Alabama Getaway: Bush-Rove Legal Perversion Goes South

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by Chris Floyd

http://www.opednews.com

Scott Horton has put out a detailed and entirely damning piece about the corruption of the judicial process for partisan gain engineered by Karl Rove and the White House down south: Justice in Alabama. The prosecution — and persecution — of former Democratic governor Don Siegelman was a state crime from start to finish, and was clearly orchestrated by Karl Rove and his appointed minions — themselves hip-deep in sleaze, graft and criminal conspiracy. In a brilliantly apt comparison, Horton likens Rove to Andrey Vyshinsky, the prosecutor of Stalin’s show trials, and one of history’s great perverters of the law.

The Alabama case is a microcosm of the Bush Imperium at almost every level: financial corruption, subversion of the law, rampant deceit and abuse of process — and a cowed, co-opted press to help bury the government’s wrongdoing. Siegelman is facing up to 30 years in prison for charges which were so transparently false that they had earlier been dismissed, with prejudice, by an honest judge. But Rove and his operatives merely shopped the case around to a more compliant judge — one riddled with the kind of flagrant conflicts-of-interest that are meat and drink to the Bushist crowd.

But Siegelman — whose conviction will doubtless be appealed and almost certainly overturned at some point — is by no means the only victim in this caper. Dana Simpson, a Republican lawyer who had been a staunch opponent of Siegelman, was so disgusted at the backroom court-rigging by Rove’s gang that she filed a sworn affadavit revealing the set-up. The reaction to her “disloyalty” to the Bush gang has been severe. As Horton tells it:

She’s been smeared as “crazy” and as a “disgruntled contract bidder.” And something nastier: after her intention to speak became known, Simpson’s house was burned to the ground, and her car was driven off the road and totaled. Clearly, there are some very powerful people in Alabama who feel threatened…However, those who have dismissed Simpson are in for a very rude surprise. Her affidavit stands up on every point, and there is substantial evidence which will corroborate its details.

As Horton notes, the Siegelman case is just one of many instances of a wide-ranging scheme to turn the federal courts into a political arm of the Bush Faction. As more evidence of this Stalinist-style perversion becomes known, we will doubtless see more rough treatment like that doled out to Dana Simpson, and not just in relation to the court-perversion operation. As the Bush gang’s tenure in office nears its end, the frantic thugs will face the possibility of prosecution for a number of high crimes, and they will resort increasingly to physical intimidation to cow or silence witnesses.

Does that sound far-fetched? Then consider this: at every single point, the Bush Administration’s depradations have turned out to be even worse than originally thought. For example, the “bad apples” of the “incident” at Abu Ghraib turned out to be the products of a deliberate, knowing, thorough-going, worldwide system of torture formally created and officially approved by the White House itself. The “investigation” of 9/11 — which had to be forced on the Bush gang in the first place — turned out to be an ludicrous whitewash, directed by a close colleague of Condi Rice who later went on the State Department payroll. The “shaky evidence” for launching a war of aggression against Iraq turned out to be a pack of falsehoods that were known to be falsehoods by the war’s perpetrators, just as the “unforeseen chaos” that erupted in the wake of the invasion turned out to have been predicted beforehand with remarkable precision by government agencies. The illegal wiretaps on “foreign terrorists” turned out to be part of a secret nationwide system of domestic espionage that has caught untold millions of innocent Americans in its web. The “routine firing” of a few federal attorneys turned out to be the tip of a vast iceberg of legal and judicial corruption. The “all clear” on deadly chemicals at Ground Zero in the days following 9/11 turns out to have been a deliberate deceit that has already killed many selfless rescue and reconstruction workers, and will kill many more in the years to come.

Given all this (which still just barely scratches the surface), can anyone seriously doubt that we will see more house-burnings, more car wrecks — and worse — from these two-bit Borgias in their bloodstained twilight?

You should read the whole piece by Horton (on Harper’s “No Comment” blog) — a wonderful essay that ranges far and deep, from Atticus Finch to the Scottsboro Boys to the letters of Cicero, to set the filthy corruption of Rove and Bush in its full and proper context.

copyright 2007 Chris Floyd

crossposted from pacificfreepress.com

http://www.chris-floyd.com/

Chris Floyd is the Editor and co-founder of Atlantic Free Press. He is an American journalist now based in Great Britain and the UK correspondent for Truthout.org. For 10 years, he wrote the weekly Global Eye political column for The Moscow Times and St. Petersburg Times. His writings also appear in The Nation, Columbia Journalism Review, The Baltimore Chronicle, The Bergen Record and elsewhere around the world. His book, Empire Burlesque, is published by Expathos Books. His work there included interviews with such thinkers as Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Steven Pinker, Frans de Waal, V.S. Ramachandran and other contributors from around the world including Islamic scientists, Jewish theologians, militant atheists, Nobel Prize-winning physicists, as well as authors such as Freeman Dyson, Paul Davies, Lisa Jardine, A.N. Wilson, John Polkinghorne.

One Response to “Alabama Getaway: Bush-Rove Legal Perversion Goes South”

  1. Administrator Says:

    Siegelman sentencing gets mixed reactions
    By Dana Beyerle
    Montgomery Bureau
    MONTGOMERY — There’s dismay in Democratic circles over former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman’s swift sentencing Thursday and his shackled shuffle to the Atlanta federal penitentiary, but there’s deafening silence from Republicans.

    A federal judge sentenced Siegelman to seven years and four months in prison. Leg irons were snapped on and he clinked off to a transport vehicle to take him to the same federal prison that once housed mobsters Al Capone and John Gotti, and baseball player Denny McLain.

    “He wasn’t even given three minutes to get his toothbrush,'’ his attorney, Vince Kilborn, said Friday. “He was allowed to keep his wedding ring.'’

    Co-defendant Richard Scrushy,

    former CEO of HealthSouth, got six years and 10 months and was shuffled off, too. “Scrushy didn’t get a chance to kiss his kids goodbye,'’ Kilborn said.

    Federal Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Traci Billingsley said both Siegelman and Scrushy were at the Atlanta federal prison.

    She didn’t say whether either was at the maximum security male prison or the minimum security male prison camp. It also has a detention center for pre-trial and holdover inmates.

    Kilborn said he filed an emergency bond appeal with the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. It is Siegelman and Scrushy’s next venue in fighting their 2006 convictions on bribery, conspiracy and mail fraud charges that Democrats say may come back to haunt Republicans.

    Siegelman and Scrushy were convicted partly for a $500,000 contribution Scrushy made to Siegelman’s 1999 lottery campaign. Siegelman appointed Scrushy to a state medical review board.

    The state Democratic Party charged politics by a Republican administration.

    “Any credible allegations of political involvement being injected into the judicial justice system for partisan, personal or political gain should be fully investigated by Congress and the news media,'’ party officials said in a statement.

    Riley’s office had no comment. Neither did Alabama Republican Party officials. But Democrats did.

    “The terminology politicians use is quid pro quo,'’ Colbert County Democratic Party Chairman Billy Underwood said. “(Republican Gov.) Bob Riley gets a lot of (campaign) money from somebody and then appoints them. I guess if (Democratic U.S. Sen.) Hillary Clinton gets (elected president) and appoints her U.S. attorneys they can indict Bob Riley for the same thing.'’

    There’s an allegation that former White House insider Karl Rove conspired with Riley’s son, Rob, Business Council of Alabama President Billy Canary, who is the husband of U.S. Attorney Leura Canary whose office prosecuted Siegelman, and others to get Siegelman. They denied it.

    “It reeks of political shenanigans,'’ Tuscaloosa County Democratic Party Chairman James Smith said. “I mean, it was obviously a vendetta, stuff coming out about Karl Rove’s involvement.'’

    Alabama Ethics Commission Director James L. Sumner Jr. said the convictions and sentences may send a message to politicians to clean up their acts.

    “Also, it will cause great pause on the behalf of business people who are asked to do something in exchange for something else, a quid pro quo,'’ he said.

    Auburn University Montgomery political science professor D’Linell Finley wondered whether every campaign contribution is now a case of bribery.

    “Are you going to convict every person who makes a campaign contribution to an elected official?'’ he asked.

    “What if a Democrat wins (the White House) and the U.S. attorney decides to investigate (Attorney General) Troy King with Alabama Power?'’ Smith said, referring to initial failure to report Alabama Power’s Atlanta Braves baseball game tickets to King.

    Dana Beyerle can be reached at (334) 264-6605 or

    http://www.timesdaily.com/article/20070630/NEWS/706300337/-1/Category=ENTERTAINMENT0201