Broad Coalition Of  Organizations And Individuals Launch "Restore 
Justice At Justice" Campaign

Demands Redress For Those Politically Prosecuted Under Bush 
Administration, Beginning With Governor Don Siegelman And Paul Minor

Today a broad coalition of organizations and individuals dedicated to 
an honest and accountable government launched "Restore Justice At 
Justice," www.RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com, a campaign to clean up the 
Department of Justice's sad record of political prosecutions under 
the Bush Administration.  These organizations, representing hundreds 
of thousands of members, have a strong track record of spurring 
action on crucial issues.  The coalition has sent a letter to 
Attorney General Eric Holder, available on the Restore Justice at 
Justice website, requesting that he quickly investigate and identify 
those targeted, and vacate their convictions, beginning with Alabama 
ex-Governor Don Siegelman and Attorney Paul Minor.

The coalition asserts that under the Bush administration, the 
Department of Justice was driven by ideology, and prosecutions were 
often used to settle scores and intimidate the opposition.  The GOP, 
at the direction of Karl Rove, used the DOJ to target political 
enemies including Democratic contributors and those who were a threat 
to GOP electoral gains and big business interests.  The Department 
was used as an arm of the White House to destroy these Democrats. 
 This political profiling resulted in the criminal prosecution of 
many on the GOP list, including Don Siegelman and Paul Minor.  

"Last week, Attorney General Holder ordered the dismissal of charges 
against Senator Ted Stevens because of prosecutorial misconduct," 
said coalition spokesperson Brad Friedman, the renowned crusader for 
electoral reform states: .  "Because targeted political prosecutions 
also constitute prosecutorial misconduct, AG Holder should apply the 
same standard to Siegelman, Minor, and all the others identified as 
targeted by the Bush DOJ," said Friedman. "Siegelman and Minor were 
targets of political profiling, which is as unjust as racial 
profiling. President Obama and Attorney General Holder promised to 
return justice to the Justice Department and free the Department from 
politics. We demand that they do so."

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., one of the signers at 
RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com, has stated publicly that "Paul Minor is 
an innocent man" who was targeted by Karl Rove, prosecuted by 
"crooked Justice Department prosecutors," and sentenced to "a 
breathtaking 11-year sentence for non-violent, white collar crimes he 
did not commit," while Minor's wife of 41 years lies in a hospital 
dying from cancer, unable "to utter the word l-o-v-e to her husband." 
Kennedy summarizes the case this way:  "Karl Rove's crooked henchmen 
at the U.S. Justice Department have turned this dignified gentleman's 
life into a horrible ordeal that is a disgrace to American 
democracy."  **Late Monday, Sylvia Minor died without her husband by 
her side after the DOJ opposed Minor's bail pending appeal and a 
compassionate furlough.

The campaign is spearheaded by VelvetRevolution.us 
<<http://www.velvetrevolution.us/>http://www.velvetrevolution.us/> , 
a national non-profit affiliated with over 150 organizations. The 
coalition urges other organizations that care about justice to sign 
on to this campaign by sending an email to 
RestoreJusticeAtJustice(at)velvetrevolution.us.  Individuals can sign 
on at www.RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com.

Source: www.RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com 
<<http://www.RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com>http://www.RestoreJusticeAtJustice.com>


CONTACT:


THE CENTER FOR RESPONSIBLE PUBLIC RELATIONS
Press Contact: Ilene Proctor
Direct Line: (310) 858 6643
E-mail: proc...@artnet.net


The Siegelman Case


The New York Times
Editorial
April 25, 2009

<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/opinion/25sat4.html>http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/opinion/25sat4.html

Attorney General Eric Holder's recent decision to drop all of the 
charges against Ted Stevens,
the former Republican senator from Alaska, because of prosecutorial 
misconduct raises an
important question: What about Don Siegelman? A bipartisan group of 
75 former state attorneys general has written to Mr. Holder asking 
him to take a fresh look at the former Alabama
governor's case. He should do so right away.

Mr. Siegelman was convicted in 2006 on dubious corruption charges. He 
spent nine months in
prison before being released on appeal, and he faces years more 
behind bars. He has long insisted
that the case against him was politically motivated and that 
prosecutors engaged in an array of professional and ethical 
violations.

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 [as he had been in 
2002: a victory that was stolen from him--MCM.]
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.

In the case of Mr. Stevens, who was convicted of felony charges for 
failing to disclose gifts
and services, Mr. Holder was so troubled by the way the prosecution 
was carried out that he
decided to drop the case entirely.

According to the Siegelman camp, at least three of the same officials 
who have been accused
of prosecutorial misconduct in the Stevens case were involved in Mr. 
Siegelman's prosecution.
If true, this alone would seem to justify a thorough investigation of the case.
From: mimi kennedy
Sent: Sunday, April 26, 2009 1:15 AM
To: <mailto:lett...@nytimes.com>lett...@nytimes.com
Re: Governor Don Siegelman's prosecution by Bush's Justice Dept.

As a child, I heard about writers, artists and politicians in 
Communist Russia being imprisoned and hospitalized, careers ruined, 
for false reasons, because they were considered a threat to the 
government's Party.

It can and did happen here. Don Siegelman's second term win as 
governor of Alabama was mysteriously flipped in the wee hours by a 
"corrected" electronic opti-scan count in a single county behind 
closed doors.  His indictment, by Rove-friendly U.S. Attorneys for 
"crimes" never charged against Republicans who behaved similarly, was 
followed by conviction and humiliating treatment - strip search and 
solitary confinement. The press took little notice. Rove was 
successful in "disappearing" a popular southern Democrat he'd 
targeted, early on, as a threat to his GOP southern strategy. This 
case is one of the worst abuses in the U.S. Attorney scandal and 
Justice Dept corruption. It must be reviewed so nothing like it can 
ever happen again.

Mimi Kennedy
Chair, Progressive Democrats of America
Van Nuys, CA   91406


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