Mar 31st, 2007 at 11:45 am by Susie
Bud Crimmins is one of the fired U.S. attorneys:
So indeed, all of us connected with this administration’s Department of Justice are being quizzed about politicization in other cases. I have been asked time and again whether this or that U.S. attorney around the country has perhaps acted or not acted based on political considerations. I know most of those U.S. attorneys, and honestly don’t think they have done anything but conduct their offices in the neutral and nonpartisan way that is to be expected of them. But the interest in these questions — which nobody seemed to have before Dec. 7, 2006 — is certainly understandable in light of recent revelations.
Put simply, the Department of Justice lives on credibility. When a federal prosecutor sends FBI agents to your brother’s house with an arrest warrant, demonstrating an intention to take away years of his liberty, separate him from his family, and take away his property, you and the public at large must have absolute confidence that the sole reason for those actions is that there was substantial evidence to suggest that your brother intentionally committed a federal crime. Everyone must have confidence that the prosecutor exercised his or her vast discretion in a neutral and nonpartisan pursuit of the facts and the law.
Being credible is like being pregnant — you either are, or you aren’t. If someone says they “kind of” believe what you say, they are really calling you a liar. Once you have given the public a reason to believe some of your decisions are improperly motivated, then they are going to question every decision you have made, or will make in the future. That is a natural and predictable phenomenon.
On Friday, a New Mexico federal grand jury returned an indictment against New Mexico Senate President Pro Tem Manny Aragon and others of conspiring to skim $4.2 million in public funds. This happens to be the culmination of an investigation supervised by my colleague David Iglesias, before he was forced to resign. It is also the same case that stimulated improper telephone calls to Mr. Iglesias from a U.S. senator and a congresswoman. It is almost a certainty that the talented and hardworking law enforcement agents and prosecutors working on this significant case will now have to battle accusations of improper political motivation behind the prosecution. There will be no real basis for it, but they will have to answer the allegations nonetheless. Before the U.S. attorneys scandal, the defense team never would have considered using those allegations. Now, it is almost a certainty that they will be raised because of the way the administration carried out the U.S. attorney dismissals.
You only get one chance to hold on to your credibility. My team, which holds temporary custody of the Department of Justice, has blown it in this case. The Department of Justice will be paying for it for some time to come. Lots of sound investigations and convictions are now going to be questioned. That is a crying shame, because most of the 110,000 employees to whom the attorney general referred in a recent news conference, are neutral, nonpartisan public servants and do incredible work. A lot of President Bush’s political appointees have done a lot of great work, too. Sadly, because of the damage done by this protracted scandal, which the administration has handled poorly at every turn, none of that good work is currently being recognized. And more ominously, the credibility of the Department of Justice may no longer be, either.
Yep. One of the most powerful (and reputedly corrupt) people in Philadelphia, state Sen. Vince Fumo, is under indictment and now his attorney is fighting it as “political.”
You reap what you sow…

One minor correction, it should read *former* Senate President Pro Tem Manny Aragon since he has been out of office for a few years. The crimes he’s accused of took place while he was still in office however. Also, he’s a greedy lawyer/politician who has carried a patina of corruption for decades. Glad to see him going down. A former mayor of Albuquerque involved in this whole scam has pled guilty and is singing like the proverbial bird.
[…] figured it out from a brief radio report. Tom Hilton at No More Mister Nice Blog agrees, as does Bud Crimmins via Susie at Suburban […]