yawn

On Oct 1, 4:50 am, "mike532 [ Republicans for Obama ]"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  Palin Implicated By Witness in ‘Troopergate’ Probe
>
> http://www.pubrecord.org/component/content/359.html?task=view
> An Alaska woman who owns a company that processes workers’
> compensation claims in the state has told an independent investigator
> that she was urged by the office of Gov. Sarah Palin to deny a
> benefits claim for Palin’s ex brother-in-law, a state trooper who was
> involved in an ugly divorce and child custody dispute with Palin’s
> sister, despite evidence that the claim appeared to be legitimate,
> according to state officials who were briefed about the conversation.
>
> Murlene Wilkes, the proprietor of Harbor Adjustment Service in
> Anchorage, had originally denied that she was pressured by Gov.
> Palin’s office to deny state trooper Mike Wooten’s claim for workers
> compensation benefits.
>
> But Wilkes changed her story two weeks ago when she was subpoenaed by
> Steven Branchflower, the former federal prosecutor who was appointed
> in July to probe allegations Gov. Palin, Republican presidential
> candidate John McCain’s running mate, abused her office by abruptly
> ousting Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan, state officials
> knowledgeable about her conversation with Branchflower said.
>
> Monegan has said he felt pressured by Gov. Palin, her husband, Todd,
> and several of her aides to fire Wooten. Branchflower’s investigation
> centers on whether Palin fired Monegan because he refused to fire
> Wooten.
>
> Palin initially welcomed the investigation, which was approved
> unanimously in July by the state’s Legislative Council, which has a
> Republican majority. However, after McCain picked Palin in late August
> to be his vice presidential running mate, national and state
> Republicans began suggesting that the investigation was a partisan
> witch-hunt against Palin.
>
> Despite pressure from the McCain-Palin campaign – and the refusal of
> Todd Palin and some Palin aides to honor subpoenas seeking their
> depositions – senior Alaskan legislators said Branchflower still
> intended to finish his report on the controversy by Oct. 10.
>
> The workers’ compensation issue is likely to be a major focus of
> Branchflower's report, according to state officials knowledgeable
> about the course of the investigation.
>
> Wilkes has a $1.2 million contract with the state to handle workers
> compensation claims. Her contract with the state was up but her firm
> was recently given a new contract--for $1.5 million--despite the fact
> that there were others who provided the state with a lower bid than
> Wilkes’s firm. One of the other applicants who submitted a lower bid
> has appealed the decision.
>
> Wilkes told Branchflower she believed it was impressed upon her from
> Palin's office that she would lose the contract if she did not deny
> the claim, state officials knowledgeable about her testimony said.
>
> Although Wooten did receive worker's compensation benefits for about
> three months, his claim was suddenly denied and he was forced to hire
> a lawyer and appeal the issue, which dragged on for more than six
> months. The adjuster who denied the benefits was Johanna Grasso, who
> used to be employed by Wilkes's firm. But it is unknown if the denial
> of Wooten's benefits was due to interference from Palin's office.
>
> According to John Cyr, the executive director of the Public Safety
> Employees Association, the union that represents Wooten and other
> state troopers, Wooten was approved for workers compensation benefits
> in January 2007. He filed for benefits due to a back injury he
> suffered when he pulled a dead body from a wrecked automobile and
> slipped on icy pavement.
>
> The same month Wooten started receiving workers compensation benefits,
> Todd Palin began following Wooten around “snapping pictures of him,”
> Cyr said.
>
> “Frank Bailey was getting people to say that [Wooten] was lying on his
> worker’s comp form,” Cyr said. “The governor’s family was following
> Mike around everywhere. They forwarded that information to the
> worker’s comp division.”
>
> Cyr said Wooten had been received his benefits checks totaling $11,000
> without any problems until “somewhere between the end of March and the
> first of April.”
>
> “Out of nowhere [Wooten’s] workers comp claim was contravened, which
> basically means he got a letter saying he wasn’t entitled to benefits
> anymore,” Cyr said in an interview. Documents show that a state lawyer
> intervened in the case. Wooten “hired an attorney and filed a
> counterclaim against the state. Eventually, in November 2007 there was
> a settlement. Part of that settlement included an operation on
> [Wooten’s] back in California. This was a serious injury and he was
> flat broke and had to file for bankruptcy because his claims were
> denied. There was absolutely a personal vendetta against this trooper
> by the governor and the governor’s staff.”
>
> However, according to documents in Wooten’s case, the trooper had a
> preexisting condition that resulted in his disability claims being
> denied.
>
> But Branchflower has obtained evidence that extends beyond Wilkes’s
> statements that shows the denial of Wooten’s benefits was due to
> Palin’s office involvement in the case, according to the officials
> knowledgeable about this aspect of the probe.
>
> Branchflower has apparently zeroed in on a routing slip dated Aug. 21—
> about a month after the ethics probe into Palin was launched—from the
> Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development shows Wooten’s
> workers comp file was pulled and sent to the attention of Mike
> Monagle, a state manager with the workers' compensation division.
>
> “Wooten, as requested,” the routing slip says, which was made out to
> the attention of “Mike Monagle.”
>
> “A request came in to return all of Wooten’s [worker’s comp] files to
> Juneau [the state capital],” according to a note and routing slip
> faxed to Cyr from the worker’s compensation division. “The person who
> asked to route the files was told the files were being copied for the
> governor.”
>
> It's unclear why Palin's office requested Wooten's workers
> compensation files or how it factors into Branchflower's
> investigation.
>
> Branchflower confronted Wilkes with evidence—including statements made
> to Branchflower by one of Wilkes's former co-workers—that showed her
> previous statements were contradicted and that Palin’s office did try
> to intervene and contacted her to ensure Wooten did not receive
> benefits for a back injury he said he received while on the job.
>
> Wilkes told Branchlower that she received phone calls and personal
> visits from Palin officials, including Palin’s husband, Todd Palin,
> and was told to deny Wooten’s application for worker’s compensation
> claims because he lied about his physical condition, these people
> said.
>
> Wilkes said Todd Palin had shown her photographs of Wooten on a
> snowmobile during the time he was allegedly unable to work as evidence
> that he was not entitled to benefits, these people said. It is unknown
> whether Branchflower has determined that any laws were broken as a
> result of Palin’s office alleged interference in her ex brother-in-
> law’s workers compensation case.
>
> Immediately after being sworn in as Governor of Alaska, Palin and her
> husband and several senior aides conducted what amounted to a rogue
> investigation into suspicions that Wooten was faking a job-related
> injury as a state trooper, according to state documents, law
> enforcement officials and former aides to Palin.
>
> The investigation was conducted using the resources of Gov. Palin’s
> office and had the goal of destroying Mike Wooten’s career with the
> Alaska state troopers, the documents and the interviews reveal.
>
> A little-noticed passage in a transcript of a conversation between
> Frank Bailey, Palin’s director of boards and commissions, and Alaska
> State Trooper Lt. Rodney Dial shows that Palin’s office had developed
> information against Wooten that was turned over to the state’s
> worker’s compensation board, purportedly to prove that Wooten was not
> too sick or injured to work.
>
> In the Feb. 28, 2008, conversation with Dial, Bailey disclosed that
> Gov. Palin and her husband had uncovered information about the trooper
> that was not publicly available and had collected statements about
> Wooten going “snowmachining” when he was out on workers comp for a
> back injury.
>
> “The situation where [Wooten] declared workers comp, but then was
> caught on an eight-mile snowmachining [sic] trip days — days after,
> you know, that — that started coming up there,” Bailey said. “So we
> collected statements that we forwarded on to worker’s comp.”
>
> In January 2007, the same month Wooten began collecting workers comp
> benefits and less than 30 days into Palin's term as governor, Todd
> Palin invited new public safety commissioner Monegan to the governor’s
> office, where Todd Palin urged Monegan to reopen the Wooten case.
> After checking on it, Monegan said he informed Todd Palin that he
> couldn’t do anything because the case was closed.
>
> In an interview with the Washington Post, Monegan said that a few days
> later, the governor also called him about the Wooten matter and he
> gave her the same answer. Monegan said Gov. Palin brought the issue up
> again in a February 2007 meeting at the state capitol, prompting a
> warning that she should back off.
>
> Last update : Tuesday, September 30, 2008
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