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Tom DeLay’s Vindication, Texas’s Shame
National Review ^ | 09/20/2013 | The Editors

Posted on 09/20/2013 5:34:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

It is a scandal that there has been and will be no serious jail time in the matter of former Republican majority leader Tom DeLay — Ronnie Earle, the hyperpartisan Democratic prosecutor whose risible case against DeLay has just been finally thrown out by the Third District Texas Court of Appeals, richly deserves to be measured for an all-orange wardrobe.

After eleven years, the matter of Mr. DeLay’s fund-raising in the 2002 election cycle has been finally put to rest, with Mr. Earle’s case having been vivisected by Justice Melissa Goodwin, who in her quietly scathing opinion did not bother even to consider six of the eight points raised by Mr. DeLay’s defense, finding the first two sufficient to snuff out what is in theory a prosecution but is in fact a persecution.

For those who may have forgotten these long-ago events, Mr. DeLay was first accused by Mr. Earle, the chief prosecutor of Travis County, Texas, of conspiring to violate Texas campaign laws. That indictment immediately was challenged because, even if there had been sufficient evidence of wrongdoing — which there emphatically was not — it would have necessitated prosecuting Mr. DeLay for violating a law that had not yet been passed at the time he was alleged to have broken it, a clear violation of the constitutional ban on ex post facto prosecution. Knowing that his indictment was doomed, Mr. Earle scrambled to convene a new grand jury in order to secure additional charges. The second grand jury refused to cooperate and rejected Mr. Earle’s plea for a second indictment, issuing what is called a “no bill,” meaning a formal refusal to indict based on the evidence presented. Under normal Texas procedure, a no-bill document is made public on the day it is issued; Mr. Earle schemed to keep the grand jury’s rejection of his case secret until he could convene yet another grand jury. He found a brand-new one that had just been seated and, with the statute of limitations hanging over his head, wrung out of them indictments on charges of money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering after only a few hours of presenting his evidence. The refusal of the second grand jury to indict was kept secret until the third grand jury had done so. Mr. DeLay’s attorneys filed a formal complaint of prosecutorial misconduct, including the use of coercive and misleading measures in the matter of the third grand jury.

To charge Mr. DeLay with money laundering and conspiracy to commit same was a desperate maneuver never destined to stand up to final judgment. That is because to be guilty of money laundering, one must be guilty of producing the money in question through some prior felony offense. There was never any serious evidence that Mr. DeLay had done so. His alleged wrongdoing under campaign-finance laws consisted of using corporate “soft money” donations to offset “hard money” campaign donations in order to circumvent the Texas law prohibiting direct corporate contributions to political candidates. Never mind that Mr. DeLay was never convicted of any such offense — indeed, never mind that such an offense is not criminal — there was never any evidence that he had even come close to committing such a violation. The court had just thrown our Mr. Earle’s first indictment alleging that he had.

As Justice Goodwin notes in her opinion, Mr. DeLay’s political-action committee followed standard practices, segregating soft money and hard money in separate accounts. Democratic PACs operating at the same time had followed exactly the same procedures in the handling of comparable sums of money, here $190,000. As the justice writes, Mr. DeLay’s organization “did not transfer funds between these two accounts. . . . There was no evidence that [DeLay’s PACs] treated the corporate funds as anything but what they were, corporate funds with limited uses under campaign finance law.” In the court’s most damning finding, the justice writes that DeLay was prosecuted not for attempting to circumvent the law but for trying to satisfy it: “The evidence shows that the defendants were attempting to comply with the Election Code limitations on corporate contributions.”

That DeLay was convicted at all is a product of judicial incompetence at the trial-court level, also attested to by Justice Goodwin’s opinion. The jury, justifiably confused about how Mr. DeLay could be convicted of money laundering without an underlying crime producing dirty money to be laundered, sent the judge a question: “Can it constitute money laundering if the money wasn’t procured by illegal means originally?” Justice Goodwin again: “The proper answer to the question is ‘no.’ The jury’s question about the law was not answered, however.” Which is to say, the judge refused to answer an explicit jury inquiry about the fundamental legal question at stake in the case.

Mr. Earle, who was hot off an earlier failed attempt to use his office to engage in a similar political persecution of Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, promptly put Mr. DeLay’s scalp at the end of his lance and began considering a run for governor or attorney general. In the event, he would run for lieutenant governor and be defeated in the Democratic primary. He has since lapsed into well-deserved obscurity.

There are many legitimate criticisms that may be made of Tom DeLay, from some of his political choices to his appearances on Dancing with the Stars. But he is not a criminal. On the other hand, his defense team’s complaint alleging criminal misconduct on the part of Mr. Earle is persuasive. Unhappily, the same Democratic single-party rule in Travis County (Austin and environs) that allowed Mr. Earle’s circus of a case against Tom DeLay to proceed in the first place ensured that he was never held to account for his gross and shameful abuse of the public trust. Mr. DeLay did not earn his nickname, “The Hammer,” for being a nice guy, but the attempt of Texas Democrats to criminalize politics, and the decade-plus persecution of Mr. DeLay that resulted from it, is an act of corruption in the most literal sense of that word, eroding the legal and political institutions that enable democratic self-rule in a constitutional republic. Mr. DeLay has cause to celebrate today, but for the rest of us this matter, even though properly resolved at last, is a cause for nothing but shame.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: delay; nro; texas; tomdelay; vindication
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1 posted on 09/20/2013 5:34:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Suck it DA earle.

2 posted on 09/20/2013 5:42:34 AM PDT by Arrowhead1952 (The Second Amendment is NOT about the right to hunt. It IS a right to shoot tyrants.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Now that he has been acquitted, I'd like to see DeLay for President!
3 posted on 09/20/2013 5:43:45 AM PDT by FR_addict
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To: SeekAndFind

Ronnie Earle’s successor as DA in the Democrat cesspool of Austin, TX is a woman who has just finished serving time for DUI. This impaired individual said yesterday that she will pursue the case and call for a full court review, so DeLay is still being hounded by Austin Democrats.

However, the lady lush may have a problem because her Ethics Dept. is broke, but some UT Lefty lawyer will probably be happy to carry on the persecution pro bono to get his/her name in the swarmy Austin American Statesman rag.

Austin stinks. The state capital should be moved to Dallas.


4 posted on 09/20/2013 5:46:53 AM PDT by txrefugee
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To: SeekAndFind
Nice looking mugshot...


5 posted on 09/20/2013 5:47:00 AM PDT by Sir Francis Dashwood ("Arjuna, why have you have dropped your bow???")
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To: FR_addict
Malicious prosecution ?
6 posted on 09/20/2013 5:47:30 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks ("Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth.")
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To: FR_addict
Now that DeLay has been acquitted, Gov. Perry should address this issue.

Whatever happened to this crooked DA? Is he still in government? He should be fired at the least and indicted if possible.

7 posted on 09/20/2013 5:48:13 AM PDT by FR_addict
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To: Arrowhead1952

Best mug shot ever.


8 posted on 09/20/2013 5:49:14 AM PDT by mac_truck ( Aide toi et dieu t aidera)
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To: SeekAndFind

Earle, Corey, Holder. What difference, now, does it make? They are all democratic, lyimg scumbags who should all be serving jail time.


9 posted on 09/20/2013 5:50:02 AM PDT by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like it)
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To: Sir Francis Dashwood

I’ve never seen someone smile in a mugshot... DeLay is probably the first time I’ve seen it ( Unless of course, the pic was photoshopped ).


10 posted on 09/20/2013 5:51:05 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Nope. That is his mug shot.


11 posted on 09/20/2013 5:55:49 AM PDT by mfish13 (ELECTIONS HAVE CONSEQUENCES!!!!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Glad to see him exonerated. Sad to see what has happened to the Republican House without him.

This was Democrat politics pure and simple.

Earle should go to prison for a long stay.

It’s a compliment to DeLay that the Democrats saw him so effective, that the only way they could stop him, was to charge him with crimes and destroy his career.

I didn’t always agree with DeLay, but what happened to him was a serious political and felonious (IMO) crime.

Taking out a public figure at that level, should be a serious crime punishable by decades in prison.


12 posted on 09/20/2013 5:56:01 AM PDT by DoughtyOne (This post coming to you today from behind the Camelskin Curtain. Not the Iron or Bamboo Curtain...)
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To: txrefugee

BullS#!t throw away piece.....he’s been acquitted by the Supreme court...it’s over you moron!!!


13 posted on 09/20/2013 5:57:42 AM PDT by ontap (***)
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To: txrefugee
This impaired individual said yesterday that she will pursue the case and call for a full court review, so DeLay is still being hounded by Austin Democrats.

BullS#!t throw away piece.....he’s been acquitted by the Supreme court...it’s over you moron!!! oops!!!

14 posted on 09/20/2013 6:00:39 AM PDT by ontap (***)
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To: FR_addict
Whatever happened to this crooked DA? Is he still in government?

No, he didn't run for re-election after that.

15 posted on 09/20/2013 6:01:56 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: SeekAndFind
Ronnie Earle, should be indited “Abuse of Power Under the Color of Law”, a 1st Degree Felony. Then file for a change of Venue to Kerr County, Texas.
16 posted on 09/20/2013 6:08:41 AM PDT by Chief901 ("Peace is that brief glorious moment when everybody stands around reloading".)
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To: SeekAndFind

Amd will the RINOcrat GOP ever learn to FIGHT BACK??

Don’t hold yer breath.


17 posted on 09/20/2013 6:10:04 AM PDT by Flintlock ("The redcoats are coming" -- TO SEIZE OUR GUNS!!--Paul Revere)
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To: PAR35
I believe prosecutorial misconduct in Texas is grounds for a personal civil suit by Delay. Not sure what the time limitations are on that but for what he did, he surely should be sued out of existence. If not, there is an old Texas saying: He needed killing.

This was a disgrace not only because the instant charge was phony but because it took a prominent powerful GOP representative out of the equation and led to a stream of attacks by the dems both in Texas and in DC about GOP politics being corrupt. Coming from a party that knows corruption, they used this charade to impugn the integrity off all in the GOP and the rhetoric has not stopped to this day.

18 posted on 09/20/2013 6:13:52 AM PDT by Mouton (The insurrection laws perpetuate what we have for a government now.)
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To: txrefugee

“Austin stinks. The state capital should be moved to Dallas.”

The city of Dallas itself isn’t much better than Austin when it comes to liberal ideologues. I nominate Midland; a city of entrepreneurs, small independent businesses for the most part. People who know and believe in the value of hard work and self reliance. The problem is though; socialists always follow “other people’s money” as they know they can not survive on their own. So, the question is; how to keep these vampires out? Don’t know, suggestions welcome though......


19 posted on 09/20/2013 6:15:33 AM PDT by snoringbear (E.oGovernment is the Pimp,)
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To: Chief901

Now that is a plan. I’ll bet Ronnie would look woberful in bright orange and handcuffs.


20 posted on 09/20/2013 6:15:41 AM PDT by buffaloguy
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