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Karl Rove Subpoenaed By John Conyers: 'Time To Talk'


Dude, not every thread on this board is, or needs to be, about the conspiracy theories surrounding 9/11. Got clue?
 
Dude, not every thread on this board is, or needs to be, about the conspiracy theories surrounding 9/11. Got clue?

Can't blame me for having a little curiousity, can you? Just asking.
 

Again, we argued this exact issue around and around on another thread. The fact that I don't buy what you're selling doesn't mean I haven't paid attention to the case.

PS. You know that the lawyer that you're trumpeting as "blowing the whistle" on Rove? She's changed her testimony once already, so what makes you think she's telling the truth now?

TheHill.com - GOP lawyer ties Rove to Siegelman case

You don't have to get to the jury. You only have to get to the judge. The judge filters what the jury can and can't hear. It's not as if an injustice can't happen in a courtroom. Why won't Rove testify if it is so simple that he did nothing wrong?

Would you want to appear before a group of people who you knew would do everything in their power to demonize and attack you for political gain? **** no.

And FWIW, judges have far less control over what juries can and cannot hear than you might think.

And if one is knowledgeable regarding this case, one would know that this case was thrown out twice before they "found" a judge that would see it.

Hmmmm.

This is incorrect. The fact that prosecutors withdrew particular charges, leading to dismissal by the judge, is not the same thing as having the entire case "thrown out" by a judge.

Blago wanted to pocket the money himself, didn't he? Seigleman wanted it as a donation to his lottery state education fund, not his personal bank account.

Blago wanted donations to his campaign fund. Siegelman wanted donations to his campaign fund for a particular project.

Really different, eh?


Keep this type of stuff in the conspiracy theory forum.
 

Fascinating argument; so you are saying it is NOT corrupt to shake down donors as long as you don't pocket the money but use it for a pet project or charity? :rofl
 

Whatever it is, the details cannot lead one to come away thinking that Siegleman was not witch-hunted and framed. Nothing that I've read or seen has lead me the critically think otherwise.

Of couse Dana Jill Simpson is being attacked. Aside form those who are trying to poo-poo her tesitmony, her house was set afire and she was run off of a road while driving. Not sure if it's linked, but you can't help but think there's something off here. Bottom line is that she has not had any issues with testifying under oath, yet it seems that Carl would rather not. Why is that? He could clear theair if he wishes.

Simpson, however, points to the fact she testified to Congress under oath. Though called to testify, Rove did not show up.

“Mr. Rove was subpoenaed to testify in front a Congressional committee,” said Simpson this morning during a telephone interview. “He would not testify. He did not even appear in front of Congress, which is like not showing up for a court subpoena.”

“I testified under oath in front of Congress," she added. "He won’t even show up. Now you tell me who is lying?”

The American Spectator article, "The False and the Absurd," written by Quin Hillyer, alleges that Ms. Simpson’s story has changed.

“On Thursday, the 60 Minutes website began hawking a feature to run on its show this Sunday wherein an already discredited Alabama attorney will claim that Rove asked her to photograph Democratic former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman in "a compromising, sexual position with one of his aides."

Nothing about her story even begins to stand up to scrutiny; indeed all of it spectacularly fails every basic test of common sense. A former Democratic Alabama Supreme Court justice (and sometime Siegelman adversary) who represented a co-defendant and close ally of Siegelman's in the trial that convicted Siegelman of federal bribery and obstruction charges said that the previous incarnations of the woman's oft-changing allegations "must have been created by a drunk fiction writer."

Hillyer goes on to claim that this is the first time Ms. Simpson has alleged that Karl Rove had directly asked her to be involved in finding dirt on Governor Siegelman. This allegation, however, is not true. This reporter was aware months ago of this allegation as was Scott Horton of Harper’s who provided his own account of what Simpson told him, also months ago. In addition, Hillyer cites Toby Roth as a “Republican activist” who claims to have never heard of Simpson before.

“For one thing, Simpson consistently has made claims of being a longtime, and fairly high-level, Republican activist in Alabama. But my Republican sources in Alabama say they either don't even know her or barely remember her having done some rather low-level volunteer work. On Friday, longtime activist Toby Roth said of the 2002 campaign (around which most of her allegations revolve): "I was the campaign director [for now-Gov. Bob Riley, who challenged Siegelman]. I did not know her. Never met the lady." His only contact with her, he said, came four years later when she faxed him letters demanding that one of her clients be awarded a state contract to clean up a tire dump. The contract went to somebody else, and Roth says her bizarre allegations began surfacing only after her client lost the business.”
Earlier this month, this reporter interviewed Republican party members who have known Ms. Simpson for a very long time in Alabama. Documents regarding business contracts also indicate that Ms. Simpson worked closely with Governor Bob Riley’s son, Rob Riley Jr. In addition, the Spectator fails to mention that Mr. Roth is a lobbyist for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and had close business dealings with Michael Scanlon, the lobbyist who has plead guilty to bribery and money laundering charges and Jack Abramoff, also a lobbyist and Mr. Scanlon’s mentor, who is now serving time also for money laundering and bribery charges. Both Mr. Scanlon and Mr. Abramoff have admitted to moving Choctaw casino funds into political campaigns.


The Raw Story | In exclusive interview, Alabama whistleblower says Rove trying to smear her


This is incorrect. The fact that prosecutors withdrew particular charges, leading to dismissal by the judge, is not the same thing as having the entire case "thrown out" by a judge.

Okay, guess this is wrong:

In 2004, Don Siegelman was charged with attempted bid-rigging in a case brought by US Attorney Alice H. Martin After many twists and turns, the case was thrown out by a clearly exasperated judge on grounds of insufficient evidence.

The Raw Story | Timeline: The political prosecution of Don Siegelman



Blago wanted donations to his campaign fund. Siegelman wanted donations to his campaign fund for a particular project.

Really different, eh?

Yes, they are really different. There was NO personal benefit to Seigleman, as opposed to Blago, who wanted money for HIS campaign. I'm surprised that you cannot see that.

According to Grant Woods (a lifelong Republican, co-chair of the McCain for President leadership committee, and a lifelong friend and advisor to the presumptive 2008 G.O.P. presidential candidate. Woods is also godfather to one of the McCain children) this was the motive:

Attorney General Woods has this to say about the Bush Justice Department’s prosecution of Siegelman: "I personally believe that what happened here is that they targeted Don Siegelman because they could not beat him fair and square. This was a Republican state and he was the one Democrat they could never get rid of."

From the 60 Minutes piece:

Start with the notion that the conduct that figures in the accusations is actually a crime. The basic charge is that businessman Richard Scrushy gave $500,000 to the Alabama Education Foundation, a vehicle Siegelman created to run a campaign for a state education lottery, and Siegelman in exchange appointed him to the state’s hospital oversight board.

WOODS: You do a bribery when someone has a real personal benefit. It’s that you’re exchanging an official public act for a personal benefit. Not, “Hey, I would like for you to help out on this project which I think is good for my state.” If you’re gonna start indicting people and putting them in prison for that, then you might as well just– build nine or ten new federal prisons because that happens everyday in every statehouse, in every city council, and in the Congress of the United States.

PELLEY: What you seem to be saying here is that this is analogous to giving a great deal of money to a presidential campaign. And as a result, you become Ambassador to Paris.

WOODS: Exactly. That’s exactly right.


Firedoglake » First Monday: The Siegelman Case — A Political Prosecution Exposed


All of this, and yet I haven't even discussed the kangaroo trial in which the judge had a grudge against Siegleman, the prosecutor that had recused herself (on the grounds of conflict of interest) hadn't really, and the jurors who actually had communications with the prosecution teams.

Wow, talk about justice. :doh
 
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:rofl You're really lending credibility to your argument by including crap like this. I've tried to google credible links for this, and all I've found is **** like prisonplanet. Any evidence at all that the woman involved isn't just nuts, like most of the people who are apparently hyping her tales?

Bottom line is that she has not had any issues with testifying under oath, yet it seems that Carl would rather not. Why is that? He could clear theair if he wishes.

Again,

Would you want to appear before a group of people who you knew would do everything in their power to demonize and attack you for political gain? **** no.


I don't know what you think this proves.



That's because that passage was written and is being interpreted by someone who doesn't understand the law.

1) The trial in 2004 and the trial in 2006 were on completely unrelated issues.

2) Whether or not the case in 2004 went forward has absolutely no bearing on the evidence involved in the 2006 case.

3) The decision of the prosecutor to drop particular charges in one of the earlier cases is not the same as having the case "thrown out"

Yes, they are really different. There was NO personal benefit to Seigleman, as opposed to Blago, who wanted money for HIS campaign. I'm surprised that you cannot see that.

Where are you getting this?

Blago wanted money for his general election campaign
Siegelman wanted money for his special issue campaign

They're the same damn thing.

If I rob a store in order to get money to keep my small business from going bankrupt, am I somehow less of a scumbag than if I robbed the store to put money in my pocket?


Oh, so now McCain is a bastion of truth and honesty? Funny how 3 months ago you would have considered a friendship with McCain to be proof of this guys propensity to lie. :lol:


From a letter written by the journalist who originally broke the Siegelman story, calling out 60 minutes on their ****tastic journalism:


Flashpoint Blog Archive Eddie Curran’s letter to 60 Minutes

You might also want to read his comments on Simpson.


If your evidence for these claims is as lacking as what you've offered so far, don't bother.
 

Not sure what "Google" you're using but, I found these quite easily...

From: from: Dana Jill Simpson Issues Press Release—By Scott Horton (Harper's Magazine)

From: The Locust Fork Journal: Jill Simpson's Affidavit May Help Justice Prevail in the Siegelman, Scrushy Case

YouTube - Dana Jill Simpson Responds to Karl Rove

This sounds like yet another case of someone with ethics standing up against the Bush administration and getting trashed for her efforts. Well, Bush and his thugs are gone and there is a new sheriff in town. It should be interesting how this case proceeds now. :mrgreen:
 

Most certainly, sometimes life is stranger than fiction. You can deny it all you want, but according to what I have read, there are police reports on both the house fire and the car "accident." So you can go on thinking the gal is nuts, that's fine. But nuts or not, both instances DID happen. Is there any relation to her blowing the whistle? Nothing that I know of, but you can't deny that it's extremely coincidental.



The Raw Story | Break-ins plague targets of US Attorneys



Where am I getting this? Ahhh... how about common sense? I'm shocked that you cannot see this! Your analogy is absolutely silly. The monies that Seigleman raised for his Lottery Education Fund, was part of HIS job as elected Governor. It's not like we was planning on sending his kids to Harvard with it. It was for the greater good of the state that elected him. I repeat... there WAS NO PERSONAL GAIN, and there's nothing that I've seen so far that makes me think otherwise.

Oh, so now McCain is a bastion of truth and honesty? Funny how 3 months ago you would have considered a friendship with McCain to be proof of this guys propensity to lie. :lol:

You shouldn't make assumptions. Just because I didn't think McCain was the right choice for President does not mean that I ever thought he was dishonorable. But that's besides the point. Here is a man that is a very close friend to McCain and a lifelong Republican who without a doubt think Siegleman was framed.


If your evidence for these claims is as lacking as what you've offered so far, don't bother.


There is tons of info out there, so I'll just paste some Wiki stuff on here and you can delve further if you wish.


Don Siegelman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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Note: I'm not denying that there was a fire at this lady's house or that she had a car accident. What I am denying is the ludicrous claims advanced and insinuated by her and you that they had anything to do with some secret conspiracy to shut her up. That is literally one of the most ridiculous things imaginable.




Blago wasn't sending his kids to Harvard with campaign funds either, and I'm sure he considered his campaign to be for the "greater good" of the state, much like you consider donations to the lottery campaign fund to be for the "greater good" of that state.

Fact: Siegelman wanted money to be raised for that fund. Whether it was out of a selfish desire or out of the most purely altruistic desire possible, that doesn't have any bearing on the legality of what he did. This is not a difficult concept.

Again, if I rob a bank and then donate that money to charity, am I less guilty of robbery than if I robbed the bank and used the money to buy drugs?


He's also a long time friend to Siegelman, or did you not pick that up? And again, what is he basing his conclusion on? Did he go to court and watch the trial? Did he investigate it himself? Or is he just saying "This is my friend and he's a good guy and I can't believe he'd do that!"


There is tons of info out there, so I'll just paste some Wiki stuff on here and you can delve further if you wish.

Points 1 and 2:

Given that there's no way to judge the veracity of these claims with the evidence available, we'll have to see what the 11th circuit says.

Point 3:

Again, this relies entirely on Simpson, who has no corroboration for any of her claims and seems ****ing crazy.

Point 4:

Even if all this is true, it's simply evidence that the prosecutor in this case should be chastised for her actions. It has absolutely no bearing on whether or not Siegelman is guilty, nor will it affect the verdict in any way.
 
Blago wasn't sending his kids to Harvard with campaign funds either, and I'm sure he considered his campaign to be for the "greater good" of the state

Note the word "HIS," and in "his campaign." This has nothing to do with the state that elected him, and everything to do with getting HIMSELF re-elected. See the diff?

much like you consider donations to the lottery campaign fund to be for the "greater good" of that state.

No, not like I would consider a donation to a lottery campaign devised to aid the constituents of his state. That does not put money in Seigleman's pockets. That does not put money in Seigleman's re-election campaign. He is just doing the job that he was elected to do.

Fact: Siegelman wanted money to be raised for that fund.

No kidding. He was Governor. It was his idea. Of course he wanted donations!

Whether it was out of a selfish desire or out of the most purely altruistic desire possible, that doesn't have any bearing on the legality of what he did.


It appears that he did nothing wrong. At least for what he was convicted of.

This is not a difficult concept.

Yeah, it's not. So whay are you not getting it?

Again, if I rob a bank and then donate that money to charity, am I less guilty of robbery than if I robbed the bank and used the money to buy drugs?

Terrible analogy. The bank was never robbed.
 

This is just incorrect. The lottery campaign was a POLITICAL CAMPAIGN that Siegelman was running. He wanted a lottery to be enacted because that was a campaign pledge that he had run on. He had a DIRECT vested interest in seeing a lottery enacted, and needed funds in his lottery campaign war chest in order for that to happen. I don't understand how you don't realize how related these two things are.

HYPO: I run for mayor of NYC, pledging that I'm going to end smoking. Halfway through my term, I haven't ended smoking yet, so I need to convince the public that smoking is bad. I start a "Smoking Cessation Education Campaign Fund" in order to spread that message. Do you see why I have a vested interest in the success of that fund? Do you see how that campaign fund serves a critical political purpose for me?


It appears that he did nothing wrong. At least for what he was convicted of
.

I'm just amazed at how someone can be so convinced of that fact without seeing a single moment of the trial, without having any of the relevant evidence presented to them, and without having any knowledge of the relevant laws.


Terrible analogy. The bank was never robbed.

A crime was committed. You're simply trying to argue that there was no motive.
 

Sorry, Right, you have not convinced me one iota. If that is your stance, than any politician that raises money for a campaign promise is only doing it for themselves. So they can get re-elected. Shoot, it's not like they are trying to do the job and fulfill their campaign promises, LOL. :doh

BTW, I'm not proclaiming in any way that Seigleman was as honest as they come. I doubt any politician is. I just believe that in this case the conviction of Don Seigleman is completely and totally bogus. A witch hunt. There's not much that gets me riled up, but this case has. Out of all the stuff that has happened under Bush, I believe this to be the worst slap on the face. **** like this should not happen in America.
 
Judging by the fact that I know, there's no way it will not be overturned. And rightly so.

FYI.

Link
 
Yes, I read it today. Though 2 counts were overturned, it's very disappointing. So what is the status now? Is he out of options?

He can ask for an en banc hearing by the 11th Circuit, but it's unclear if they'll grant it. If they don't, he goes back to the district court for sentencing.
 
Oh I'm sorry, I thought this thread was about Karl Rove. Don't mind me, carry on.

/exit
 
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