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| Palin Tried to Deny Ex-Brother-Law Worker's Comp Benefits |
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| Written by Jason Leopold |
| Monday, 15 September 2008 00:00 |
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Palin's office wants $88,000 to fulfill a Freedom of Information Act Request for previously undisclosed emails. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin - collaborating with her husband Todd and several senior aides - conducted what amounted to a rogue investigation into suspicions that her ex-brother-in-law was faking a job-related injury as a state trooper, according to state documents, law enforcement officials and former aides to Palin. The investigation was conducted using the resources of Gov. Palin's office and had the goal of destroying Mike Wooten's career with the Alaska state troopers, the documents and the interviews reveal. A little-noticed passage in a transcript of a conversation between Frank Bailey, Palin's director of boards and commissions, and Alaska State Trooper Lt. Rodney Dial shows that Palin's office had developed information against Wooten that was turned over to the state's worker's compensation board, purportedly to prove that Wooten was not too sick or injured to work. In the Feb. 28, 2008, conversation with Dial, Bailey disclosed that Gov. Palin and her husband had uncovered information about the trooper that was not publicly available and had collected statements about Wooten going "snowmachining" when he was out on workers comp for a back injury. "The situation where [Wooten] declared workers comp, but then was caught on an eight-mile snowmachining [sic] trip days - days after, you know, that - that started coming up there," Bailey said. "So we collected statements that we forwarded on to worker's comp." Bailey said the governor's office also obtained information that Wooten had "applied for and got a moose ticket to go hunt a moose." Bailey also voiced frustration that police officials had cautioned Gov. Palin and her husband to back off their campaign to get Trooper Wooten fired. "Everything that has come back to - to Todd and the governor is basically stay - stay away there's nothing we can do," Bailey told Dial. "And that's just frustrating. ... Todd and Sarah are scratching their heads, 'Why on earth ... is this guy still representing the department?'" Pro-Palin DepositionsPalin's private attorney, Thomas Van Flein, has deposed two senior officials with the goal of discrediting suspicions that Palin abused her power in the firing of Monegan. "Even as early as a month ago the governor's office is still mining through Trooper Wooten's records," Cyr said. "This is such an abuse of power." However, one explanation may be that Wooten was seeking additional custody rights for his children from the judge, court records show. Defending Wooten But the Palin family apparently saw the worker's comp case as another way to get Wooten fired, especially after Sarah Palin became governor. "Todd Palin was following Mike around snapping pictures of him," Cyr said. "Frank Bailey was getting people to say that Mike was lying on his worker's comp form. The governor's family was following Mike around everywhere. They forwarded that information to the worker's comp division. "They were using the machinery of the state to claim that Mike was cheating the system and not eligible for worker's comp. That was being conducted out of the governor's office." Two former Palin aides said material about Wooten was sent on official stationery from the Office of the Governor. A former senior official to Palin also said Sarah Palin openly discussed Wooten with her husband in the presence of her staffers. Cyr said he filed a Freedom of Information Act request on behalf of the union to obtain the e-mails, but the governor's office said it would cost the union $88,000 for the documents. Confidential Information The posted documents suggested that Palin obtained information about Wooten's personnel file through the discovery process related to the divorce/custody battle with her sister. "Any information regarding personnel records came from the trooper himself," Palin said in her statement. But the fact that Wooten's personnel file was released to his ex-wife's attorney during court proceedings does not mean that Palin's office then had the right to access the files so it could be used against him, Cyr said. Plus, Cyr said, conducting an investigation of a state trooper's workers comp situation is "not the job of the governor's office and that's exactly what we have been saying. ... Why is the governor's office involved in this trooper's worker's compensation claims?" Cyr said he believes the governor's office posted documents on her Web site saying state officials were not trying to illegally gain access to Wooten's files to "inoculate themselves from the fact that they used the resources of the governor's office to obtain highly confidential information about Trooper Wooten from his personnel file without authorization." Two weeks ago, Palin's office removed the two documents, including Wooten's release form, from her official Web site.
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| Last Updated on Thursday, 16 October 2008 12:10 |
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