From: Roger Shuler [mailto:rshuler3...@gmail.com]


Why is it critical for the Obama administration to support thorough 
investigations of the Don Siegelman case and other justice-related 
matters? Because the long-term success of the Obama presidency might 
depend on it:

<http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2009/04/siegelman-case-why-obama-must-get-it.html>http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2009/04/siegelman-case-why-obama-must-get-it.html


Sunday, April 26, 2009

<http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2009/04/siegelman-case-why-obama-must-get-it.html>The
 
Siegelman Case: Why Obama Must Get It Right on Justice Issues

Pressure seems to be growing on the Obama administration to support 
complete investigations and accountability regarding apparent 
wrongdoing in the George W. Bush Department of Justice (DOJ).

Obama needs to be listening. The long-term success of his presidency 
might depend on it.

The New York Times on Saturday opined that Attorney General Eric 
Holder 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/opinion/25sat4.html?_r=1>should 
take a fresh look at the prosecution of former Alabama Governor Don 
Siegelman. Such a review becomes even more imperative, the Times 
notes, now that Holder has asked that charges be dismissed against 
former U.S. Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) because of prosecutorial 
misconduct in his case. Wrongdoing by prosecutors probably was at 
least as grave in the Siegelman case, probably more so, the Times 
notes:
Many aspects of the case require further scrutiny. United States 
Attorney Leura Canary is the wife of a prominent Republican political 
operative who was a strong opponent of Mr. Siegelman. Her office 
prosecuted Mr. Siegelman. Ms. Canary said that she recused herself 
from the prosecution, but questions have been raised about whether 
she actually did.

Mr. Siegelman's supporters have long argued that he was targeted by 
the Justice Department because he was Alabama's leading Democratic 
politician and stood a good chance of once again being elected 
governor. A Republican lawyer in Alabama, Jill Simpson, has said that 
she heard Ms. Canary's husband, William Canary, say that he had 
discussed the prosecution with Karl Rove, the senior White House 
political adviser.

Sources say The New York Times is not just writing editorials on the 
Siegelman case. Times reporters also are checking into the curious 
relationship between two Alabama newspapers--The Birmingham News and 
the Mobile Press-Register--and prosecutors in the Siegelman case. And 
Justice Department investigators, checking into the same issue, have 
found substantial evidence of improper connections between 
prosecutors and Alabama journalists regarding the Siegelman case.

Christine Bowman, at BuzzFlash, writes that 
<http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/analysis/726>Holder must build on 
momentum from the recent release of Bush torture memos to conduct a 
thorough cleansing at the DOJ. Like the Times, Bowman focuses on the 
Siegelman case:
One DOJ conservative ideologue who needs to be dumped immediately is 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/us/22justice.html?_r=1>Leura 
Canary, the US Attorney in Alabama who prosecuted and jailed 
Democratic Gov. Don Siegelman. (He's out and mounting an appeal now.) 
Thom Hartmann urged listeners to his April 21 radio show to call Eric 
Holder's office at 202-514-2001 and politely urge him to replace her.

Why is it critical that Obama pay attention to these calls for 
justice at Justice? Much of the good he is likely to accomplish in 
his presidency could go down the drain if he doesn't.

Veteran journalist Robert Parry has written that perhaps 
<http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2008/11/could-obama-repeat-bill-clintons.html>the
 
biggest mistake of Bill Clinton's presidency was his decision to give 
the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations free passes on 
corruption. That caused Americans to view the Reagan and Bush 
legacies in a much more favorable light than they would have if 
wrongdoing had been exposed.
In business lingo, Clinton allowed the Reagan/Bush "brand" to not be 
tarnished. And that led to the disastrous presidency of George W. 
Bush, which undid much of what Clinton had accomplished.

What does the Reagan/Bush "brand" of Republicanism stand for? It 
personifies greed, graft, corruption, income inequality, financial 
speculation, lax regulation, international cluelessness, economic 
decay, environmental degradation, and more.

Obama has said he wants to look forward and not backward. But if he 
doesn't look back and make sure wrongdoing is exposed, another 
president in the Reagan/Bush mold will come along and undo much of 
what Obama now is working to achieve.

The bottom line? If Obama doesn't get it right on justice issues, 
much of his effort in other areas is going to be wasted.



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