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Bush, Ashcroft imitate Clinton, Reno in blocking probe of Boston FBI
Manchester, NH Union Leader ^ | January 22, 2002 | Robert Novak

Posted on 01/22/2002 3:53:43 AM PST by RJCogburn

Bush, Ashcroft imitate Clinton, Reno in blocking probe of Boston FBI

REP. DAN BURTON’S House Government Reform Committee hearing, scheduled for Wednesday but postponed until early February, will continue months of rancor between old Republican comrades. George W. Bush and John Ashcroft have given an excellent imitation of Bill Clinton and Janet Reno by withholding information from Congress. Indeed, they have surpassed their Democratic predecessors in defying the legislative branch.

While President Clinton was trying to undermine investigations of his own campaign finance abuses, President Bush has ruled against the Burton committee’s access to old scandals unconnected to him. The Bush team has seemed to back away from an earlier blanket rejection of all congressional subpoenas, but its claim to invoke executive privilege on a case-by-case basis is suspect. Incredibly, it refuses to give up documents about the FBI’s Boston office condoning law-breaking.

More than FBI abuse or executive privilege is at stake. The Bush White House’s cavalier attitude toward Burton’s subpoenas presaged inept handling of the Enron scandal. Its insistence on secrecy about Vice President Dick Cheney’s energy task force stems from the same root as its attempt to permit a Republican national chairman to double as a registered federal lobbyist. That root is arrogance of power, which infects administrations without regard to party or ideology.

Nobody is more distressed by this arrogance than Dan Burton, a true-blue conservative Republican from Indiana who wanted no fight with his administration. “It just devastates me,” Burton told me. “There is nobody who supports George W. Bush more than I do.” Nevertheless, he insists his investigation “really needs to be done” and cannot be blocked by government lawyers.

The blockage stunned Burton and his staff last summer when they sought government documents in two areas: first, then Attorney General Reno’s rejection of Justice Department recommendations to investigate Clinton campaign scandals; second, FBI misuse of mob informants in Boston decades ago. The message from Attorney General Ashcroft and White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales was blunt: Congress never again will have access to any documents reflecting deliberations inside the executive branch.

During a heated Burton Committee hearing Dec. 13, Justice Department Criminal Division Chief of Staff Michael Horowitz modified this hard line by promising a case-by-case analysis. But it soon became clear that no case ever could meet the test. If FBI abuses in Boston failed, what case could succeed?

In Boston, Joe Salvati went to prison for 30 years on murder charges because of lies under oath by star FBI informant Joe Barboza; the FBI knew Salvati was innocent but wanted to protect Barboza. Stephen Flemmi allegedly committed murders over two decades while informing for the FBI and was not prosecuted. The same is true of another FBI informant and alleged killer, Whitey Bulger, who remains at large. Burton wants to know why killers were protected.

“I believe that congressional access to these documents would be contrary to the national interest,” Bush said Dec. 12 while invoking executive privilege. Burton’s response in a Jan. 3 letter to Ashcroft: “It eludes me how it is in the national interest to cloak this dark chapter of the Justice Department’s history in secrecy.”

Reading ample correspondence between Burton and government lawyers makes the Bush team’s intransigence look identical to Clinton’s. Indeed, a Dec. 19 letter from Assistant Attorney General Daniel J. Bryant (a former Republican congressional staffer) appeared to defend Attorney General Reno’s refusal to cooperate with Burton. Bryant suggested that Reno had satisfied the committee with an oral interview, which in fact was wholly unsatisfactory.

For Bush’s Justice Department to align itself with Janet Reno is drenched in irony. James Wilson, the Burton committee’s chief of staff, worked for Michael Chertoff in the 1995 Senate investigation of Whitewater. Chertoff, assistant attorney general running the criminal division, today clashes head-on with Wilson. As a tough prosecutor, Chertoff is regarded by former Capitol Hill colleagues as the real source of this intractable policy.

Burton has come under attack from some conservatives because of praise from Democratic Reps. Henry Waxman and Barney Frank for opposing the pretensions of executive privilege even when a Republican President is responsible. Those critics want Republicans in Congress to accept and actually imitate the arrogance that habitually comes with executive power.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial
KEYWORDS: gagliardi; masslist; pusser
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To: Clarity
"He can waive the privilege anytime he wants to "

And if he does so too freely he will lose their open and honest input.

41 posted on 01/22/2002 1:44:49 PM PST by mrsmith
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To: Clarity
Well boo hiss! I expect more than a big belly laugh from you Mister! :) I want solid criticism I can refute, or bow to.

But still, I'm rethinking my position.

It's not I think the FBI incapable of doing two things at once, it's that I question the wisdom of internal navel gazing, finger pointing, and clownish congressional grandstanding right now.

I think this 30 year old case of FBI abuse/corruption, etc., like the one Attorney Dunn is instigating for his Egyptian client (the student who didn't really have a pilot's radio in his hotel room on Sept 11), should be fought in a court of law, NOT in congress.

Believe me, I'm struggling not to blindly support Bush/Ashcroft. They will make mistakes, I know that...but their motive here is not CYA..it's what they think best for the country. The second I think they are acting to cover up their own illegal acts is the minute I get off the Bush/Cheney train.

Back to the Egyptian guy. The FBI got him to confess the pilot's radio was his. A lie. Now Dunn, one sharp lawyer, is asking the judge to investigate how the FBI coerced a confession from the kid. It's gonna be hell to pay if the judge finds the FBI did illegally charge him, and Johnny Walker's lawyer uses that information to accuse the FBI of the same tactics in getting Walker to talk.

So....I'm not nearly as concerned about 30 year old FBI misdeeds,as I am the present. And I don't want Dan Burton's committee investigating either one.

42 posted on 01/22/2002 2:02:03 PM PST by YaYa123
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To: YaYa123
Funny MR Salvatore is still alived, as of yesterday and I am sure that he doesn't consider the corruption of the FBI 30 years ago in the long past.

Now the families of the two other convicted with the perjured testimony that died might consider it long past.

However, the FBI agent who helped pull this off, about summed it up. Whatcha want me to do cry.

Me I want him under the jail.

I want the FBI Cleaned up and its power curtailed.

I don't want them holidng anymore Bar B Ques for a long time.

43 posted on 01/22/2002 2:33:13 PM PST by dts32041
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Comment #44 Removed by Moderator

Comment #45 Removed by Moderator

To: Clarity
Former FBI Special Agent John Connolly - the agent in charge of the informants from 1975 to the early 1990s - is awaiting trial on charges that range from bribery to the possibility that information he supplied to Bulger led to the deaths of other FBI informants.

Seems there is already a strong disincentive against corrupt "input".

Unless a larger problem is evidenced from his trial, and/or the civil suits by others wrongly imprisoned, where is the unpunished corruption?

46 posted on 01/22/2002 6:08:51 PM PST by mrsmith
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Comment #47 Removed by Moderator

To: Clarity
Without some evidence of further corruption, what is Burton's reason for looking for it?
The known problem, so far, has been addressed.

The Executive doesn't have fourth amendment protections, but if not a "probable cause" standard, it needs better protection from the Congress than "because we want to".

48 posted on 01/22/2002 6:26:42 PM PST by mrsmith
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Comment #49 Removed by Moderator

To: RJCogburn
White House OKs access to mob files from Hub FBI

"The lawyers can read the documents kept in Justice Department files but cannot make copies."

50 posted on 03/09/2002 6:26:38 AM PST by mrsmith
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