Justice Department Unit Is Again the Focus of Scrutiny
The Wall Street Journal by EVAN PEREZ - April 9, 2009
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Justice Department's public-integrity section, now the subject of a court-ordered criminal probe into its pursuit of former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens, not too long ago was scrutinized for being overly cautious. William Welch, the head of the unit, was appointed two years ago to help boost the section, which handles government corruption cases. He is an aggressive prosecutor who was catapulted to department headquarters in Washington after winning plaudits on local corruption cases as a federal prosecutor in Springfield, Mass.
Prosecutors in the unit oversaw the investigation of Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff in the early part of this decade. But by a few years ago, the flow of big cases had slowed. At the same time, the Justice Department was facing a scandal over alleged political meddling under former President George W. Bush's White House. Some suggested the department was slowing cases that might be embarrassing to Republicans. Two years later, the portrayal emerging from the courtroom of U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan, who on Tuesday dismissed the conviction of Mr. Stevens, is of prosecutorial tactics so aggressive that they denied a fair trial to the longest-serving Republican senator. Todd Foster, a former federal prosecutor in Tampa and Houston and a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, questions whether the case would have been re-examined as closely if it hadn't involved a U.S. senator. "My question is what happens to the rest of us?" he asked. "What happens when the person doesn't have the resources Sen. Stevens had? What happens to those cases that don't reach the attorney general?" In the Stevens case, the judge railed against government lawyers for repeatedly withholding evidence from defense attorneys. The latest instance came to light last week when Attorney General Eric Holder decided he wanted to drop the case. Tuesday, the judge appointed a special prosecutor to investigate and bring possible criminal-contempt of court charges against six federal prosecutors, including Mr. Welch and his deputy, Brenda Morris, who led the Stevens prosecution. Ms. Morris declined to comment. Mr. Welch didn't respond to a request for comment.
Mr. Holder on Wednesday replaced the head of the Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility, whose review of the Stevens prosecution also drew fire from Judge Sullivan. A federal jury convicted Mr. Stevens on seven counts of failing to disclose certain free home renovations and other gifts from friends. His lawyer, Brendan Sullivan, cited the prosecutorial misconduct to portray his client Tuesday as an innocent man railroaded by the Justice Department. Some department officials said the missteps had drawn focus away from the facts of the case: that Mr. Stevens accepted gifts from an oil company with business before Senate committees on which he sat. The number of lawyers in the public-integrity section hovers between 20 and 30. Many cases handled in the section involve law-enforcement corruption and never gain public attention. In recent years, the section has brought cases against members of Congress for accepting bribes as well as military officers involved in bribery in Iraq-reconstruction contracts. Between 2001 and 2007, the section brought public-corruption charges against 416 people, winning 371 convictions.
Former and current officials say the division, by the nature of its work, is one of the most precarious places in the Justice Department. The officials describe Mr. Welch and Ms. Morris as longtime dedicated career lawyers. Though some critics have raised possible political motives on the part of the prosecutors, officials of both Republican and Democratic affiliation who know them dismiss the likelihood of that. The Stevens case was approved by senior political appointees at the department, under the Bush administration at the time. Laura Sweeney, a department spokeswoman, said: "Every day, prosecutors go into courtrooms around the country to hold our public officials accountable, regardless of political party. The case was investigated for more than four years. Officials at headquarters debated whether the case should be brought by prosecutors in the U.S. attorney's office in Washington. Alaska prosecutors pushed for the chance to handle the case and department officials relented, but picked Ms. Morris to lead the trial team, a decision that caused some infighting, according to officials familiar with the matter. Ms. Morris inherited many of the problems in the case, according to people familiar with the matter. But as head of the trial team, much of the blame for missteps will likely fall on her. Georgetown University, where Ms. Morris has periodically taught a summer course, says she has withdrawn from plans to teach there this summer. —Gary Fields contributed to this article. Write to Evan Perez at evan.perez@wsj.com
MLK said: "Injustice Anywhere is a Threat to Justice Everywhere"
End Corruption in the Courts!
Court employee, judge or citizen - Report Corruption in any Court Today !! As of June 15, 2016, we've received over 142,500 tips...KEEP THEM COMING !! Email: CorruptCourts@gmail.com
Most Read Stories
- Tembeckjian's Corrupt Judicial 'Ethics' Commission Out of Control
- As NY Judges' Pay Fiasco Grows, Judicial 'Ethics' Chief Enjoys Public-Paid Perks
- New York Judges Disgraced Again
- Wall Street Journal: When our Trusted Officials Lie
- Massive Attorney Conflict in Madoff Scam
- FBI Probes Threats on Federal Witnesses in New York Ethics Scandal
- Federal Judge: "But you destroyed the faith of the people in their government."
- Attorney Gives New Meaning to Oral Argument
- Wannabe Judge Attorney Writes About Ethical Dilemmas SHE Failed to Report
- 3 Judges Covered Crony's 9/11 Donation Fraud
- Former NY State Chief Court Clerk Sues Judges in Federal Court
- Concealing the Truth at the Attorney Ethics Committee
- NY Ethics Scandal Tied to International Espionage Scheme
- Westchester Surrogate's Court's Dastardly Deeds
Friday, April 17, 2009
Mr. President: Please Create a Department of Public Integrity
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(554)
-
▼
April
(55)
- Anderson's $10 Million Lawsuit Proceeds Against Co...
- Administrative Judge Francis A. Nicolai Stepping Down
- Anderson Advances, Federal Jury to Hear 'Ethics' C...
- 'Officer of the Court' Marc Dreier to Plead Guilty
- New York's Prosecutor Envy, Expanding
- The New Brown Bag: Judge Arrested in Alleged Bond ...
- Judge Voices Regrets Over Selling His Soul
- Fax Press Contacts Today !! Tell Them to Advertise...
- Let Your Voice Be Heard by NY's Judiciary Committee
- Bribe-Taking Judge Haunts Justice 23 Years Later
- Report: NYS Court System in Sad Crisis, Desperate
- Fiasco Continues With Ex-Lawyer Who Brought Down N...
- Corrupt Judicial Ethics Oversight Fuels Texas-Styl...
- Dripping Blood Brings Call For AG Andrew Cuomo's L...
- Indicted on Sex and Ethics Charges, Judge Pleads N...
- Dreier Straw Man Got Big Bucks in Lawyer Fraud
- Manhattan Lawyer Involved in Murder-Suicide, Say P...
- Our 'Officers of the Courts' Need Help
- Corrupt Court Blog Denounces Physical Threats and ...
- Harm Is From Cover-Ups and Corruption, Not Human E...
- New York State: The Kickback Capital
- WSJ: It's Rare for Prosecutors to Get the Book Thr...
- More Changes From NYS Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman
- New York's Cesspool Widens
- Mr. President: Please Create a Department of Publi...
- Will The U.S. Supreme Court Ever Address the Natio...
- DA Office Fumbles as Mortgage Frauds Score
- Another NY Good Ole Boy Charged in Pay-To-Play
- Justice NOT Served, by Process Server
- Happy Birthday to Frank...
- Jury Finds SDNY Federal Magistrate Judge Guilty of...
- GOP Lawyer Beats Head-Butt Rap
- Federal Complaint Accuses District Attorney of Cov...
- More Accountability Coming to Administration of NY...
- Another Promising Step in Reversing NY's Court Cor...
- NEWSWEEK: When Judges Behave Badly
- Newly Established Financial Crimes and Public Corr...
- More OCA Dead Wood to Go, Now Jan Plumadore
- More Fun With Dead People's Money
- Attorney Probed in Threats Against Judges, Lawyer
- Administrative Changes For New York City Courts
- Federal Judge Orders Probe of Prosecutorial Miscon...
- Fox News on Corrupt Court Guardians
- Cuomo's Brilliant; Starts Going After Corrupt "Mid...
- Federal Prosecutor Slams Two Crooked Fen-Phen Lawyers
- Feds: Judges Used System to Enrich Selves
- Consolation: Judicial Entitlement and Abuse Everyw...
- JUDGE OF THE DAY: Federal Magistrate Valerie Cooke...
- Attorneys Who Coach Fraud Like Judge Who Knew Whic...
- Ex-attorney gets maximum sentence in fatal hit-run
- Madoff's Brother Gets Some Money, and Lesson, from...
- Honest Judges Deserve Raises
- Commission on Judicial Conduct Targets Farm Hands,...
- Despite Red Flags About Judges, a Kickback Scheme ...
- Lawyer's Mistake Thinking Client Didn't Mind He Sc...
-
▼
April
(55)
See Video of Senator John L. Sampson's 1st Hearing on Court 'Ethics' Corruption
The first hearing, held in Albany on June 8, 2009 hearing is on two videos:
Video of 1st Hearing on Court 'Ethics' Corruption
The June 8, 2009 hearing is on two videos:
4 comments:
I'm from Springfield and observed the antics of Mr. Welch in this city. He conducted himself in the same corrupt manner which has been his history.
When are we going to start holding our elected officials responsible for their actions?
Don't hold your breath, the president is just another lying politician.
Is there a contact yet???
Post a Comment