Speaking of which -- here's a good one; I was listening to a story
about this on the way to work this morning.


How feds' top environmental prosecutor built home with big-oil lobbyist
By John Heilprin

By John Heilprin

WASHINGTON -- A House committee will investigate and request documents
on a real estate deal involving the government's top environmental
prosecutor and ConocoPhillips' top lobbyist, and legal agreements
between the government and the oil company.

The inquiry by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee was
announced hours after The Associated Press reported that the
prosecutor, Sue Ellen Wooldridge, bought a $1 million vacation home on
Kiawah Island, S.C., with ConocoPhillips Vice President Donald R.
Duncan, nine months before agreeing to let the company delay a
half-billion-dollar pollution cleanup. It was one of two proposed
consent decrees Wooldridge signed with ConocoPhillips just before
resigning last month.

"There appears to be a breakdown of ethics at the Justice Department,"
the committee's chairman, Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said Wednesday
night. "Senior Justice Department officials should not be handling
cases that affect their close friends and investment partners."

The third buyer of the beachshore getaway was former Deputy Interior
Secretary J. Steven Griles, the highest-ranking Bush administration
official targeted for criminal prosecution in the Jack Abramoff
corruption probe.

In one of her last acts, Wooldridge signed proposed consent decrees
with ConocoPhillips, one delaying the required installation of $525
million in pollution controls at nine refineries and the other dealing
with a Superfund toxic waste cleanup.

Last April, Wooldridge, Duncan and Griles bought a $980,000 home in a
gated community at Kiawah Island. Records from the Charleston County
Auditor's office obtained by the AP list Duncan as a 50 percent owner
of the home and Wooldridge and Griles as 25 percent owners.

ConocoPhillips said in a statement Wednesday night that Duncan had no
involvement in negotiating the consent agreements.

"We object to the suggestion that the real estate transaction
involving Don Duncan, which was cleared in advance by the ethics
office of the Department of Justice, had any impact whatsoever on the
consent decrees entered into by ConocoPhillips or the recent SEC
filing amending ConocoPhillips code of ethics," company officials
said. "Any savings resulting from these delays are expected to be
offset by the cost of additional and stricter controls agreed to in
the amended agreement."

Griles, now an oil and gas lobbyist, began dating Wooldridge while he
was her boss at Interior. He was the department's No. 2 official from
July 2001 to January 2005, behind only former Secretary Gale Norton.
He and Duncan, ConocoPhillips' chief Washington lobbyist, both served
on President Bush's presidential transition team.

Wooldridge and Griles have known each other at least since the first
year of the Bush administration in 2001, when Wooldridge became deputy
chief of staff and counselor to Norton. Bush appointed Wooldridge as
Interior's top lawyer in June 2004.




After she became Interior solicitor, Wooldridge told the department's
ethics office she and Griles had begun dating, an Interior spokesman
said.

Bush later appointed Wooldridge to head the Justice Department's
environment division, representing virtually every federal agency, and
she began working there in November 2005.

Stephen W. Grafman, Wooldridge's attorney, said she paid for her share
in the home and was told by the Justice Department's ethics office a
month before the sale went through "that the purchase was not a
problem."

"There was no need to recuse herself from ConocoPhillips since she was
advised by the appropriate ethics officials that there was not a
conflict," Grafman said. "Mr. Duncan invested in the property as an
individual and friend."

Grafman said Duncan never lobbied Wooldridge for himself or his company.

Justice Department spokeswoman Cynthia Magnuson confirmed that
Wooldridge "sought the advice of ethics officials who informed her
that the purchase did not raise ethical issues."

Magnuson said the consent decrees with ConocoPhillips "were approved
through the normal management channels and were presented to Sue Ellen
with the unanimous recommendations of her career staff as well as
those of the EPA."

Griles' lawyer, Barry M. Hartman, called the home a shared investment
among people who have known each other for years. "What exactly is
wrong with three close personal friends sharing a vacation/rental
home?" he said.

Wooldridge submitted her resignation letter from Justice on Jan. 8,
three days after other prosecutors in the department met with Griles
to outline criminal charges they are seeking against him. She said in
the letter she wanted to return to private sector work.

The federal task force heading the Abramoff corruption probe also has
become interested in Wooldridge and her connections to Griles, people
familiar with the investigation said on condition of anonymity, citing
the issue's sensitivity.

Paul Light, a professor at New York University's Wagner School of
Public Service and an expert on presidential appointees, said
Wooldridge's participation in the home purchase and ConocoPhillips
settlements "creates the impression of favoritism, or favors due."

"From an appearance standpoint it's awful, and from a legal standpoint
it's questionable," Light said Wednesday. "Political appointees have
been indicted for less."

Wooldridge's last day at Justice was Jan. 19. One of the proposed
agreements she signed before leaving would change the terms of a major
air pollution settlement with ConocoPhillips announced in 2005.

To settle charges of Clean Air Act violations, the new agreement
Wooldridge signed would delay deadlines the government imposed -- some
by two to three years -- for cutting emissions of chemicals that cause
smog and soot. It also postponed by more than a year potential
penalties and pollution reporting requirements. The agreement cited
damage to a refinery from Hurricane Katrina as reason for some of the
delays.

Wooldridge did not list her share in the South Carolina home in a
financial disclosure she submitted a month after the real estate deal.
That report covered calendar 2005 and Wooldridge resigned before
having to submit a new report for 2006.

Wooldridge also put her undated signature on a proposed consent decree
involving ConocoPhillips and a Superfund toxic waste site. It is among
dozens of company that would pay $500,000 in damages and up to $10
million to clean an 8-acre site in Elkton, Md.

Copyright (c) 2007 The Seattle Times Company

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003573382_webscandal15.html

On 2/28/07, Dana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Meh. I just don't have time to attempt to prove or disprove. Or maybe
> it's too much apathy. I just can't get excited over Gore's electric
> bill. Perhaps it's hypocrisy, I dunno -- I'd have to look at whether
> he actually preached that people *should* something rather than merely
> listed "things you personally can do to help."
>
> But say it is hypocrisy. There are so many better examples and nobody
> is dying over this one.
>
> On 2/28/07, G Money <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Forget it.....i think a liberal could take a giant shit in your living room,
> > and you'd spin it as some new great social program.
> >
> > Ann Coultier could whip out her penis and start beating it against Sam's
> > head, and he'd claim it was good for the economy some how.
> >
> > What a joke. You partisans claim to be able to see through your
> > bias....well, not from where I'm sitting.
> >
> > Feeling more a disillusioned independent today than most days....
> >
> > On 2/27/07, Dana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > > but see Sam... I don't care whether he does or not ;) And I'm assuming
> > > you mean Gore? If you ask me emperor is kinda a wierd thing to call
> > > him. Maybe Freudian.
> > >
> > > Look at all the power you're giving him. A whole afternoon you wasted,
> > > being pissed off over someone else's electric bill. And a beautiful
> > > afternoon it was, at least out here in the Sangre de Cristos. Too
> > > beautiful to worry about my *own* electric bill.
> > >
> > > Dana
> > >
> > > On 2/27/07, Sam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > Because I want her to notice that her emperor has no clothes
> > > >
> > > > On 2/27/07, Dinner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > Why does that bug you so much?  We've already got "no child left
> > > behind",
> > > > > "homeland" security, the "defense" department, and a President!
> > > >
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> > 

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