Update: 11/19 9am
Holder hedges on GOP request for disclosure/recusal information
Attorney General Eric Holder, Team Obamas Dirty Dozen (get your trading cards here)
If youve been paying attention, you already know all about AG Eric Holder and his DOJ staffs national security conflict of interest as senior partner with Covington & Burling the prestigious Washington, D.C. law firm, which represents 17 Yemenis currently held at Gitmo.
I first mentioned it here in January and spotlighted the problem in chapter 4 of Culture of Corruption.
In fact, Holder and Covington & Burling have a lucrative niche in terrorist representation.
Im reprinting the relevant section from Culture of Corruption so you have it at your fingertips. All of this was known before Holder was confirmed as AG, which, as Ive pointed out before, makes it all the more inexplicable that 19 Republican senators Alexander (R-TN); Bennett (R-UT); Bond (R-MO); Chambliss (R-Ga); Collins (R-ME); Corker (R-TN); Graham (R-SC); Grassley (R-IA); Gregg (R-NH); Hatch (R-UT); Isakson (R-GA;) Kyl (R-AZ); Lugar (R-IN) McCain (R-AZ); Murkowski (R-AK); Sessions (R-AL); Snowe (R-ME); Specter (R-PA); and Voinovich (R-OH) cast their votes for him. Now, they are reaping what they helped sow.
Excerpted from Chapter 4: Meet the Mess Inside the Crooked Cabinet, Culture of Corruption, by Michelle Malkin (see book for footnotes)
Dont go into corporate America, First Lady Michelle Obama admonished supporters on the campaign trail. Remember? She extolled the rewards of public service over the material perks of life at a high-powered law firm. She certainly didnt take her own adviceand neither did her husbands own attorney general. If he hadnt pulled out all the stops campaigning for the president, raising money at lavish celebrity events, and offering his strategic and legal adviceand if Eric Holder had an R by his name instead of a Dhe might have served as the perfect poster boy for Mrs. Os caustic campaign against white-shoe corporate law.
After a quarter-century as a government lawyer, Holder joined the prestigious Covington & Burling business and corporate law firm. He represented a gallery of the Lefts fattest targets in Big Pharma and Big Business, defending them in fraud and discrimination cases that drove progressives mad. Holder has served both his corporate and government masters welland he has the bank account and stock portfolio to prove it. His salary jumped from under $200,000 as deputy U.S. Attorney General for the Clinton administration to more than $2 million a year as a Covington & Burling senior partner. During 2008, Holder spent countless hours away from his corporate office working for the Obama campaignraising money, fielding calls, making speeches. I hope the management committee is going to be real understanding when they see my billable hours this year, Holder joked to The American Lawyer. Its an investment, of course, and the law firm will get its political dividends later.
Holder returns to a more modest $186,000 salary as Obamas attorney general. But parting has its perks, too. The Washington revolving door pays.
Covington & Burling will make a separation payment valued at between $1 million and $5 million, plus a repayment of up to $1 million from the firms capital account, plus a retirement plan of up to $500,000. His net worth: $5.7 million. Reflecting on his past eight years raking in the dough and watching him schmooze friends and clients from his elegant new Manhattan offices, an American Lawyer profile observed: Life is good for private citizen Eric Holder, Jr. President Obama and the missus, such outspoken detractors of climbing the corporate ladder and influence-peddling, were unavailable for comment.
One wonders what the Obamas would say about Holders lucrative work for Chiquita Brands International if it had been performed by, say, John McCains top lawyer? As chief counsel for the global company, Holder won a slap-on-the-wrist plea deal to charges that it had paid off Colombian paramilitary death squads. Liberal critics of Holder point out that he used his influence as a former Clinton Justice Department official to negotiate a sweetheart deal for Chiquita. The company pleaded guilty to illegally doing business with the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia or AUC (designated as an international terrorist organization by the State Department in 2001). Chiquita admitted negotiating with and forking over $1.7 million in protection racket money to the guerillas beginning in 1997. AUC terrorists slaughtered thousands of civilians to gain control of Colombias banana fields. The company ignored the advice of outside counsel (not Holder or anyone else at Covington & Burling) to stop the illegal payments in 2003:
Must stop payments.
Bottom Line: CANNOT MAKE THE PAYMENT
Advised NOT TO MAKE ALTERNATIVE PAYMENT through CONVIVIR
General Rule: Cannot do indirectly what you cannot do directly
Concluded with: CANNOT MAKE THE PAYMENT
You voluntarily put yourself in this position. Duress defense can wear out through repetition. Buz [business] decision to stay in harms way. Chiquita should leave Colombia.
[T]he company should not continue to make the Santa Marta payments, given the AUCs designation as a foreign terrorist organization[.]
[T]he company should not make the payment.
Even after disclosing the payments to the Justice Department in the spring of 2003, Chiquita continued funneling money to the terrorists. According to the Justice Department: From April 24, 2003 (the date of Chiquitas initial disclosure to the Justice Department) through February 4, 2004, Chiquita made 20 payments to the AUC totaling over $300,000. And yet, despite knowingly and repeatedly breaking the law, not a single Chiquita official was prosecuted or jailed. The $25 million criminal fine was written off as the cost of doing business. And, stunningly, the plea agreement forged by Holder and the DOJ succeeded in protecting the identities of the executives involved in the bloody terrorist payoffs.
Putting on the best terrorist defense is a Covington & Burling specialty. Among the firms other celebrity terrorist clients: 17 Yemenis held at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility. The law firm employed dozens of radical attorneys such as David Remes and Marc Falkoff to provide the enemy combatants with more than 3,000 hours of pro bono representation. Covington & Burling co-authored one of three petitioners briefs filed in the Boumediene v. Bush detainee case, and secured victories for several other Gitmo enemy combatants in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Falkoff went on to publish a book of poetry, Poems from Guantanamo: The Detainees Speak, which he dedicated to the suspected terrorists: For my friends inside the wire, Mahmoad, Majid, Yasein, Saeed, Abdulsalam, Mohammed, Adnan, Jamal, Othman, Adil, Mohamed, Abdulmalik, Areef, Adeq, Farouk, Salman, and Makhtar. Inshallah, we will next meet over coffee in your homes in Yemen.
How sweet. One of the class of Yemeni Gitmo detainees that Falkoff described as gentle, thoughtful young men was released in 2005only to blow himself up (gently and thoughtfully, of course) in a truck bombing in Mosul, Iraq, in 2008, killing 13 soldiers from the 2nd Iraqi Army division and seriously wounding 42 others.
The Senate shrugged at the glaring conflict of interest Attorney General Holder presents in handling Gitmo legal issues. Lieutenant Colonel Gordon Cucullu, author of Inside Gitmo: The True Story Behind the Myths of Guantanamo Bay, makes the ethical problem plain:
As a senior partner, he undoubtedly had significant input on what kind of charity cases his firm picked up. He surely knew that dozens of lawyers from his firm were among the 500-plus civilian lawyers representing the 244 or so remaining detainees (on top of military-court-appointed defenders). Even now, his Covington colleagues continue to allege rampant torture at Gitmo. Theyre fighting hard to have detainees tried through the US court systemessentially given the same rights as US citizens. And their arguments and plans hinge largely on having Holder issue a bad report card.
Recent polls indicate that at least half of Americans disagree with affording the detainees legal rights on US soil. Will they have the same access to Holders ears as his former colleagues do?
The White House says that Holder will formally recuse himself from charging decisions and prosecutions affecting any of Covington & Burlings clients, but he will have unfettered oversight over Obamas order to close the facility within a year. Moreover, theres a gaping loophole in the Obama administration ethics rules that will allow Holder to participate in decision-making despite his conflicts of interests if he can show that his participation in a matter outweighs an appearance or actual conflict of interest. If you think Holders professional connections wont have any influence on the outcome of these decisions, I have a Colombian banana farm to sell you.
Among the other eyebrow-raising cases Holder took on at Covington & Burling:
*Signing up to assist then Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich in a casino license battle in 2004. The states gaming board had approved the construction of a disputed casino, overruling the recommendation of the boards staff. Rank-and-file investigators had qualms over the casino developers alleged mob ties and over Blagos appointment of a crony fund-raiser to oversee the states deal-making with the casino. The fund-raiser, Christopher Kelly, turned out to be a business partner of convicted Obama/Blago confidante and real estate mogul Tony Rezko. The Chicago Sun-Times reported that Rezko held an option to lease a hotel site next to the proposed casino site. Holder held a public press conference with Blago to announce his role as a special independent investigator into the matter. The dog-and-pony show produced no report, but Holder and his law firm had contracted to conduct the probe for a tidy $300,000. Somehow, the foul-smelling case slipped Holders mind; he failed to mention it in his Senate Judiciary Committee questionnaire.
*Forging a massive settlement for Purdue Pharma, manufacturer of the addictive painkiller OxyContin, with the state of West Virginia in 2004. The state accused the drugmaker of deceptively marking OxyContin as safe and effective for minor pain. The firms marketing practices, the state maintained, led to West Virginia users becoming addicted to the drug. State attorney general Darrell McGraw Jr., a Democrat, filed suit. In an article entitled, Why Eric Holder Represents Whats Wrong with Washington, liberal columnist David Corn described Holders pivotal role in negotiating a settlement that spared executives a criminal trial:
This suit was a serious threat to the drugmaker, and it eventually called in Holder. And in November 2004, the morning that the case was about to go to trial, Holder helped negotiate a settlement. Working in the judges chambers in West Virginia, he forged an agreement under which the firm would have to pay $10 million over four years into drug abuse and education programs in West Virginia. Purdue would not have to admit any wrongdoing. (Days earlier, the firm had offered the state about $2 million to settle; McGraw had turned down Purdue and had not bothered to produce a counter-offer.)
The settlement was a big win for the company. Ten million dollars was a piddling amount compared to what Purdue was reaping from OxyContin sales. More important, this settlement helped keep the lid on the firms criminal activities. There would be no trialand no public release of documents or testimony about the companys actions, which were already being investigated by federal prosecutors. In late 2002, the feds had begun an investigation of Purdue, with the first of what would be nearly 600 subpoenas for corporate records related to the manufacturing, marketing, and distribution of OxyContin.
In May 2007, the company and its three top executives pleaded guilty to federal charges of fraudulently marketing OxyContin by claiming it was less addictive, less subject to abuse, and less likely to cause withdrawal symptoms. Purdue and the three execs agreed to pay fines of $634.5 million.
*Brokering a settlement for pharmaceutical kingpin Merck, which had been besieged by multiple state lawsuits over Medicaid overbilling and doctor kickbacks involving four popular drugs. Merck admitted no wrongdoing, paying $671 million to make whistleblowers, state probes over their pricing, and bribery charges go away.
In his tony Manhattan offices, Holder did what any corporate lawyer worth his multi-million-dollar salary and benefits package would do: Represent his clients to the best of his ability. But in his first tours of duty as a government lawyer, Holder repeatedly put politics above the national interest. During his Senate confirmation hearing, Holders infamous roles in issuing pardons to Clinton crony Marc Rich and clemency to convicted bank robbers and bombers of the Puerto Rican terrorist group, FALN (Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional), received the most heat. In both cases, the government servant played a far more active role in intervening than he ever cared to admit.
The Los Angeles Times added new information to the terrorist clemency case by disclosing before the hearing that Holder had repeatedly pushed some of his subordinates at the Clinton Justice Department to drop their opposition to the FALN commutations. Holder, the paper determined from whistleblower interviews and documents, played an active role in changing the position of the Justice Department to facilitate President Clintons commutations for 16 violent terrorists from the group. The FALN had waged a bloody bombing campaign that maimed dozens of New York City police officers and resulted in the deaths or injuries of scores of other victims. Holder forged ahead with his meddling on behalf of the president against the protests of the FBI, NYPD, federal prosecutors, and victims.
The nations top law enforcer did not pay the bombing victims or their families the courtesy of notifying them of the decision to release the unrepentant terrorists until after the clemencies were publicized in the media.
As for the Marc Rich case, former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy accurately described it as one of the most disgraceful chapters in the history of the Justice Department. Congressional investigators called it unconscionable. Fugitive commodities trader Marc Rich, on the run for evading nearly $50 million in taxes, found the best lawyer he could buy: former Democratic White House counsel and intimate friend of Eric Holder, Jack Quinn. Despite his denials, memos showed Holder knew of the pardon in advance, failed to notify prosecutors and the FBI that it was coming, and even gave Quinn public-relations advice on getting out the legal merits of the case. The evidence clearly shows Holder and Quinn violated department protocols and colluded to keep the Justice Department out of the pardon deal.
Appearing contrite at his Senate confirmation hearing, Holder confessed:
Ive accepted the responsibility of making those mistakes. Ive never tried to hide. Ive never tried to blame anybody else.
What Ive always said was that, given mygiven the opportunity to do it differently, I certainly would have.
I should have made sure that everybody, all the prosecutors in that case, were informed of what was going on. I made assumptions that turned out not to be true. I should have not spoken to the White House and expressed an opinion without knowing all of the facts with regard to that matter.
That was and remains the most intense, most searing experience Ive ever had as a lawyer. There were questions raised about me that I was not used to hearing.
Ive learned from that experience. I think that, as perverse as this might sound, I will be a better attorney general, should I be confirmed, having had the Mark Rich experience.
It was something that I think is not typical of the way in which Ive conducted myself as a careful, thoughtful lawyer. As I said, it is something where I made mistakes, and I learned from those mistakes.
Washington, alas, was determined to repeat the mistakes of the past. The Senate, including 19 Republicans, confirmed Holder on February 2, 2009.
I wrote about this here yesterday:
http://danleereport.net/2009/11/17/is-us-attorney-general-eric-holder-scratching-backs-at-our-expense/
He should be prosecuting himself for anti-trust violations...
Thursday, November 19, 2009, 3:19 PM
The_Anchoress
Love Sarah Palin or not, one has to admit the press is so undone by her that they are both aggressive and passive-aggressive in their hate, and they betray themselves continually in all sorts of ways. They betray their snobbism; they betray their spitefulness, and most emphatically, they betray the fact that our fourth estate is populated mostly by perpetual adolescents.
Our press, with a few exceptions, is largely made up of people who, at age 14, decided they were sophisticates who knew everything about everything, and therefore had no need to ever think deeply, change an opinion or grow.
They betray their hate, their spitefulness and their perpetual adolescence very succinctly, here, in this piece about Palins spectacularly well-attended book signing in Michigan:
County music played as Palins tour bus, painted to resemble the cover of her book, pulled up to the Woodland Mall in Grand Rapids.
I just cant tell you how good it is to be back in Michigan, the former Alaska governor . . . Alaska and Michigan have so much in common, with the huntin and the fishin and the hockey moms, and just the hardworking, patriotic Americans who are here, Palin said.
Ah, those rubes lining up were treated to country music; other politicians work the midwest to the strains of the prentender-everyman Bruce Springsteen, who is at least authentically cool. And then here comes former Governor Palin Buckshot Annie and her too-large family, droppin er gs and layin on the hardworking, patriotic Americans schtick with a graceless trowel.
Because Barack Obama never talks about hardworking Americans. Hillary Clinton never talked about patriotic Americans. And no other politician, except Bill Clinton (all the time), Hillary Clinton (when she was pandering) and Barack Obama (when he was pandering or playing) has ever dropped their gs while talkin to the crowd.
Or, more correctly, none of those politicians have ever had their dropped gs wholly spelled out in quotes or transcripts, as is routinely done to Sarah Palin. It was occasionally done to President Bush, too, most notably when the Democrats won the 2006 elections and Bush (unlike either Obama or Mrs. Pelosi in the recent election) manfully admitted the loss, calling it a thumpin.
To our rather well-paid press-folk, dropped gs are indicators of low intellects, lower incomes and the lowest social strata. Dropped gs are so uncool. Except when theyre savvy and slick. In the screwed up world of the press, fake dropped gs are clever, and authentic dropped gs are campy.
The press is so busy embracing urban irony, they do not realize the disoriented, out-of-touch clowns they have become; just like those out-of-touch Beltway players they so love to promote. The clown-politicians are going to be voted out of office in the next two elections, barring fraud. And the clown-press is going to then stump around in their floppy clown feet, sadly beeping their horns and shaking their heads, wondering how it all fell apart.
The American public was not paying much attention to the press, back when they were systematically talking down President Bush day after day, with their incessant negativity and outright distortions, and so people could be swayed. They were swayable in 2008, when the press spent every last dime of its credibility convincing America that Barack Obama was the smartest man ever to run for president, that he was sort of God, that he was stepping down to accept the presidency.
The American public trusted the press, who told them that Cowboy president was a moron who had made the world (except for England, France, Germany, Australia, Israel, India, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Eastern Europe, Japan, China, Taiwan, Philippines, Georgia, Ukraine, Lebanon, Turkey, Kurdistan and the entire continent of Africa
) totally hate us, and whose administration was cloaked in secrecy.
So, persuaded by the positivism of the press, Americans voted for a charismatic fellow whose college transcripts, friendships and background -and seemingly all of his instincts- were cloaked in a secrecy untroubling to incurious media; a guy who promised the most transparent government ever, and sensible government economic policies. The guy who, since becoming president, has revealed himself to be -not the open, bi-partisan, coalition-building, transparent tower of transcendent brilliance the American people thought they were getting- but a flip-flopping, thin-skinned, secretive, teleprompter-dependent, far-left radical spend-a-holic who talks incessantly and does not listen, who cant tell us where the money has gone; a guy who says pretty much anything that comes into his head, whether it is true or not, and figures thats the new history; a uniter who has locked the opposition party out of every policy debate (there actually is no debate, anymore) and has weakend our influence abroad (by becoming the worst sort of ally) and our security at home, has disrespected, snubbed or betrayed every one of our allies, cozied up to tyrants and done little in a bare year besides bankrupting the country, dissing his predecessor at every opportunity, making us wonder what sort of government he is fomenting, and whether he is in fact, actively working to tear the country apart.
In less than a year, the medias choice for President, the guy they carried on their shoulders into the White House along with his most glamorous, most brilliant, most stylish First Lady, ever has a surprising number of people missing George W. Bush. Obama even has some conservatives, myself among them, missing Bill and Hillary Clinton.
The American people have realized that they were played -by the very press charged with the public trust of information-gathering and presentment- into a bait-and-switch. They are not going to listen to the press, anymore. They will no longer be swayed by stuck-up 14 year olds telling them who is stupid and who is smart, because theyve seen just how incredibly stupid the common-sense-deficient smartest people in the world tend to be.
The press has not had President Bush -who was insufficiently impressed by their intellectual conceits- to use as an outlet for their boundless disdain, They need an outlet, because they are frustrated. They cannot allow themselves to admit that they -they! who are so smart, so clever- have been utterly hoodwinked by the supposed-genius of Barack Obama (who said yesterday that accounting is an inexact science) and they need a reassuring stupid focalpoint on which they can direct their scorn and reassure themselves that they are smart, and cool and not at all parochial and closed off.
Palin is that outlet, now Bush is gone, and the putzes in the press cant mock, spite, roll-their-eyes or seethe enough about her. But their mugging and huffing and mocking is not working, this time.
At Instapundit, Glenn Reynolds notes that a few Certified Palin Haters in the pundit class have become so appalled by the behavior of the press that they are themselves backlashing against it:
DAVID HARSANYI ON SARAH PALIN: All you haters out there force me to root for her. and The widely read blogger and purveyor of all truth, Andrew Sullivan, was impelled to blog 17 times on the subject of Palin on the same day Americans learned that the Obama administration awarded $6.7 billion in stimulus money to non-existent congressional districts which did not merit a single mention. To see what is in front of ones nose demands a constant struggle, I guess.
Megan McArdle: Yall well know that I really dont like Sarah Palin. In fact, more than one of you has yelled at me about this. And I find the whole schtick about how the media is just a bunch of elitist hooligans who are out to get her really grating. Thats why I really wish the media wouldnt act like, well, a bunch of elitist hooligans who are out to get her. Or, in some cases, crazed conspiracy theorists.
The 14 year olds in the press had better pay attention: when even those sympathetic to their disdain are alludin to their hatin and their pettiness an their excessive fussin, they risk playin right into Palins graspin, social-climbin and impermissible ambitions.
Whatever Palins weaknesses, and she does have them, the outsized disdain of the press for this woman Camille Paglia has called a natural on the political stage, is backfiring on them, and to her advantage.
Related:
Fred Thompson: Obama has no heart for victory in Afghanistan
Ed Morrissey: So much for Resetting relations with Russia
Malkin: Sullivans psychosis and Imagine if Bush (or Palin) talked like this
Melissa Clouthier: Mental illness
Jules Crittenden: Nuts