David Iglesias, the
former U.S. attorney for New Mexico who was one of nine federal prosecutors
fired two years ago for reasons that appear to be politically motivated, said a
recent House vote to hold former White House counsel Harriet Miers and
President Bush's chief of staff, Josh Bolten, in contempt for refusing to
testify before Congress about the matter was encouraging. But he said questions
related to his dismissal remain unanswered.
In an interview
following the historic vote, the first time in 25 years a full chamber of
Congress voted on contempt of Congress citation, Iglesias called upon the White
House to "do the right thing."
"Congress is
exercising its legitimate oversight role in this unfinished matter," said
Iglesias, who has written a book on the ordeal, "In Justice: Inside the
Scandal that Rocked the Bush Administration," that is due to be published
in June. "I implore the White House to do the right thing and produce Ms.
Miers and Mr. Bolten to the Congress."
The White House said
it has no intention of producing documents to the House Judiciary Committee or
allowing Bolten and Miers to testify on grounds that the information is covered
by executive privilege. Attorney General Michael Mukasey testified before
Congress two weeks ago that he has no plans to enforce the contempt citations.
But Congressman
Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) said even if Mukasey refuses to act on the contempt
citations, Congress will pursue civil litigation to enforce the subpoenas and
Bolten and Miers' testimony.
"It's pretty
clear to me that senior White House and U.S. Department of Justice officials
deliberately fired U.S. attorneys who they felt were not acting in ways that
were politically advantageous to the Bush administration and the Republican
Party," Hinchey said. "Those subpoenas have been ignored for far too
long, which is why . . . we finally passed resolutions of contempt against them
to begin the legal process of forcing them to comply or, if they continue to
refuse, imposing tough consequences."
John Conyers, the
Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, agreed, and said he would
vigorously pursue legal action to enforce the subpoenas to "vindicate
Congress' authority."
“The Privilege
Resolution introduced [February 13] follows the suggestion first made by former
Judiciary Committee chairman James Sensenbrenner last year and authorizes the
House general counsel to file a civil suit to enforce the subpoenas,"
Conyers said. "That way, if the administration refuses to enforce the
contempt finding, we can take action in the courts. . . . Although Mr.
Sensenbrenner suggested a civil lawsuit as an alternative to contempt, the
courts have made clear that statutory contempt must be tried first. In a
lawsuit in the 1980s, when the Justice Department tried to get a civil court
ruling after the House had found a former EPA administrator in contempt, the
court ruled that it should 'defer to established statutory procedures' on
contempt and that a civil lawsuit could be pursued only after statutory
contempt remedies are exhausted. Here, a civil suit would be filed only after
the administration refuses to allow statutory contempt to go forward."
Iglesias said the
legal wrangling clearly indicates that the executive branch and Congress are
headed for a showdown, but he added that documents in the case released thus
far goes far beyond the realm of circumstantial evidence and shows
culpability--and perhaps criminal behavior--on the part of several high-level
former Justice Department and White House officials who were involved in his
firing and sought to cover-up their involvement. Iglesias points to a transcript of
an interview with career Justice Department official David Margolis
conducted by congressional investigators in May 2007 in which Margolis said
that he participated in a "brainstorming" session with other senior
DOJ officials to come up with a reason to sell to the public and to lawmakers
in the event that questions were raised about why Iglesias was ousted.
John McKay, the
former US attorney for the Western District of Washington who was also fired in
late 2006 for reasons that appear to have been motivated by partisan politics,
wrote in a lengthy article in the January
edition of the Seattle University Law Review that Iglesias's firing stands
out among the other eight federal prosecutors because it demonstrates "the
very real prospect of improper interference with an ongoing criminal
investigation involving public corruption and the seeking of political advantage."
"Violations of
the obstruction of justice statute may have occurred and should be
investigated," McKay wrote. "Even as the role of the White House
remains shrouded in its claims of executive privilege, 23 certain White House
employees appear to have been heavily involved in the dismissal of U.S.
Attorney Iglesias. In several e-mails it appears that these officials were
reacting directly to the complaints of Senator Pete Domenici (R-NM) and the
ongoing investigation into public corruption in New Mexico. For example, Deputy
White House Counsel Bill Kelley smugly e-mailed Gonzales’ Chief of Staff Kyle
Sampson to report that Domenici’s office was 'happy as a clam' on learning of
Iglesias’s ouster. Senior Counselor to the President Karl Rove bragged about
Iglesias’s dismissal by proclaiming 'he’s gone' to the New Mexico Republican
Party Chairman, who had previously complained to Rove about Iglesias."
McKay wrote that
multiple investigations at the DOJ, which are said to be in the final stages,
could result in "criminal charges" against former Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales and other former DOJ officials involved in the dismissals
"for impeding justice."
"The elements of
a prima facie case of obstruction of justice are: (1) the existence of the
judicial proceeding; (2) knowledge of or notice of the judicial proceeding; (3)
acting 'corruptly' with intent to influence, obstruct or impede the proceeding
in the due administration of justice; and (4) a nexus (although not necessarily
one which is material) between the judicial proceeding sought to be corruptly
influenced and the defendant's efforts," McKay wrote in the 32-page law
review article. "The [federal] omnibus clause is a 'catchall' provision,
which is broadly construed to include a wide variety of corrupt methods."
In testimony before
Congress last year, Iglesias said that a few weeks before the 2006 midterm
elections he received telephone calls from Domenici, and the state's Republican
congresswoman, Heather Wilson, inquiring about the timing of an indictment
against a popular Democratic official in the state who was the target of a
corruption investigation. Iglesias told Domenici and Wilson he could not
discuss indictments with them. Iglesias was added to a list of US attorneys to
be fired on Election Day in November 2006. The official or officials
responsible for drafting the list is still unknown.
Domenici is currently
the subject of a Senate Ethics Committee probe for allegedly trying to pressure
Iglesias into securing indictments prior to the November 2006 midterm election.
Last April, Iglesias
filed a Hatch Act complaint with the White House Office of Special Counsel,
alleging former White House political adviser Karl Rove and other Bush
administration officials may have broken the law by orchestrating his firing.
That investigation is still ongoing, but the obscure shop has hit some
roadblocks. Special Counsel Scott Bloch, a Bush appointee, said he has been
unable to obtain certain documents from the Justice Department (DOJ) to advance
his probe into the firings.
The OSC sent a
request to the DOJ late last year seeking a wide range of documents including
email correspondence between DOJ and White House officials who had discussed
which US attorneys should be selected for dismissal. The OSC set a deadline for
turning over the documents. However, the deadline has since passed and the DOJ
has not formally responded to the OSC's request, nor has the agency stated a
reason it would not turn over documents. The OSC appears to have been
particularly interested in obtaining documents from the DOJ surrounding the
circumstances that led to Iglesias's firing, according to people knowledgeable
about the probe.
The DOJ's Office of
Professional Responsibility (OPR) and the Justice Department's inspector
general have been investigating the issue, with particular attention being paid
to Iglesias's dismissal. Recently, the OPR contacted Iglesias's former
executive assistant, Rumaldo Armijo, to interview him about whether he was
pressured by Pat Rogers, a Republican attorney in Albuquerque, and Mickey
Barnett, a Republican lobbyist, to bring charges of voter fraud against
Democrats in the state, Iglesias confirmed when asked about the matter during
an interview.
Rogers was affiliated
with the American Center for Voting Rights, a now defunct non-profit
organization that sought to defend voter rights and increase public confidence
in the fairness and outcome of elections. However, it has since emerged that
the organization played a major role in suppressing the votes of people who
intended to cast ballots for Democrats in various states. Rogers is also the
former chief counsel to the New Mexico Republican Party, and was tapped by
Domenici to replace Iglesias as US Attorney for New Mexico.
Rogers did not
respond to emails seeking comment.
Armijo was also
unavailable for comment. During his tenure in the US attorney's office he was
in charge of issues related to voter fraud in New Mexico. Iglesias said in an
interview that he launched an in-depth investigation into claims of voter fraud
in New Mexico and found the allegations to be “non-provable in court.” He said
he is certain that his firing was due, in part, to the fact that he would not
file criminal charges of voter fraud in New Mexico. Iglesias added that, based
on evidence that had surfaced thus far and "Karl Rove's obsession with
voter fraud issues throughout the country," he now believes GOP operatives
had wanted him to go after Democratic-funded organizations in an attempt to
swing the 2006 midterm elections to Republicans.
Armijo spoke to the
Senate Ethics Committee last year about numerous telephone calls and emails
dating back to 2005 he received from Rogers related to voter fraud, and
Iglesias's alleged failure to investigate the matter while Iglesias was US
attorney, Iglesias confirmed.
Last May, House
Democrats released a transcript of
an interview congressional investigators had with one of Gonzales's senior
Justice Department staffers, Matthew Friedrich, in which Friedrich
recounted that over breakfast in November 2006, Rogers and Barnett told him
they were frustrated about Iglesias's refusal to pursue cases of voter fraud
and that they had spoken to Karl Rove and Domenici about having Iglesias fired.
"I remember them
repeating basically what they had said before in terms of unhappiness with Dave
Iglesias and the fact that this case hadn't gone anyplace," Friedrich
said, according to a copy of the interview transcript. "It was clear to me
that they did not want him to be the US attorney. And they mentioned that they
had essentially . . . they were sort of working towards that."
According to media
reports, Rogers said he does not recall speaking to Rove about Iglesias.
Additionally, Barnett
and Rogers met with Monica Goodling, the Justice Department's White House
liaison, in June 2006 to complain that Iglesias was ignoring voter fraud.
Goodling's meeting with Rogers and Barnett took place at the urging of a
colleague. Rogers also drafted a lengthy letter that he sent to Domenici
detailing what he claimed were Iglesias's prosecutorial failures, Iglesias said
he had been told.
Allen Weh, the New
Mexico Republican Party chairman, told McClatchy Newspapers in March that he
urged Rove to use his influence to have Iglesias fired because Weh was unhappy
with Iglesias's alleged refusal to bring criminal charges against Democrats in
a voter fraud investigation.
Weh told McClatchy
Newspapers that he followed up with Rove personally in late 2006 during a visit
to the White House.
"Is anything
ever going to happen to that guy?" Weh said he asked Rove at a White House
holiday event that month, according to McClatchy's report.
"He's
gone," Rove said, according to Weh.
"I probably said
something close to 'Hallelujah,'" said Weh.
This chain of events
troubles McKay who wrote in his law review article that former Attorney General
Gonzales ultimately approved Iglesias's termination with the full knowledge
that it was based on partisan politics.
Gonzales admitted
"he took multiple phone calls from Domenici concerning [Iglesias], urging
that he be replaced, and has admitted that [President Bush] spoke with him
about the 'problems' with Iglesias," McKay wrote.
”Gonzales
has even admitted that one of the reasons that Iglesias was fired was because
Senator Domenici had "lost confidence" in Iglesias. “While these
allegations are troubling under any analysis, a thorough and independent
investigation is necessary to determine whether criminal laws have been violated,”
McKay added. “Among the considerations facing the inspector general is whether
the actions of former Attorney General Gonzales constituted obstruction of
justice by removing Iglesias.”