American Nightmare: Gonzales “wrong and illegal and unethicalâ€
by
Greg Palast

“
What I’ve experienced in the last six months is the ugly side of the American dream.â€
Last month, David Iglesias and I were looking out at the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island where his dad had entered the US from Panama decades ago. It was a hard moment for the military lawyer who, immediately after Attorney General Alberto Gonzales fired Iglesias as US Attorney for New Mexico, returned to active military duty as a Naval Reserve JAG.
Captain Iglesias, cool and circumspect, added something I didn’t expect:
“They misjudged my character, I mean they really thought I was just going to roll over and give them what they wanted and when I didn’t, that I’d go away quietly but I just couldn’t do that. You know US Attorneys and the Justice Department have a history of not taking into consideration partisan politics. That should not be a factor. And what they tried to do is just wrong and illegal and unethical.â€
When a federal prosecutor says something is illegal, it’s not
just small talk. And the illegality wasn’t small. It’s called,
“obstruction of justice,†and it’s a felony crime.
Specifically,
Attorney General Gonzales, Iglesias told me, wanted him to bring what
the prosecutor called “bogus voter fraud†cases. In effect, US Attorney
Iglesias was under pressure from the boss to charge citizens with
crimes they didn’t commit. Saddam did that. Stalin did that. But
Iglesias would NOT do that - even at the behest of the Attorney
General. Today, Captain Iglesias, reached by phone, told me, “I’m not
going to file any bogus prosecutions.â€
But it wasn’t just Gonzales whose acts were “unethical, wrong and illegal.“
It was Gonzales’ boss.
Iglesias
says, “The evidence shows right now, is that [Republican Senator Pete]
Domenici complained directly to President Bush. And that Bush then
called Alberto Gonzales, the Attorney General, and complained about my
alleged lack of vigorous enforcement of voter fraud laws.“
In other words, it went to the top. The Decider had decided to punish a prosecutor who wouldn’t prosecute innocents.
All
day long I’ve heard Democrats dance with glee that they now have the
scalp of Alberto Gonzales. They nailed the puppet. But what about the
puppeteer?
The question that remains is the same that Watergate
prosecutors asked of Richard Nixon, “What did the President know and
when did he know it?â€
Or, to update it for Dubya, “What did the President know and how many times did Karl Rove have to explain it to him?â€
During
the Watergate hearings, Nixon tried to obstruct the investigation into
his obstruction of justice by offering up the heads of his Attorney
General and other officials. Then, Congress refused to swallow the
Nixon bait. The only resignation that counted was the one by the capo
di capi of the criminal-political cabal: Nixon’s. The President’s.
But
in this case, even the exit of the Decider-in-Chief would not be the
end of it. Because this isn’t about finagling with the power of
prosecutors, it’s about the 2008 election.
“This voter fraud thing is the bogey man,†says Iglesias.
In
New Mexico, the 2004 announcement of Iglesias’ pending prosecution of
voters (which he ultimately refused to do) put the chill on the turnout
of Hispanic citizens already harassed by officialdom. The bogus “vote
fraud†hysteria helped sell New Mexico’s legislature on the Republican
plan to require citizenship IDs to vote - all to stop “fraudulentâ€
voters that simply don’t exist.
The voter witch-hunt worked.
“Wrong†or “insufficient†ID was used to knock out the civil rights of
over a quarter million voters in 2004. In New Mexico, that was enough
to swing the state George Bush by a mere 5,900 votes.
So what is
most frightening is not the resignation of Alberto Gonzales, the
Pinocchio of prosecutorial misconduct, but the resignation of Karl
Rove. Because New Mexico 2004 was just the testing ground for the
roll-out of the “ID†attack planned for 2008.
And Rove who three
decades ago cut his political fangs as chief of the
Nixon Youth, is
ready to roll. To say Rove left his White House job under a cloud is
nonsense. He just went into free-agent status, an electoral hitman
ready to jump on the next GOP nominee’s black-ops squad. The fact that
Rove’s venomous assistant, Tim Griffin, was set up to work for the
campaign Fred Thompson, is a sign that the Lord Voldemort of vote
suppression is preparing to practice his Dark Arts in ‘08.
It
was Rove who convinced Bush to fire upright prosecutors and replace
them with Rove-bots ready to strike out at fraudulent (i.e. Democratic)
voters.
Iglesias, however, remains the optimist. “I’m hopeful
that I’ll get back to the American dream. And get out of the American
nightmare.“
Dreams. Nightmares. I have a better idea for America: Wake up.