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| Mukasey Rules Out Charges in DOJ's Hiring Probe |
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| Written by Jason Leopold |
| Wednesday, 13 August 2008 00:00 |
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The Department of Justice's Inspector General and the agency's Office of Professional Responsibility issued two reports over the past couple of months found that seven former officials at the agency broke federal laws on numerous occasions by basing their hiring decisions on politics and refused to promote career prosecutors they suspected of being gay. The report singled out Monica Goodling, the DOJ's White House liaison, and Kyle Sampson, the chief of staff to former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, for the most egregious offenses. For example, Goodling rejected an applicant who had decades of experience in counterterrorism because his wife was involved in Democratic politics in their hometown. And Sampson rejected immigration judges he perceived were too liberal. Sampson said he was under the impression that immigration judges were political appointees and therefore could allow politics to guide his hiring decisions. But the inspector general's report said Sampson came to that conclusion on his own. "Even if Sampson was confused or mistaken in his interpretation of the rules that applied to [immigration judge] hiring, we do not believe that would excuse his actions," the report states. "His actions, which were carried out over a lengthy period of time and were not based on formal advice from anyone, systematically violated federal law and Department policy and constituted misconduct." Sampson, who is now in private practice, and Goodling resigned from the Justice Department in disgrace last year and both testified before Congress about the inner workings of the DOJ under Gonzales's tenure. Goodling testified before Congress under a grant of immunity. Revelations about the politicization of the agency surfaced during a congressional investigation into the firings of nine U.S. attorneys in December 2006. Internal Justice Department documents released last year suggested that the dismissals of the federal prosecutors were based on partisan politics. Mukasey told the ABA that he is "well aware that some people have called on me and on the Department to take even more drastic steps than those I have described." "For example, some commentators have suggested that we should criminally prosecute the people found in the reports to have committed misconduct," Mukasey said. "Where there is evidence of criminal wrongdoing, we vigorously investigate it. And where there is enough evidence to charge someone with a crime, we vigorously prosecute. But not every wrong, or even every violation of the law, is a crime. In this instance, the two joint reports found only violations of the civil service laws."
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers said he is "distressed" that Mukasey has decided not to prosecute the former DOJ officials who broke the law. "I am distressed that Attorney General Mukasey has been so quick to determine that no criminal offense has been committed in connection with the illegal hiring practices at the Department of Justice," Conyers said Friday. "It is not enough for Mr. Mukasey to assert that things are different under his watch. The Department of Justice cannot reestablish its credibility so long as it persists in a strategy designed to avoid revealing all the facts that have so compromised the integrity of the Department of Justice and to prevent real accountability for misconduct by former DOJ officials." Sen. Patrick Leahy, (D-Vt.), agreed, saying Mukasey's "blanket conclusions appear premature based on the facts and evidence that congressional investigators and the Inspector General have uncovered so far." "The Attorney General, the nation's top law enforcement officer, seems intent on insulating this administration from accountability," Leahy said Tuesday. "We must continue to pursue the truth and facts, and hold any wrongdoers accountable." Since becoming Attorney General in December 2007, Mukasey has balked at investigating crimes allegedly committed earlier by Bush administration officials - from torturing detainees to arranging political prosecutions - a "no-look-back" approach that drew criticism from the Senate Judiciary Committee.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 13 August 2008 15:22 |
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Current and former Justice Department officials who used a political litmus test in violation of civil service laws to guide the hiring process at the agency won't be prosecuted or disciplined, Attorney General Michael Mukasey said Tuesday. 
