Posts Tagged siegelman

Siegelman Nov. 2 Showdown Hurts Obama, Not Rove

By Andrew Kreig
Justice Integrity Project

Don SiegelmanA legal showdown of historic proportion unfolds Nov. 2 in an Alabama federal court. Squared off in Courtroom B4 beginning at 10 a.m. in Montgomery were the Obama Justice Department and its most important domestic defendant, former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman, once the leading Democrat in his state.

Siegelman wants the government to provide documents proving that Middle District U.S. Attorney Leura Canary really withdrew from the case, as she claimed. The government contends he is not entitled to confidential government documents. After five years Siegelman has finally won a hearing on a request for documents that are central to his 2006 convictions on corruption charges. Middle District U.S. Magistrate-Judge Charles S. Coody, sitting under the authority of the district’s Chief Judge Mark E. Fuller, presides in the courthouse shown below.

Beyond that, Siegelman is in the rare position of having witnesses Frank Johnson Courthousestep forward with evidence that his prosecutors and trial judge framed him. Meanwhile, Siegelman has been tried and sentenced to a lengthy prison term in what our Justice Integrity Project, among others, has described as the nation’s most notorious political prosecution in decades. Some of us have documented this many times, with both sources and official denials in the links below.
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Siegelman Sentence Delayed As DOJ Hides Conflict Data

By Andrew Kreig

The Alabama judge presiding over the notorious Bush prosecution of former Gov. Don Siegelman postponed the defendant’s re-sentencing last week while prosecutors continue to stonewall defense requests for documents showing whether federal prosecutors violated the defendant’s right to an honest, unbiased prosecutor. On Sept. 22, Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller of Montgomery postponed his re-sentencing of Siegelman and co-defendant Richard Scrushy on corruption charges. Decisions by the Supreme Court and other appellate bodies reduced charges, requiring re-sentencing.

Siegelman, at right, a Democrat, was the state’s governor from 1999 to 2003. He claims that authorities for five years have illegally blocked his document requests regarding Middle District U.S. Attorney Leura Canary, left, who recused herself from his case according to conventional wisdom. William Canary, her husband, was Siegelman’s longtime political enemy and the 2002 campaign manager for Bob Riley, Siegelman’s Republican opponent in that year’s election for governor. Siegelman narrowly lost after election software recorded a 6,000 drop in his totals in Baldwin County after polls closed.
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The Edwards Prosecution – They have better things to do

Michael Collins

We can draw several clear conclusions from the indictment of John Edwards.

The case is a joke, quite literally.  It mocks justice.

The cast of characters consists of people who should have recused themselves, rather than bringing a prosecution.  This strange case has the faint odor of the nonstop assault on former Alabama governor, Don Siegelman.

Apparently the Department of Justice has a lot of time on its hands.  How else could it pursue this transparent nonsense while failing to prosecute the perpetrators of the financial collapse?

Finally, the prosecution shows that those in control are not even pretending to acknowledge a rule of law.
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Come and Get It! Prisoners Served Expired Food, “Not for Human Consumption”

By Joan Brunwasser



Welcome back to OpEdNews, Judy. We’ve been following your husband Gary’s case and his incarceration, which began over a month ago. I am aware of the circumstances concerning Gary‘s arrest and conviction, and the indications of it being a corrupt political prosecution. Certainly, imprisonment is unjust for anyone who is innocent. Does it give you any peace of mind that he is in a federal prison camp, with others who have been convicted of “white collar” crimes? Is the Edgefield, SC facility like Club Fed, complete with tennis courts? Read the rest of this entry »

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