"...not...every violation of the law, is a crime." Mukasey punts

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Of COURSE I'm pissed. I can barely move through life without bumping up against SOMETHING illegal and find that the only way I feel safe FROM THE AUTHORITIES is to stay hidden in my apartment as much as possible, yet these bastards can openly and blatantly break long standing laws over the period of years and skate off into the sunset.

If I remember correctly (mostly reliable, but I HAVE been known to mix things up), Cenk offered the same take on Mukasey that he did with Gates..."better than his predecessor"... I don't see it. I can't honestly think of an Attorney General who has demonstrated his main mission of protecting America and it's citizens since Bobby Kennedy. Since then, it's been "cover the government's ass" which appears to be the Prime Directive.

 

Mukasey: No prosecutions in Justice hiring scandal

Former Justice Department officials will not face prosecution for letting improper political considerations drive hirings of prosecutors, immigration judges and other career government lawyers, Attorney General Michael Mukasey said Tuesday.
 
Mukasey used his sharpest words yet to criticize the senior leaders who took part in or failed to stop illegal hiring practices during the tenure of his predecessor, Alberto Gonzales.

But, he told delegates to the American Bar Association annual meeting, "not every wrong, or even every violation of the law, is a crime. In this instance, the two joint reports found only violations of the civil service laws."

Other intrusions of Bush administration politics into department hirings and firings remain under investigation. Mukasey said he is awaiting reports on the firing of nine U.S. attorneys in 2006 and the hiring practices in the department's civil rights division.

The political controversies prompted Gonzales' resignation last year.

An internal investigation concluded last month that for nearly two years, top advisers to Gonzales discriminated against applicants for career jobs who weren't Republican or conservative loyalists.

The federal government makes a distinction between "career" and "political" appointees, and it's a violation of civil service laws and Justice Department policy to hire career employees on the basis of political affiliation or allegiance.

Yet Monica Goodling, who served as Gonzales' counselor and White House liaison, routinely asked career job applicants about politics, the report concluded.

Mukasey, who once served as a federal judge in New York, said the Justice Department has taken steps under his leadership to prevent a recurrence of the hiring scandal.

"I have made repeatedly clear...that it is neither permissible nor acceptable to consider political affiliations in the hiring of career department employees," Mukasey said.

If the problems were to recur, Mukasey said he is confident department employees would speak up.

That did not happen during Gonzales' tenure, he said. Gonzales appeared unaware of the political hiring process outlined by Goodling and his then-chief of staff, Kyle Sampson, the report said.

"There was a failure of supervision by senior officials in the department. And there was a failure on the part of some employees to cry foul when they were aware, or should have been aware, of problems," Mukasey said.

The ABA has been at odds with the Bush administration on a range of issues, including treatment of prisoners suspected of terrorist ties and the need for a federal law to shield reporters from subpoenas.

Mukasey said that on the issue of politics in his department, there was no disagreement with the lawyers' group.

"Professionalism is alive and well at the Justice Department," he said.

Some candidates for career Justice Department jobs who were excluded because of politics could be invited to apply for new positions, Mukasey said.

He also ruled out firing or reassigning those who were hired under the now-discarded evaluation process.

"Two wrongs do not make a right," he said. "People who were hired in an improper way didn't themselves do anything wrong."

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Can you believe that NONE of the applicants - prosecutors, immigration judges and other career government lawyers - had no clue that the questions they were being asked were illegal? That they were taking part in an unethical process? That they never got a "heads up" to the favorable (to them) hiring practices going on at DOJ?

Give. Me. A. Fucking. Break.

And can you believe that there are still people out there who think that Mukasey will give "due diligence" to the AG9 scandal? That he would pursue violations from the White House?

Fuck you Pelosi. Fuck you Reid. Fuck ALL the Democratic leaders.

There is NO ONE left to protect America....

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Videotape shows man beaten by Denver Police

The Denver District Attorney's office has dropped its case against a man who was facing three years in prison for assault, after 9Wants to Know obtained and showed prosecutors a videotape of the man's arrest.

"The thing that kind of made everybody gasp was when the officer took the back of the guy's head and shoved it to the ground on his face," said TV producer Greg Prinkey.

The Denver Police Department has also started an internal investigation.

On the video, which was shot outside Coors Field on the home opener of the Colorado Rockies game on April 4, undercover Denver Police detectives hit, kick and choke John Heaney.

"They both unloaded on me and I started seeing stars and the whole thing was just bam, bam, bam after that," said Heaney. "Someone had a chokehold and they were all on top of me and I couldn't breathe and I thought I was going to die."

After three detectives had Heaney facedown on the ground with his hands behind his back, the video shows undercover Det. Michael Cordova pull Heaney's hair, lift up his head and slam it into the ground, breaking two of his teeth on the cement.

Heaney says he had to have two teeth capped.

"I didn't know my teeth were broken until I was spitting out loose pieces," he said.

Heaney was charged with second-degree assault on a police officer and criminal mischief after one of the officer's sunglasses were broken during the arrest. The officers claim Heaney rode his bicycle through a red light at 20th and Blake Streets and then punched Cordova in the nose.

Heaney, who didn't know the men were undercover police officers, says he only flipped Cordova's Rockies hat off of his head.

Heaney says he was biking past Coors Field on April 4 to visit his terminally ill mother in a nursing home nearby.

Detectives Cordova and James Costigan, both on the Denver vice-narcotics squad, were working undercover in a scalping ring. Although 9NEWS is naming the officers, we have chosen not to show their faces to protect their undercover identities.

A local sports TV crew was videotaping the opening day of the Rockies when they saw and videotaped the arrest.

"The thing that kind of made everybody gasp was when the officer took the back of the guy's head and shoved it to the ground on his face," said TV producer Greg Prinkey. "He was not resisting. It was totally uncalled for."

When Prinkey saw men beating Heaney, he ran in to stop the fight. The video shows that's when the officers yelled, "Hey, we're cops! Get the (expletive) out of here!"

Prinkey gave the videotape of the arrest to 9NEWS.

"Had I not been rolling the camera, and no one else was rolling the camera, it might have just been swept under the rug," Prinkey said.

Before the Denver detectives knew about the videotape, they wrote reports and were deposed in court about what happened. Both officers said Heaney was throwing "wild punches" at them, hit the officers in the face and chest and continued to attack them, even when they had him on the ground.

Under oath, Cordova and Costigan also denied knowing anything about Heaney's broken teeth.

Heaney's attorney Lonn Heymann asked Cordova in court, "Was there a point at which somebody slammed his face into the ground?"

Cordova answered, "Absolutely not."

"How did Mr. Heaney's front teeth get broken," asked Heymann.

Cordova replied, "I have not a clue."

"When you start seeing that the officers are making arguments that are directly contradicted by this videotape, it raises questions about how believable the police officers are," Heymann told 9NEWS.

The Denver Police Department did not interview any civilian witnesses in their investigation of Heaney's arrest. However, 9NEWS interviewed three witnesses who all say Heaney did not hit the officers.

"I never saw the bicyclist make any sort of swing at either of the officers," said videographer Jason Jewett.

"He definitely didn't start it, that's for sure," said Nick Heckman, a still photographer for MileHigh Sports Magazine, who took four pictures of the arrest.

A hospital report and X-rays of Cordova's nose show it was not bleeding or broken after the arrest. Cordova claims it was red and swollen.

The Denver Police Department said Monday it is conducting an internal investigation of the arrest.

"The investigation is underway, and no conclusions should be drawn until all of the facts are available and the totality of the circumstances can be considered," said Division Chief of Investigations Dave Fisher. "Everyone in our country is initially entitled to a presumption of innocence, even police officers."

In addition to the injuries to his teeth, Heaney says he suffered neck and shoulder injuries.

Cordova and Costigan are still on duty while the investigation is underway. Once the police investigation is complete, it will be sent to the Denver District Attorney's office for review.

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When is this shit going to STOP??? When are the people of America going to realize that they are not being PROTECTED by these thugs, they are being ASSAULTED by them.

Fuckin' cops.

by MedfordTim on 08/12/2008 01:48:29 PM EST


or democrats grow balls. My money is on skiing in Hades.

by hazmat on 08/12/2008 03:12:35 PM EST

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Haz, I can't even see it as a Dem/Rep matter. Hell, it isn't even a Lib/Con matter, because I have witnessed self-described 'Liberals' be just as quick to pick up the putchforks and torches and join the villagers.

Our system of "justice" is rotten to the core, from the bottom-feeding scum who would justify tasing (in the past month, Google shows 5,150 hits for the word. One. Month.) to the carrion eaters at the top, protecting their own.

But we have the nice officers and DA's on Law & Order and CSI who help week after week; don't confuse the viewers with reality or facts. 

This is an ignored element in the discussion of America's problems. The Right reflexively deflects ANY criticism of The Law and the Left only focuses on the highest of profiled cases. Meanwhile, millions of people are in a nightmare system spurred on by greed and sadism.

I pity the GOOD police; those who remember that they are dealing with human beings, don't manipulate evidence, lie, cheat, steal, break the same laws they bust other people for...I'm sure there are one or two in this great land. Maybe.

I haven't met them.

by MedfordTim on 08/12/2008 04:38:15 PM EST

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And I'm totally with you bro. Here's the thing. Do I get depressed about it? I have hope that Barack Obama is going to set some of this shit straight, but I'm not holding my breath. I look at the precedents that have been set, especially with the privatization of the armed forces (blackwater) and I don't see an easy way out. I sometimes wonder if the damage that has been done is permanent. I look at the shit Mucasey pulls on a steady basis and I'm speechless. Its as if the generation that taught us all about the constitution in civics class up and decided it was all a crock of shit anyway so why bother with process and laws. If it can be labeled as partisan it must be bad. I don't know what goes through the heads of republicans these days. They're really out to lunch. Sometimes I think the republicans look at the communists in china and think to themselves, "hey maybe they're onto something". I can't read the tea leaves to tell whether Barack is going to restore this country, or whether he's just another corporate tool. Sometimes I gotta admit, the man gives me pause. Its gotta start with election reform. Absent that I think we're all fucked and there was never any way out of this downward spiral.

by hazmat on 08/12/2008 05:00:06 PM EST

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...Required service.

I believe that every able American, upon finishing high school,  should be required to perform service to the country for two years.

And I don't mean just military service. There are many places where young Americans can serve, and learn, and thereby become stakeholders in America. Healthcare, land management, infrastructure maintenance, etc.

World War 2 was a time of everyone pulling together and being part of the whole for the betterment of all. Sacrifices were made, but it was all for a greater good.

Now what if we could engender that spirit absent of war? If it's in the name of building a better country; economically, spiritually, ecologically, etc., we can change the attitude of "me against them" in this country of ours.

By this required service (see Germany, Israel) we can show that "we the people"  are more important than just the pursuit of greediness.

We can  turn this country around in under a generation when we teach ourselves to give a rat's ass about one another.

Empathy is the gravy train to paradise. 

by Andrew Koenig on 08/12/2008 05:50:24 PM EST

[ Parent ]

And I think its a fantastic idea. But election reform is  crucial.

I was thinking about one of your ideas from a thread a while back Andrew, regarding getting some coalition of independents going. Cenk mentioned something the other day on the show that was relevant to this, the idea that we've eliminated faction from our system, dating back to John Adams. This struck a chord with me because I was once an exchange student in Germany, and I remember having a fascinating conversation with my host father there, in which I asked him whether he was more liberal or conservative. He replied that he had no idea what I was talking about. There are at least 3 major parties there, and several minors, and they all get representation by proportional voting. Can you imagine that? What a different world we would be living in if Bush had to work to build a coalition to bring us into war, instead of simply having a 51/49 seat majority in the senate.

by hazmat on 08/12/2008 06:01:17 PM EST

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The amount of hubris and blatant disregard for the rule of law is unbelievable.

This quote really got me :"Two wrongs do not make a right," he said. "People who were hired in an improper way didn't themselves do anything wrong."

Huh? How about sending them through the interview process again and seeing if they are actually qualified?

And Mukassey suggesting that people will speak up if this happens again. Really? 

So the threat of punishment for breaking the law is no longer the deterrent? Tattle tails are?

 Okay folks, go out and murder if you like, but if you do, someone's going to tell on you. (I realize that's an extreme example, but I wish to point out the ludicrous nature of Mukassey's argument.)

Please for the love of God, impeach these fuckers now! 

 

by Andrew Koenig on 08/12/2008 03:11:14 PM EST


will be an infamous one in American political history.  Hell, shouldn't we make t-shirts with that line?

"...not...every violation of the law, is a crime."

Come to think of it, why not have people in prison make them?

I'd pay $20 for the irony alone.

by ihavenobias on 08/12/2008 06:17:18 PM EST


I actually agree with this statement. When I was arrested at a protest I told the reporter that I broke a law but did not commit a crime.

However in the case of the people at the justice department, they are definitely criminals. 

by Andrew Koenig on 08/12/2008 07:36:32 PM EST

[ Parent ]
The law can be wrong. For example, with regard to pot (and not, I don't use it, just alcohol for me, and not often at that).

But the way he's using it here is just enraging...truly terrible. Like I said, it'll go down in infamy.

by ihavenobias on 08/12/2008 07:39:34 PM EST

[ Parent ]

 

I understand completely. Context is everything. I don't expect to get dinged for jaywalking on an empty street, but I see how such a law would come in handy on a 4 lane busy road.

It's when the authority figures cross that 4 lane, heedless of traffic and the devastation they leave behind, have the gall to then proclaim, "Move along, nothing to see here, nothing happened," which makes me feel like an inhabitant of an ant farm, moving the same piece of sand back and forth every time someone shakes things up. Nothing seems to get accomplished yet we're scrambling faster than ever to keep things together.

I'll compromise with you on your mandatiry service idea - keep the military component out of it. Change existing laws to prevent anyone under 21 from joining the military. The need for shelter and a job which drives many people into the military will be covered by the public service job and they will have time to experience some life before giving it away to people like Bush. Deal?

The next time some employer gets hauled into court because they refused to hire someone based on <insert discriminatory practice here>, they will be able to say, "Sure, I knew what I was doing was illegal, but I was simply weeding out undesireables like the Justice Department did. Not every violation of the law is a crime, your honor."

I feel so...helpless... 

by MedfordTim on 08/12/2008 08:43:33 PM EST

[ Parent ]

Of course the cocksucker...(sorry, I am angry) Mukasey is not going to take any action.  The field is set. The damage is done. They have their hacks in place. His mission is not to reverse it or screw it up. IT HAS BEEN SUCESSFUL. The Rove strategy is in place. He, Bush via (Rove)  has stacked the courts with political operatives.  Did anyone see the smile on the face of Speedy Gonzales as this dick sucker MuCrazy was making his decision known? Its on Huff. The bastard (speedy) looked almost orgasmic. He knows his ass is covered.

MuCrazy needs to be added to the list of lawbreakers; Pure and simple, he is covering the ass of the regime.  He is like Roberts and the other NAZI Bush appointed; a political hack. 

Every move this regime has made is based on politics.  They give a shit less if the rule of law is kept consistant or if the country prospers. They are obscessed with keeping the power at any cost. 

by psyche2 on 08/12/2008 07:49:13 PM EST


I guess I'm confused.

American Heritage Dictionary:
crime
1) An act committed or omitted in violation of a law forbidding or commanding it and for which punishment is imposed upon conviction.
2) Unlawful activity: statistics relating to violent crime.
3) A serious offense, especially one in violation of morality.
4) An unjust, senseless, or disgraceful act or condition: It's a crime to squander our country's natural resources.
crim·i·nal  
1) Of, involving, or having the nature of crime: criminal abuse.
2) Relating to the administration of penal law.
 2a) Guilty of crime.
 2b) Characteristic of a criminal.
3) Shameful; disgraceful: a criminal waste of talent.

I guess I'm trying to figure out how, in this case, breaking the law is not a crime and these perpetrators are not criminals that should be subjected to the rule of law.

"Like lipstick on a pig"

by TJD on 08/13/2008 09:25:23 AM EST


It does seem like the Bush Administration gets by with just repeating something over and over long enough for the media to move on to the next sensationalist topic.  Justice seems so far out of reach in this climate. 

by desertpear on 08/13/2008 01:33:57 PM EST

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