<http://www.jacksonfreepress.com/index.php/site/comments/musgrove_camp_decries_scruggs_smear_093008/>Although
 
it tells a local story, and does so in detail, 
this article is well worth reading
to the end, where Don Siegelman puts the whole thing in its proper context.

In a word, what's happening in Mississippi is 
what's happening from coast to coast,
with a "Department of Justice" firmly in the hands of Karl Rove.

MCM

Musgrove Camp Decries Scruggs Smear

by Adam Lynch
September 30, 2008

http://www.jacksonfreepress.com/index.php/site/comments/musgrove_camp_decries_scruggs_smear_093008/

Sen. Roger Wicker's supporters at the National 
Republican Senatorial Committee are attempting to 
link his Democratic opponent, Ronnie Musgrove, 
with incarcerated lawyer Paul Minor, as well as 
Mississippi attorney Richard "Dickie" Scruggs, 
who pled guilty this year for attempting to bribe 
a Lafayette County Circuit Court judge for a 
favorable ruling in a dispute over $26.5 million 
in legal fees from a mass settlement of Hurricane 
Katrina cases. A U.S. District Court found Minor 
guilty of corruption in March 2007 for 
racketeering and bribery, along with former 
Judges Wes Teel and John Whitfield, for accepting 
the bribes.

"Paul Minor and Dickie Scruggs: trial lawyers who 
gave thousands to Ronnie Musgrove's campaigns," 
the NRSC ad states. "... Minor had so much 
influence with Musgrove, insiders called him 'the 
judgemaker.' Now Minor and Scruggs are in jail, 
convicted of trying to bribe a judge. Ronnie 
Musgrove: a record that makes you want to blush."

Adam Bozzi, spokesman for the Musgrove campaign, 
said Musgrove has not received any contributions 
from either of the two during his Senate campaign.

"The money they're referring to is from five or 
10 years ago, maybe even longer. At the time 
there was no reason to suspect it," Bozzi said.

A 2003 Biloxi Sun Herald article reported that 
Scruggs gave Musgrove $57,000 in 1999, while 
Minor gave Musgrove $112,000. Minor's most recent 
contribution to Musgrove was a $4,125 donation 
for his 2002 gubernatorial campaign.

A federal jury convicted Minor of corruption in 
2007, and Scruggs in 2008, well after Musgrove's 
2002 campaign. Scruggs also donated money to 
Republican campaigns, including those of his 
brother-in-law, former U.S. Sen Trent Lott, who 
retired the day before Scruggs was indicted last 
year..

Bozzi said the ads are "an attempt to cover Roger 
Wicker's Washington practices of the corrupt 
'Pay-to-Play' system," the system of heavy 
lobbyist input in the creation of legislation. 
"He's funneled millions of dollars in taxpayer 
earmarks to his top contributors," Bozzi said.

A January Washington Post article revealed that 
Wicker, last year, obtained a $6 million earmark 
for a defense contractor, Aurora Flight Science, 
whose executives were among his top campaign 
contributors. Wicker's former chief of staff even 
represented Aurora concerning the earmarks.

Minor's attorney Hiram Eastland said the use of 
the ads lends credibility to his accusation that 
Minor's prosecution was politically charged.

"The NRSC ad simply verifies that this has been a 
political prosecution all along, and the 
Republican Party is continuing to use these 
prosecutions to further their political goals," 
Eastland said.

Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Chuck Easley 
said he believed DOJ agents were aiming 
investigations only at Democrats during the 
height of Minor's trials.

"One agent interviewed me about possible 
investigations, and I had a ton of dirt on a lot 
of people, but they said they weren't interested 
in them. She said they were only interested in 
me, (Supreme Court Justices Oliver) Diaz and 
(Chuck) McRae, not (Jim) Smith, (William) Waller 
or anybody else. They were only hunting people 
they thought were Democratic oriented," Easley 
said.

The DOJ routinely leaked investigation details to 
the press throughout the investigation, notably 
details pertaining to Democrats.

Ryan Annison, spokesman for the Wicker campaign, 
said he knew nothing about the ads and directed 
all calls to the NRSC. "Not only do we have 
nothing to do with them (the NRSC), but it's 
illegal for us to have anything to do with them. 
We learn about them the same way you do, by 
watching them on TV," Annison said.

Rebecca Fisher, communications director for the 
NRSC, did not immediately respond to information 
requests.

Minor, Teel and Whitfield are appealing their 
convictions, arguing that Republican-appointed 
prosecutors, working with Ronald Reagan-appointed 
U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate, convinced the 
court to push a corruption trial without proof of 
an exchange of goods money or services, or quid 
pro quo.

The jury convicted Minor specifically of 
financing judges' campaign loans in exchange for 
favorable rulings, though none of the judges 
requested to oversee any of the cases Minor was 
working on. Also, prosecutors did not have to 
prove that either of the judges' decisions in 
Minor's cases were illogical. None of the 
plaintiffs in the cases in question, for that 
matter, filed to remove the judges for suspicious 
behavior or political connection with Minor.

The U.S. Congress is currently investigating 
allegations of political-based prosecutions by 
the DOJ under President George Bush and former 
White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove. Rove is 
ducking congressional subpoenas to appear before 
the congressional committee regarding the 
investigation and is currently in contempt of 
Congress.

Minor is not the only attorney charging the DOJ 
with targeting Democrats. Former Alabama Gov. Don 
Siegelman, who was convicted of corruption in 
2006-also without the necessity of proving quid 
pro quo-is out on appeal alleging political 
persecution. Siegelman is petitioning Congress 
this week to get Rove's contempt citation up for 
a vote and is pushing votes for final passage.

"We know Rove's master plan for his America was 
to create a permanent Republican majority ... 
apparently by any means necessary. Rove has 
praised his 'friend' Harriet Miers-the same 
Harriet Miers who has now admitted she broke the 
law in stacking the U.S. Department of Justice 
with Rove clones. She has admitted creating a 
right-wing political litmus test even for those 
(who) worked at the lowest levels of DOJ," 
Siegelman wrote in a Sept. 24 letter.

"We know that U.S. attorneys were used to 
prosecute seven times more Democrats than 
Republicans; we know that U.S. attorneys like 
David Iglesias were fired because they wouldn't 
play along with this White House's attempt to 
shape the outcomes of elections; we know from 
sworn testimony that Karl Rove was involved in 
using the DOJ as a political weapon to destroy 
Democrats who were unbeatable at the polls."

Siegelman accuses Rove of working with Alabama 
Republicans to tamper with state voting machines, 
which switched votes to Siegelman's opponent in 
2002-oddly without affecting any down-ticket 
races. Voters who chose Democrats on every other 
race mysteriously voted for the Republican 
gubernatorial candidate after Republican 
operatives were left alone with voting machines 
on the night of the election.

A new 356-page report from the Department of 
Justice's inspector general and the Office of 
Professional Responsibility outline charges of 
alleged politicization of the justice system by 
the Bush administration.

The report, "An Investigation into the Removal of 
Nine U.S. Attorneys in 2006," contains a painful 
assessment of then-Attorney General Alberto 
Gonzales and concludes that political 
considerations played a part in the firings of at 
least four of the nine prosecutors, despite the 
denials of the administration at the time of the 
controversy.

Former New Mexico U.S. Attorney David Iglesias 
claimed he was fired for not pursuing 
unsubstantiated voter fraud and corruption cases 
against New Mexico Democrats. The White House has 
refused to turn over internal documents and major 
players in the investigation, including Rove, 
former White House Counsel Miers, and former 
Justice Department liaison Monica M. Goodling.

© Jackson Free Press, Inc.
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