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Saturday, March 24, 2007

Gonzales Has Not Been So Truthful

Golly, it seems that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales isn't the most honest person in the world. Who knew? After blaming the federal attorney purge on an aide -- and then firing said aide -- it's looking more and more like Gonzales was a hands-on sort of purger.

New York Times:

An accumulating body of evidence is at odds with the statements of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales that he played little role in the deliberations over the dismissal of eight United States attorneys.

Mr. Gonzales has said he did not take part in any discussions of the dismissal effort, and left the planning and execution of the removals up to D. Kyle Sampson, his former chief of staff.

But e-mail messages and other documents released by the Justice Department in recent days suggest that Mr. Gonzales was told of the dismissal plan on at least two occasions, in 2005 when the plan was first devised and again in late 2006 shortly before the firings were carried out.


But the fun doesn't end there. Another familiar name comes up.

The conflicts between the documentary record and Mr. Gonzales’s version of events have contributed to an erosion of support for him in Congress, where lawmakers from both parties have called for him to step down. They have also fed suspicions by some Democrats that the ousters, from the start, may have been orchestrated by the White House, and most particularly, by Karl Rove, the White House political adviser.


Warm up those subpoenas...

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