-Caveat Lector-

http://www.salon.com/news/col/cona/2001/01/16/ashcroft/print.html


Ashcroft's tough Sell

A segregationist group is banking on the hard-on-crime attorney general
nominee to drop a murder conspiracy case against one of its own.

By Joe Conason


Jan. 16, 2001 | As <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/john_ashcroft/">John
Ashcroft</A> seeks confirmation by his former colleagues in the
Senate, the nominee for attorney general cannot afford the
slightest taint of extremism. His ultraconservative record on
such issues as abortion, affirmative action and civil rights has
already stimulated intense controversy. And opponents of his
nomination have sharply questioned the Missouri Republican's
racial attitudes because of his opposition to a Federal judgeship
for African-American jurist <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/01/08/ashcroft/index.html">Ronnie
White</A> and his <A
HREF="http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/SouthernPartisanIndex1999.htm#Ashcroft">endorsement
of the Southern Partisan,</A> a racist, pro-Confederate magazine
which has praised the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

Now Ashcroft has been asked to explain why he met last fall with
Thomas Bugel, the president of the militantly racist <A
HREF="http://www.cofcc.org/">Council of Conservative Citizens
</A> and a veteran leader of segregationist groups in the St.
Louis area.

In the midst of his hard-fought, unsuccessful Senate reelection
campaign, Ashcroft sat down with Bugel at the Spirit of St. Louis
Airport on September 22. Their meeting took place only weeks
before Ashcroft's Democratic opponent, Governor Mel Carnahan, was
killed along with his son and campaign manager in a plane crash.
Bugel wanted to talk with the senator about the case of Dr.
Charles "Tom" Sell, a local dentist under indictment for plotting
to murder an FBI agent and a federal witness. Over the past two
years Bugel and other leaders of the white supremacist group have
been agitating for the release of Sell, a longtime CCC member who
has advertised his dental services on Baum's local radio program.

They have succeeded in getting Ashcroft, Sen. Christopher Bond,
R-Mo., and other legislators to write letters to the Justice
Department seeking an investigation of the unusual circumstances
under which Sell has been held in federal custody for most of the
past three years without trial. "As is typical in these types of
cases, the senators made inquiries to the appropriate federal
agencies for more information and that information was all sent
to the federal bureau of prisons," said Bush transition office
spokeswoman Mindy Tucker.

According to Tucker, the meeting between Ashcroft and Bugel ended
after "approximately 10 minutes." Tucker said that the then
senator took no subsequent action on the Sell case. She said
Ashcroft "would not have met with [Bugel]" if he had been aware
of Bugel's affiliation with the CCC.  Yet that denial isn't fully
credible, given Bugel's longtime prominence as an agitator
against racial integration in Ashcroft's home state, where the
CCC maintains both its national headquarters and an active local
chapter. Bugel is no obscure figure in St. Louis. Between 1987
and 1993 he led a white militant faction on the city's school
board, fighting against implementation of a judicially-ordered
busing plan. During that period, when urban school integation
became the hottest political issue in Missouri, Ashcroft served
as state attorney general and governor.

These days, however, Bugel's cause célèbre is the strange matter
of Dr. Sell, a dentist whose friends (and former patients)
include Gordon Baum, the "chief executive officer" of the
national CCC. In May 1997, the dentist was arrested in his office
by FBI agents on charges of Medicaid fraud. Later that year, the
FBI was approached by a St. Louis couple who made a stunning
accusation against Sell and his wife Mary. They claimed that the
Sells had tried to hire them to murder both the FBI agent who had
arrested Dr. Sell and a former employee of the dentist who was
the chief witness against him in the fraud case.

Expanding its investigation, the FBI secretly taped six hours of
conversations between the Sells and the other couple that winter.
A St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter who later listened to those
tapes described them as "incriminating." The Sells were indicted
for murder conspiracy in April 1998, and Mary Sell later pled
guilty and implicated her husband in the alleged plot.

More than two years after his indictment, however, Tom Sell has
yet to come to trial. During most of that time he has been held
in a federal prison hospital in Springfield, Mo. The U.S.
attorney in St. Louis says that psychiatric examinations of the
dentist show that he is mentally ill and therefore unfit to stand
trial.

But Dr. Sell, who insists he is both innocent and sane, has
refused medication with anti-psychotic drugs that the government
believes would make him fit for trial. During this lengthy legal
standoff, Dr. Sell and his supporters have accused prison guards
of "torturing" him with beatings, scalding water and long periods
of shackling.

While the CCC hasn't officially taken up Dr. Sell's cause, its
leaders have lobbied Missouri's Senate and congressional
delegations on his behalf, according to Baum and Bugel. "We as an
organization have never made any efforts to be involved in Dr.
Sell's plight," insists Baum, who said that the government's
treatment of the dentist has been "obscene." The CCC chief also
says "everything has been done by individuals, and they've
probably kept the CCC out of it."

Nevertheless, members of the St. Louis CCC chapter are actively
involved in promoting Sell's cause. A Dec. 22 "news update" on
the chapter's Web site welcomed Ashcroft's nomination in late
December with an item headlined "Our Ship Has Come In." The same
article went on to suggest that the prospect of Ashcroft as
attorney general meant that "the whole tragic sequence of the
Carnahan plane crash seemed to have a Higher Purpose."

That article also noted that Dr. Sell's friends had gotten
Ashcroft to help the dentist, but added that "those efforts had
to be put on the back burner when his 2000 reelection campaign
for Senate began." Ashcroft's providential ascendancy, according
to the article, "will likely mean that some time soon after Jan.
20, the Feds will drop any efforts to indict" Dr. Sell.
(Actually, he is already under indictment; the writer evidently
meant that Ashcroft would drop the charges against him.)

There is no proof that Ashcroft promised anything to the CCC, an
organization that was denounced by his campaign last year during
the controversy over the senator's interview in the Southern
Partisan. Despite the pro-Confederate views he expressed in that
interview, Ashcroft has taken pains to dissociate himself from
the kind of racist and nativist positions taken by Baum and
Bugel.

Ashcroft probably remembers the acute embarrassment suffered by
his Mississippi colleague, <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/trent_lott/">Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott,</A> and Georgia Rep. <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/bob_barr/"> Bob
Barr,</A> when their <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/col/cona/1998/12/22cona.html">connections
with the group</A> were exposed during the president's
impeachment. Both Lott and Barr claimed that they had been
unaware of the CCC's racism when they met with the group's
leaders -- an alibi that few took seriously.

Ashcroft's apparent claim that he didn't know about Bugel's ties
to the CCC strains credulity. As both governor and attorney
general, Ashcroft took a strong stand against the "judicial
despotism" of court-ordered school integration in St. Louis at a
time when Bugel led the local opposition to busing. When Missouri
legislators tried to increase black representation on the city
school board by mandating district elections, Bugel opposed the
bill and Ashcroft vetoed it.

During that era, Bugel's leadership of the Metro South Citizens
Council, a local offshoot of the CCC, was heavily publicized in
the St. Louis media. The CCC's ties to Southern segregationist
groups and individuals, including Louisiana racist <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/david_duke/">David
Duke,</A> also got copious coverage. Bugel and his clique were
prominent supporters of <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/pat_buchanan/">Patrick
Buchanan's</A> insurgent candidacy in the 1992 Missouri caucus,
when Ashcroft was backing incumbent <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/directory/topics/president_bush/">President
George Bush.</A>

So it does seem unlikely that Ashcroft didn't know who Bugel was
when they met last September to discuss the Sell case. And it
seems curious, too, that a tough anti-crime politician like
Ashcroft, who has rarely if ever spoken out on behalf of criminal
defendants, would suddenly manifest concern for a man accused of
conspiring to murder a federal agent. He still has some
explaining to do.


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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