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Alcee Hastings, Bribery, and the House Intelligence Committee [Byron York...]
NRO.COM ^ | Byron York

Posted on 11/17/2006 2:12:55 PM PST by Sub-Driver

Alcee Hastings, Bribery, and the House Intelligence Committee Will Democrats overlook the next chairman’s past?

By Byron York

Eighteen years ago, Democratic Rep. John Conyers came to believe that Alcee Hastings, at the time a federal judge in Florida, was guilty of impeachable offenses. Hastings stood accused of conspiring to take bribes, and, although it is little remembered today, Conyers served as the chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee that investigated Hastings and unanimously recommended his impeachment. After the House voted 413 to 3 to impeach Hastings, Conyers went on to serve as one of the House impeachment managers who successfully argued before the Senate that Hastings should be convicted and removed from office.

Conyers was also the author of perhaps the most dramatic words to come from the entire impeachment saga. In the summer of 1988, after he had played a key role in drawing up the articles of impeachment, Conyers made a speech before the House in which suggested that some of the allegations against Hastings, the first black to serve on the federal bench in Florida, might have been racially motivated. But as troubling as he found that possibility, Conyers said those concerns did not change the facts of the case. And the facts pointed to Hastings’s guilt.

In the speech, Conyers looked back to civil-rights days, when corrupt judges sometimes twisted and ignored the law. “We did not wage that civil rights struggle merely to replace one form of judicial corruption for another,” Conyers said. “The principle of equality requires that a black public official be held to the same standard that other public officials are held to.…Just as race should never disqualify a person from office, race should never insulate a person from the consequences of wrongful conduct.”

(Excerpt) Read more at article.nationalreview.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: alceehastings; conyers; democrat; democrats; dnc; dncvalues; hastings; johnconyers; michigan
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1 posted on 11/17/2006 2:12:56 PM PST by Sub-Driver
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To: sauropod

review


2 posted on 11/17/2006 2:16:36 PM PST by sauropod ("Come have some pie with me.")
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To: Sub-Driver

Almost all democrats are criminals. Hastings is the tip of the iceberg.

Democrats become multi-millionaires during their Congressional careers, through every manner of well-disguised bribes and inluence peddling.


3 posted on 11/17/2006 2:19:41 PM PST by FormerACLUmember
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To: Sub-Driver

Bella Pelosi should nominate Alcee for the Head of the Intellegence Committee!


4 posted on 11/17/2006 2:21:04 PM PST by petkus
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To: Sub-Driver
A crook on the House "Intelligence" Committee. LOL! Those wascally DemocRATS are at it again.

Replacing the GOP culture of corruption with the DemocRATS' culture of corruption was a brilliant move by the voters, both dead and alive.

5 posted on 11/17/2006 2:21:34 PM PST by FlingWingFlyer (America! It's off with the desert BDUs and on with the lavender burqas!!!)
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To: Sub-Driver

I'm waiting for the New York Times to run an editorial about this corruption, like the one they just ran on John Murtha (after their silence helped him get re-elected).


6 posted on 11/17/2006 2:24:13 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: FlingWingFlyer

Wanna bet the media doesn't much notice? Can you imagine if this were the Republicans?


7 posted on 11/17/2006 2:25:53 PM PST by kjo
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To: Sub-Driver
We did not wage that civil rights struggle merely to replace one form of judicial corruption for another,” Conyers said. “The principle of equality requires that a black public official be held to the same standard that other public officials are held to.…Just as race should never disqualify a person from office, race should never insulate a person from the consequences of wrongful conduct.”

This, from a guy with a pinochle deck full of race cards up his sleeve?

8 posted on 11/17/2006 2:26:10 PM PST by digger48
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To: petkus
Bella Pelosi should nominate Alcee for the Head of the Intellegence Committee!

If he becomes head of the intelligence committee, can Bush revoke his security clearance? I'd love to see how Bella would respond to that.

9 posted on 11/17/2006 2:31:10 PM PST by SMM48
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To: petkus
Bella Pelosi

Did you coin this great new moniker, or did some one else? Either way, It's will be part of the FReeper lexicon I bet.

10 posted on 11/17/2006 2:31:54 PM PST by feedback doctor (Mark Sanford - 2008)
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To: kjo

The "voters" wanted "security" from the DemocRATS and now they're going to get it with Pelosi's boy, Alcee Hastings. Just knowing he's on the committee is enough to keep me awake at night.


11 posted on 11/17/2006 2:32:02 PM PST by FlingWingFlyer (America! It's off with the desert BDUs and on with the lavender burqas!!!)
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To: All

Victor/Victoria Pelosi, wants her crooked, yes man,
flunkie in control of Intelligence, to not only
have control over it, but to get her grudge revenge
against Harman..who just so happens to be one of
the best the Dims have, on Intelligence, and has
years and years of expirience and inside knowledge
of the various military branches, systems and
contractors....But NOOOOOOOOOOOOooooo!

Pelosi must have her bribe taking flunkie in control!


"Most ethical Congress ever!" BWAHAHAHAHAHA!


12 posted on 11/17/2006 2:34:29 PM PST by NickatNite2003
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To: petkus

Absolutely! Put this crook right in the spotlight so everyone can see what the Dems stand for!


13 posted on 11/17/2006 2:36:11 PM PST by bigbob (2)
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To: Sub-Driver
The Dems will say Alcee Hastings was not convicted of his crimes in court. He was. He was convicted in a court higher than the Supreme Court. It is not subject to Supreme Court review.

Alcee Hastings was convicted by The Senate. He was prosecuted by the House of Representatives.

Senate Removes Hastings

By Ruth Marcus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, October 21, 1989; Page A01

U.S. District Judge Alcee L. Hastings was convicted by the Senate yesterday of engaging in a "corrupt conspiracy" to extort a $150,000 bribe in a case before him, marking the first time a federal official has been impeached and removed from office for a crime he had been acquitted of by a jury.

In a solemn and tense session, the Senate voted 69 to 26 -- five votes more than needed for conviction -- to find Hastings guilty of the major charge against him and strip the 53-year-old jurist of his lifetime, $89,500-a-year position.

Hastings, Florida's first black federal trial judge, sat facing the senators as the lawmakers rose, one by one, to render their verdicts on the charge that he conspired with disbarred Washington lawyer William A. Borders Jr. to obtain the bribe.

The outcome of the proceeding -- eight years after Hastings was first accused and five years after a jury found him not guilty -- was unclear until nearly the end of the first roll call. Both the chairman, Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.), and the vice chairman, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), of the 12-member panel that heard the evidence in the case voted for acquittal. The 12 members of the panel voted 7 to 5 for conviction.

When he left the Senate after the vote on the second article of impeachment, Hastings, besieged by reporters on the Capitol steps, said, "I have no choice but to accept their judgment." But, he said, "I'm in thorough disagreement with their decision and that's all."

He said his conviction violates the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. And he criticized the process under which only 12 of the 100 senators heard the witnesses against him. Hastings also announced his plans to open a private law practice and to run as a Democratic candidate for governor of Florida next year.

"My momma had a man," Hastings, who was named to the bench by President Jimmy Carter in 1979, said of his plans to remain in the public eye. "She did not have anybody that was afraid of the system."

The Senate, in two hours of roll calls, voted on 11 of the 17 articles of impeachment. It convicted Hastings of eight of the 11 articles, finding that he engaged in the bribery conspiracy and repeatedly lied under oath at his trial and forged letters in order to win acquittal.

Hastings was acquitted on one of the perjury charges and an umbrella count that accused him of "bringing disrepute on the federal courts" through his actions. He was unanimously cleared, by 95 to 0, of a separate charge of leaking confidential information from a wiretap that he had authorized as a judge. The Senate did not vote on six of the 17 articles because it had already decided to remove Hastings from office.

Four senators did not vote yesterday because they were members of the House when it voted 413 to 3 in August 1988 to impeach Hastings. Sen. Pete Wilson (R-Calif.) was not present. Under the Constitution, conviction required the votes of two-thirds of the senators present, or at least 64 in this case.

Shortly after noon yesterday, Senate President Pro Tempore Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) announced the result. With Hastings convicted of eight high crimes and misdemeanors, Byrd said, "it is therefore ordered and adjudged that said Alcee L. Hastings be and he is hereby removed from office."

The vote on Hastings did not break down along ideological, regional, or other identifiable lines.

The 26 senators -- 21 Democrats and five Republicans -- who voted to acquit him of the major charge included some of the Senate's most conservative members -- William L. Armstrong (R-Colo.) and Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) -- and some of its most liberal -- Howard M. Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) and Alan Cranston (D-Calif.).

Sen. Warren B. Rudman (R-N.H.), a former prosecutor on the trial committee, voted for conviction and Specter, another former prosecutor on the panel, voted to acquit.

Hastings is the sixth federal official, all judges, impeached by the House and removed from office after conviction by the Senate. The case proved a particularly anguishing decision for the senators, who deliberated behind closed doors for 7 1/2 hours Thursday, because of the circumstantial nature of the evidence, the earlier jury verdict to acquit and the charges of racism.

In an eloquent plea for acquittal on the floor Wednesday, Hastings said that he did not think race was a factor in the case, and Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), a member of the House prosecution team, agreed. However, a number of Hastings supporters have cast the case in those terms.

The Senate found that Hastings had arranged with Borders, his close friend and a prominent Washington lawyer, to solicit a bribe from an FBI undercover agent posing as one of two brothers who were defendants in a racketeering case before Hastings. In return for the $150,000 -- $25,000 of which was given to Borders as a down payment -- Hastings was to sentence the Romano brothers to probation rather than prison and to return $845,000 in forfeited property.

There was circumstantial evidence that Hastings was part of the scheme, including a pattern of telephone calls between Hastings and Borders at key junctures in the Romano case, Borders's successful promise to an FBI agent to have Hastings turn up for dinner at the Fontainebleau Hotel at a specified time and a key, cryptic telephone conversation between Borders and Hastings that prosecutors contended was a coded discussion of the bribe arrangements.

But Hastings's lawyers argued that these actions, while seemingly suspicious, had other, innocuous explanations, and portrayed Hastings as the innocent victim of a scam perpetrated by Borders. There was no direct evidence of Hastings's participation in the conspiracy because the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Borders before money could be traced to Hastings.

Borders, who was convicted of the bribery conspiracy charges in a separate trial in 1982, refused to testify -- despite a grant of immunity -- before the grand jury or the House and Senate panels. He was jailed on contempt charges from Aug. 22 until yesterday for refusing to testify before the Senate committee.

Some senators said after the verdict that they found the evidence insufficient and were troubled by the earlier jury acquittal, while others took the opposite view. Senators could choose whatever standard of proof -- beyond a reasonable doubt, clear and convincing, or another measure -- they deemed appropriate.

"The facts simply led me to the inference that Judge Hastings quite clearly was involved in a scheme with Bill Borders," said Sen. Slade Gorton (R-Wash.), a member of the trial panel.

But committee Chairman Bingaman said that "the evidence, although furnishing grounds for investigation and trial, does not provide a sound basis upon which I can vote for conviction."

yitbos

14 posted on 11/17/2006 2:38:42 PM PST by bruinbirdman ("Those who control language control minds." -- Ayn Rand)
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To: Sub-Driver
Eighteen years ago, Democratic Rep. John Conyers came to believe that Alcee Hastings, at the time a federal judge in Florida, was guilty of impeachable offenses.

Not to worry. Look for Conyers and other Demo/Commies to take the position that "that was then, this is now". No harm, no foul, can't we all get along, let's just move on...

15 posted on 11/17/2006 2:41:13 PM PST by Zeppo
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To: NickatNite2003
Harmon, "who just so happens to be one of the best the Dims have, on Intelligence,"

Except when it comes to leaking the Baker Iraq Report just before elections.

yitbos

16 posted on 11/17/2006 2:42:20 PM PST by bruinbirdman ("Those who control language control minds." -- Ayn Rand)
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To: petkus

Dems have done this kind of crap before..Remember Ron Dellums?


17 posted on 11/17/2006 2:42:57 PM PST by ken5050
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To: SMM48

I doubt that Hastings could get a security clearance except for serving on the House Select Committee on Intelligence.

That's a sad commentary.


18 posted on 11/17/2006 2:46:44 PM PST by bagman
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To: Sub-Driver

Can the administration refuse to give him a clearance? I'd say it was not only justified but an imperative.


19 posted on 11/17/2006 2:48:04 PM PST by NonValueAdded (Prayers for our patriot brother, 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub. Brian, we're all pulling for you!)
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To: feedback doctor
Did you coin this great new moniker, or did some one else? Either way, It's will be part of the FReeper lexicon I bet. Bella is a good one, but I still prefer "Stretch". One of these days she is going to smile and something is going to snap...
20 posted on 11/17/2006 2:50:15 PM PST by gov_bean_ counter ( I am sitting under my cone of silence, inside a copper wire cage wearing a tin foil hat...)
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