Please get your facts straight, even if Newsweek does sloppy
reporting..   The State Troopers did in fact find Wooten Tasared his
step-son, did drive while Drinking Beer while on duty, and did shoot
that Moose...   So when Newsweek says

>>> The Palins later raised allegations about Wooten

They are misreporting the facts and lying...  Who says so???  The
Alaska State Troopers investigation...

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24325497-5012748,00.html

http://www.adn.com/politics/story/476430.html

>>> Wooten recently gave his union permission to release the entire 
>>> investigative file, all 482 pages and hours of recorded interviews.

"The record clearly indicates a serious and concentrated pattern of
unacceptable and at times, illegal activity occurring over a lengthy
period, which establishes a course of conduct totally at odds with the
ethics of our profession," Col. Julia Grimes, then head of Alaska
State Troopers, wrote in March 1, 2006, letter suspending Wooten for
10 days. After the union protested it, the suspension was reduced to
five days.

>>> She warned that if he messed up again, he'd be fired.

"This discipline is meant to be a last chance to take corrective
action," Grimes wrote. "You are hereby given notice that any further
occurrences of these types of behaviors or incidents will not be
tolerated and will result in your termination."

It's nearly impossible to know whether other complaints have come in
about Wooten in the last two years. His personnel file is
confidential. But the fact he remains on the force is an indication
that he hasn't had the sort of trouble that Grimes warned against.

Grimes declined to comment, as did various troopers involved in the
investigation.

'... NOT WITHOUT A BLEMISH'

As the investigation got under way in 2005, Wooten was in the midst of
a bitter divorce from Palin's sister, Molly McCann. The couple was
fighting over custody of their two young children. Accusations flew
from both sides.

Troopers eventually investigated 13 issues and found four in which
Wooten violated policy or broke the law or both:

• Wooten used a Taser on his stepson.

• He illegally shot a moose.

• He drank beer in his patrol car on one occasion.

• He told others his father-in-law would "eat a f'ing lead bullet" if
he helped his daughter get an attorney for the divorce.

Beyond the investigation sparked by the family, trooper commanders saw
cause to discipline or give written instructions to correct Wooten
seven times since he joined the force, according to Grimes' letter to
Wooten.

Those incidents included: a reprimand in January 2004 for negligent
damage to a state vehicle; a January 2005 instruction after being
accused of speeding, unsafe lane changes, following too closely and
not using turn signals in his state vehicle; a June 2005 instruction
regarding personal cell phone calls; an October 2005 suspension from
work after getting a speeding ticket; and a November 2005 memo "to
clarify duty hours, tardiness and personal business during duty time."

On Sep 10, 3:39 pm, PoliticalAmazon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Newsweek goes for Troopergate.  Besides the fact that the judge
> ordered Palin and her family to quit harassing the brother-in-law,
> they have continued to do so, which defies an order from the court.
>
> Send her porker ass to jail.  She is not above the law.
>
> ---------
>
> http://www.newsweek.com/id/158140
>
> 'TROOPERGATE'
> Warned by the Court
> A judge repeatedly told Palin and family not to badmouth her sister's
> ex
>
> Mark Hosenball
> Newsweek Web Exclusive
>
> Updated: 7:36 PM ET Sep 9, 2008
>
> An Anchorage judge three years ago warned Sarah Palin and members of
> her family to stop "disparaging" the reputation of Alaska State
> Trooper Michael Wooten, who at the time was undergoing a bitter
> separation and divorce from Palin's sister Molly.
>
> Allegations that Palin, her husband Todd, and at least one top
> gubernatorial aide continued to vilify Wooten—after Palin became
> Alaska's governor and pressured state police officials to take action
> against him—are at the center of "Troopergate," a political and
> ethical controversy which has embroiled Palin's administration and is
> currently the subject of an official inquiry by a special investigator
> hired by the state legislature.
>
> Court records obtained by NEWSWEEK show that during the course of
> divorce hearings three years ago, Judge John Suddock heard testimony
> from an official of the Alaska State Troopers' union about how Sarah
> Palin—then a private citizen—and members of her family, including her
> father and daughter, lodged up to a dozen complaints against Wooten
> with the state police. The union official told the judge that he had
> never before been asked to appear as a divorce-case witness, that the
> union believed family complaints against Wooten were "not job-
> related," and that Wooten was being "harassed" by Palin and other
> family members.
>
> Court documents show that Judge Suddock was disturbed by the alleged
> attacks by Palin and her family members on Wooten's behavior and
> character. "Disparaging will not be tolerated—it is a form of child
> abuse," the judge told a settlement hearing in October 2005, according
> to typed notes of the proceedings. The judge added: "Relatives cannot
> disparage either. If occurs [sic] the parent needs to set boundaries
> for their relatives."
>
> A spokesperson for the law firm that represented Palin's sister, now
> known as Molly Hackett, said Hackett's lawyer would have no comment
> because custody issues are still in litigation. Other lawyers
> representing Sarah Palin in connection with the state legislative
> investigation—which is examining whether she abused her powers as
> governor in trying to have Wooten fired or disciplined—had no
> immediate comment. Palin's official gubernatorial spokeswoman did not
> respond to e-mails and a phone message requesting comment.
>
> Wooten's lawyer also did not respond to messages requesting comment.
> John Cyr, executive director of the State Troopers union, who
> testified at the divorce hearing and is acting as Wooten's spokesman,
> said Wooten has avoided giving media interviews because he wants to
> avoid criticizing his former relatives (to date, Wooten has granted
> just one interview, to CNN).
>
> As the divorce case dragged on, the judge's concern about family
> "disparagement" appeared to deepen. In an order signed Jan. 31, 2006,
> which granted Palin's sister and Wooten a final divorce decree, Judge
> Suddock continued to express concern about attacks by Palin's family
> on Wooten. The judge even threatened to curb Palin's sister's child
> custody rights if family criticism of Wooten continued.
>
> In monitoring how a joint-custody arrangement worked out, the judge
> said in his order that he would pay particular attention to problems
> noted by a "custody investigator," specifically "the disparagement of
> the father [Wooten] by the mother [Molly Hackett, Sarah Palin's
> sister] and her family members."
>
> "It is the mother's [Hackett's] responsibility to set boundaries for
> her relatives and insure [sic] they respect them, and the
> disparagement by either parent, or their surrogates is emotional child
> abuse," Judge Suddock wrote. He added that: "If the court finds it is
> necessary due to disparagement in the Mat-Su Valley [the area north of
> Anchorage where Palin and her extended family live], for the
> children's best interests, it [the court] will not hesitate to order
> custody to the father and a move into Anchorage." Cyr, the union
> official, said that to his knowledge, no such move was ever ordered.
>
> The "Troopergate" special investigator, former prosecutor Steve
> Branchflower, was hired by a unanimous vote of state legislative
> leaders. His mission: to investigate whether Palin fired Walter Monegan
> —her State Public Safety Commissioner (and the official in charge of
> the State Police)—when he refused to dismiss or open a new
> disciplinary investigation of Wooten after receiving complaints about
> him from Gov. Palin and her husband Todd. Initially, Palin indicated
> she would cooperate with the investigation. But more recently, a
> lawyer hired by the state to represent her in the case asked the
> Alaska Attorney General to request that a state personnel board
> conduct its own special-counsel inquiry and demanded that the state
> legislature back off.
>
> At the heart of the continuing "Troopergate" flap is evidence that
> despite Judge Suddock's warnings back in 2005 and 2006, Palin and her
> husband continued to make disparaging allegations against Wooten, even
> after she went to the statehouse. During her first security briefing
> with a representative of the state police, Palin and Todd were both
> asked whether they knew of any potential physical threats against
> them, according to a deposition taken from one of Palin's top aides
> following her election in Nov. 2006. Both said the only threat they
> were aware of was posed by Wooten.
>
> The Palins later raised allegations about Wooten with public-safety
> chief Monegan, according to an account Monegan gave to The Washington
> Post. Last February, a top Palin gubernatorial aide named Frank Bailey
> criticized Wooten in detail in a conversation with another senior
> state-police official. Bailey repeated previous charges made by the
> Palins against the trooper—including allegations  that he had Tasered
> his stepson; driven a cop car while holding a beer; and shot a moose
> without a permit (charges which resulted in his suspension for five
> days without pay as a trooper). But Bailey also made a new allegation:
> that Wooten might have submitted a questionable workers' compensation
> claim. The state police recorded Bailey's conversation, and Palin
> later released it after Monegan's sacking.
>
> Palin and Bailey both said that Palin did not instigate Bailey's
> complaints about Wooten to the police. Bailey, who is now on paid
> leave from his state job, has said that in trashing Wooten to state
> police management, he had "overstepped my boundaries … I should not
> have spoken for the governor, or Todd, for that matter."
>
> In a press release issued last week by her new lawyer, Palin continued
> to attack the character of Wooten—still serving as a state trooper in
> Palin's hometown of Wasilla. The release repeats allegations that
> Wooten had threatened members of her family, including her father,
> with violence; that Wooten had threatened to "bring" Palin and members
> of her family "down;" and that Wooten had once been the subject of a
> court-imposed domestic-violence protection order. A court filing by
> Wooten's lawyer indicates that within months of being issued, the
> violence protection order was dismissed.
>
> URL:http://www.newsweek.com/id/158140
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