Fired official asked Palin about her car seat use with Trig
 | Anchorage Daily News
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/226/story/53678.html              Todd
Palin talked with over a dozen state officials, many of them
repeatedly, in his crusade to get a state trooper fired who he
considered to be a bad cop, a dishonest person and a threat to the
Palin family, according to his sworn statement given Wednesday to a
legislative investigator.


The 25-page statement from Gov. Sarah Palin’s husband, in response to
questions submitted by the investigator, shows that Todd Palin's
efforts started before his wife became governor and accelerated during
the first 19 months of her administration.

He also suggested there was bad blood between the governor and fired
Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan over two other matters:


-- An inquiry from Monegan to the governor about whether she once
failed to put her Trig, her infant, in a car seat while she was
driving.


-- The unavailability of a state trooper airplane for the governor's
use when traveling to the Alaska's rural areas.


On the car seat matter, Monegan sent an e-mail to the governor on June
30, 12 days before he lost his job, that said: "Via a soon-to-be-
retiring legislator, we received a complaint that had you driving with
Trig not in an approved car seat; if this is so that would be awkward
in many ways."


The governor fired back from her private e-mail account: "I've never
driven Trig anywhere without a new, approved carseat. I want to know
who said otherwise — pls provide me that info now."


Todd Palin, in his sworn statement, said this was a "false rumor," and
that the governor was a passenger in a truck, "on a private farm road
without traffic at low speed."


On the trooper airplane, "It seemed that whenever Sarah needed this
plane, it was unavailable," Todd Palin said. "We were concerned that
the Department of Public Safety was retaliating against Sarah for
selling the Murkowski jet that Department of Public Safety officials
enjoyed using." In 2007, the governor sold a jet her predecessor,
Frank Murkowski, bought in a controversial defiance of the
Legislature.

Todd Palin was waging the campaign against his ex-brother-in-law,
State Trooper Mike Wooten, who had divorced the governor’s sister in
2006 and who is involved in an on-going custody fight.


Two investigations — one by the Legislature and one by the state
personnel board — are under way over whether Gov. Palin or members of
her administration abused their powers in pushing for Wooten’s firing,
and whether their efforts resulted in the governor's dismissal of
Monegan in July.


The Legislature ordered its investigation in late July, and until this
week Todd Palin and officials of the governor’s administration
resisted subpoenas to tell what they know about Troopergate. Palin’s
statement Wednesday comes after a state judge last week refused to
invalidate the subpoenas.


In his statement, Palin is unapologetic about his efforts to get
Wooten fired, but he says he doesn’t think those efforts had anything
to do with Monegan's dismissal. He said his understanding is that
Monegan lost his job due to a "dispute with the governor and her staff
over budget issues and failure to fill trooper vacancies."


In his statement, Palin repeatedly discusses his quest to get Wooten
dismissed, but said he never told Monegan to fire Wooten. He said
Wooten threatened Palin's father-in-law, bullied people as a trooper,
drove in his trooper car after drinking, improperly used his trooper
car to shuttle his kids and falsified a workers' comp claim. Wooten
was suspended for five days in 2006 after troopers investigated
complaints against him.


"I had hundreds of conversations and communications about Trooper
Wooten over the last several years with my family, with friends, with
colleagues, and with just about everyone I could — including
government officials," Palin said.


"I talked about Wooten so much over the years that my wife told me to
stop talking about it with her."


He said by taking his concerns to Monegan he was following the
instructions regular citizens get for complaining about troopers.


"There is absolutely nothing improper about lodging concerns about
Trooper Wooten with Monegan or his predecessor — complaints about
State Troopers are supposed to go to the Commissioner," he said.


"I make no apologies for wanting to protect my family and wanting to
publicize the injustice of a violent trooper keeping his badge and
abusing the worker compensation system. The real investigation that
needs to be conducted for the best interests of the public at large is
the Department of Public Safety's unwillingness to discipline its
own."

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