial channels that
included DNC rainmaker Patrick O’Connor and Terry McAuliffe.
▪ He actively opposed the naming of a
special prosecutor in the 1996 Clinton-Gore ‘Chinagate’ scandal.
▪ Radek ordered the termination of an
investigation into illegal fundraising by then Vice President Al Gore
that took place at a California Buddhist temple.
▪ He refused to investigate a three-way
quid-pro-quo scheme involving the Teamsters Union, the Clinton White
House and the Democratic National Committee.
Radek is significant to The Barrett
Report not only because of his lack of an aggressive prosecution in the
Cisneros case but because he offered "little in the way of cooperation"
to Independent Counsel Barrett’s investigation.
In the end, there was enough
uncooperative foot-dragging by Radek and his cohorts at the USJD that
legal wranglers were given enough time to secure a court order that
effectively redacted 120 of the most damning pages of the report.
Barrett is quoted as saying, "Enough
high-ranking officials with enough power were able to blunt any effort
to bring about a full and independent examination of Cisneros' possible
tax offenses in the face of what seemed to many to be obvious grounds
for such an inquiry."
In contrast, the USJD cooperated fully
with Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to literally facilitate the
creation of a crime in the "questionable at best” Valerie Plame case. In
this instance America witnessed the USJD and a special prosecutor
completely ignore the discovery of the person who actually leaked Ms.
Plame’s identity to columnist Robert Novak and instead prosecuting
‘Scooter’ Libby for having a bad memory.
The Investigation into Hillary
Clinton’s Campaign Finance Fraud
As exposed in The New Media Journal original series,
The Fraudulent Senator, USJD prosecutors – specifically Janet
Reno appointee Noel Hillman, who replaced Lee Radek who was re-tasked as
Senior Counsel in the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section – played a significant role in diverting attention from
the largest case of campaign finance fraud in American history.
The result of Mr.
Peter F. Paul’s FEC complaint that the Hillary Clinton Senate 2000
Campaign under-reported by over $700,000 his in-kind contribution of a
$1.2 million Hollywood gala event and fundraiser was an amateurish
prosecution of the wrong man.
The USJD’s Office of Public Integrity
indicted the campaign’s national
finance director David Rosen on three counts of election fraud. The
problem with this indictment is that Rosen wasn’t legally required to
file any reports and did not sign the reports that were filed. The
resulting trial ended with Rosen’s acquittal. The jury found that Rosen
wasn’t responsible for the filing, spotlighting a glaring oversight by USJD prosecutors. Or was it?
The signature required on the FEC filings
was that of the campaign treasurer, Andrew Grossman. In December of
2005, Grossman entered into a secret agreement with the FEC allowing him
to admit culpability in filing false reports and commanding him to pay a
$35,000 civil fine. To this day the USJD has not charged Andrew Grossman
with anything even though he testified under oath – perjuring himself –
in Rosen’s trial that he never heard of an event costing over a million
dollars.
Logic mandates that either the USDJ's
Public Integrity Office
was so inept that it didn’t research the protocol for FEC financial
statements – an unbelievable contention for an office charged with
investigating and prosecuting allegations of criminal misconduct by
public officials – or they purposely charged the wrong man as a
diversionary tactic until the 2000 campaign was over, Hillary Clinton
had won and Grossman was able to satisfy his transgression with the FEC.
Of course, that doesn’t explain why the USJD didn’t pursue
criminal charges against Grossman.
In contrast, the USJD went after Randall
‘Duke’ Cunningham with a zeal usually reserved for members of al Qaeda.
In 2005, Cunningham pleaded guilty to accepting $2.4 million in illegal
income and underreporting his income for 2004. He pleaded guilty to
federal charges of conspiracy to commit bribery, mail fraud, wire fraud,
and tax evasion. Cunningham, a 21-year officer in the US Navy and a
Vietnam War flying ace, received a sentence of eight years and four
months in prison and an order to pay $1.8 million in restitution.
Clinton lies about $700,000 and the USJD
doesn’t even sneeze. A true war hero – not like John Kerry or
John
Murtha – admits his guilt and goes to jail for almost a decade. The
inequity is glaring.
Would You Like Unique and Sensitive
Files with that Mr. Berger?
In October of 2003, former Clinton National Security Advisor Sandy
Berger, in preparation for his 9/11 Commission testimony, removed and
then destroyed unique and classified documents pertaining to the Clinton
Administration’s knowledge of terrorist threats to the United States.
Berger described his removal of the
unique documents initially as "an honest mistake.” But as details
emerged courtesy of a report titled,
Sandy Berger's Theft of Classified Documents: Unanswered Questions
compiled by the US House Committee on Oversight & Government Reform it
became clear that Berger’s efforts were well thought out and tantamount
to an attempt at obstructing the 9/11 Commission’s investigation.
Berger not only removed unique documents
in his briefcase and socks, he positioned additional unique documents at
a construction trailer on site for later retrieval. His actions required
planning and forethought, therefore they were premeditated.
In the report, National Archives
Inspector General Paul Brachfield testified that he had met with USJD
trial attorney Howard Sklamberg from the public integrity unit. The
purpose of Brachfield’s meeting was to inquire as to whether the USJD
had notified the 9/11 Commission of Berger’s actions, the possible
connotations of those actions and whether the USJD had established what
documents had been taken and destroyed. Brachfield’s answers would come
in a troubling phone call.
On March 22, two days before Sandy
Berger’s testimony to the 9/11 Commission, Brachfield received a phone
call from John Dion, Chief of the USJD Counterespionage Section, and
Bruce Swartz, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the USJD Criminal
Division. There were several reasons for this phone call, among them:
▪ To notify Brachfield that Berger was to
testify before the 9/11 Commission on March 24.
▪ To notify Brachfield that he may be
ultimately culpable for not notifying the 9/11 Commission of Berger’s
crime and, thus, his potential for being an non-credible witness.
▪ To notify Brachfield that any
disclosure of Berger’s crime to the 9/11 Commission could compromise the
USJD investigation into said crime, intimating a possible obstruction of
justice charge.
Brachfield’s answer was no, the 9/11
Commission was never alerted to Berger’s crime prior to his testimony.
In an April 9, 2004 meeting facilitated
by Glenn Fine, the Inspector General for the USJD, Brachfield advanced
his concern that the USJD investigation was fixated on only two of
Berger’s four visits to the National Archives, each visit allowing
Berger to be in proximity to unique and classified documents.
During this meeting Swartz insisted that
Berger had been supervised "at all times.” But this statement is in
direct contradiction to statements made by the senior National Archive
official charged with Berger’s supervision. In fact, this senior
National Archives official, referred to as "Senior Official 1” in the
report, is on record as saying she, "...would never know what, if any,
original documents were missing.”
The meeting concluded with Fine finally
exposing the fact that the FBI hadn’t even questioned Berger about the
first two visits.
As a result of the USJD’s apathetic
investigation and prosecution of Sandy Berger’s theft and destruction of
unique and classified documents from the National Archives, and as the
result of a plea bargain authorized by the USJD,
Berger agreed to a $10,000 fine, a revocation of his security
clearance for three years and a
lie detector test, which to this day has not been administered. This
sentence was augmented by US Magistrate Judge Deborah Robinson who
increased the fine to $50,000 and added two years probation and 100
hours of community service. Robinson said, "The court finds that the
fine [recommended by government prosecutors] is inadequate because it
doesn't reflect the seriousness of the offense.”
Add to the Mix
While these are examples of the high-profile instances of
prosecutorial indifference toward illegal activity by those of the
Democrat Party, they are by no means the only ones.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-NV), was engaged in questionable land dealings in his
home state of Nevada yet the USJD expressed little interest in
investigating his actions.
Congressman
William Jefferson (D-LA), was found to have $90,000 bundled in his
freezer in what investigators allege are spoils from a bribery scandal.
Two of Jefferson’s former aides pled guilty to aiding and abetting the
bribery of an elected official. To this date Jefferson has not been
charged.
For five years Senator
Diane Feinstein (D-CA), sat on the Senate Appropriations Committee’s
subcommittee on military construction, which reviewed private sector
construction contracts for military projects. During this time, a
company owned and operated by Senator Feinstein’s husband received
several contracts administered by the subcommittee. No investigation is
pending.
The list goes on and on.
The Common Thread
The common thread to each of these disparities where aggressive
investigation and prosecution are concerned is politics. If the
perpetrator is of the Republican persuasion the investigation and
prosecution are aggressive and relentless. If the perpetrator is of the
left side of the aisle the investigation is half-hearted or practically
non-existent and the penalties are consistently comprised of milquetoast
plea bargains that are grossly inadequate for the crime.
When one examines those who have piloted
the USJD investigations and prosecutions of political malfeasance one
thing is abundantly clear. In each instance the person charged with the
investigation or prosecution was a Clinton holdover or a Clinton
appointee.
In the case of The Barrett Report and the
investigation and prosecution of Henry Cisneros, Lee Radek was
intimately affiliated with not only the DNC and Democrat rainmakers, but
with the Clinton-Gore White House. Jo Ann Harris who appointed Radek,
was appointed by President Clinton.
In the case of Hillary Clinton’s campaign
finance fraud, we again see Lee Radek running interference against any
credible investigation and prosecution.
And where Sandy Berger’s travesty of
justice is concerned:
▪ Glenn Fine, the Inspector General for
the USJD, was appointed by Bill Clinton, continued serving as a holdover
from the Clinton Administration into the Bush Administration and is on
record as being a donor to the DNC and/or Democrat candidate(s).
▪ Bruce Swartz, Deputy Assistant Attorney
General for the USJD Criminal Division, was appointed by Bill Clinton,
continued serving as a holdover from the Clinton Administration into the
Bush Administration and is on record as being
a donor to the DNC
and/or Democrat candidate(s).
▪ John Dion, Chief of the USJD
Counterespionage Section at the USJD, was a holdover from the Clinton
Administration into the Bush Administration.
▪ Howard Sklamberg, USJD trial attorney
from the public integrity unit, was a holdover from the Clinton
Administration into the Bush Administration and is on record as being
a donor to the DNC
and/or Democrat candidate(s).
It is apparent to anyone taking an honest
look at the current situation of the USJD that during the eight years of
the Clinton Administration, the Clinton White House loaded the United
States Justice Department with enough upper and mid-level political
appointments and promotions to circumvent any investigation and/or
prosecution of crimes originating and perpetrated at the hands of those
on their "team.”
It is equally apparent that the Clinton
White House intentionally placed these people in positions where they
could inflict the most political damage on the opposition party by
simply investigating until either a crime was discovered or created, or
there was enough dirt run through the Clinton-friendly mainstream media
to destroy the subject’s credibility and ability to be effective.
The implications of a political and
partisan United States Justice Department are disturbing and lay the
groundwork for the demise of our Constitutional government, a government
of laws such as it is. That American justice would be administered
politically on such a transparently partisan scale lends itself to an
image of a nation where political corruption is accepted and political
persecution is tolerated, which side benefiting from both being decided
by the spoils of a successful political campaign and the patronage that
includes.
Remember, Bill Clinton fired 93 US
Attorneys when he came into office. Perhaps now we can all understand
why the Democrats are so up in arms over President Bush firing eight.
"Equal and exact
justice to all men, of whatever state or persuasion, religious or
political...”
– Thomas Jefferson