Archive for September 8th, 2008

National Enquirer Reports Palin's 'Secret' Affair

September 8th, 2008

The National Enquirer, a sensational tabloid that is usually ignored by the so-called “mainstream media,” is now reporting that Alaska Governor and John McCain’s pick for Vice President, Sarah Palin, had an affair with a former business associate of her “fisherman” husband, Todd.

The press is paying more attention to the Enquirer of late, however, since the paper turned out to be right about an affair on the part of former Senator and presidential candidate John Edwards, the Democrat from North Carolina.

“Todd discovered the affair and quickly dissolved his friendship and his business associations with the guys,” a source said who is reportedly a close enemy of the Palin family. “Many people in Alaska are talking about the rumor and say Todd swept it under the rug.”

The paper is also reporting that the “ultra-conservative governor” tried to sweep something else under the rug. Sources close to the family say she “desperately tried to cover up” her 17-year-old daughter Palin’s pregnancy, until it became clear that the media already knew about it.

She reportedly worked “frantically” to arrange a small wedding ceremony before McCain announced her name as his choice for Vice President, and then again before the Republican National Convention last week.

“But Bristol refused to go along with the lies,” according to sources close to the family.

A nasty fight ensued between mother and daughter, they say. Now there are plans to get Bristol married to 18-year-old Levi Johnston, a high school hockey player, who may or may not be the father of the baby.

Bookmark and Share

Hung Jury Leads to Mistrial in Schmitz Case

September 8th, 2008

by Glynn Wilson

The Bush Justice Department’s investigation of Democrats who also serve in the state Legislature fell apart on Monday, when the first case of its kind against Rep. Sue Schmitz ended with a hung jury and a mistrial. Here’s the link to the early AP story.

The jury told U.S. District Judge David Proctor twice last week that they were unable to reach a unanimous verdict, but just like Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller did in the Siegelman-Scrushy case, he sent them home to think about it over the weekend and issued a dynamite charge urging them to do their best to reach a verdict and not allow a mistrial.

Upon their third written request today, Proctor relented.

“I think we’re at the point where we need to declare a mistrial,” Proctor said, then granted a motion for mistrial filed by Schmitz’s defense team.

Ms. Schmitz is a life-long Democrat from Toney in north Alabama, near Huntsville, where she was a well-liked school teacher for many years. After being caught up in a local political scandal due to a Republican takeover of the local school board, she took a job in the community college system to stay in the Alabama Retirement System, according to sources who know her and are familiar with the facts in the case.

In a series of highly political cases designed to take over the Legislature by the Alabama Republican Party, brought against Democrats in the Legislature who also work in the community college system, Ms. Schmitz was accused by U.S. Attorney Alice Martin, a Bush appointee and a member of the right-wing Federalist Society, of being paid $177,000 over three years. They claimed she did not do enough work in the program to help troubled teens and, in a bit if Karl Rove-style political spin, they called her a “double-dipper” who was being paid that salary plus her pay for serving in the Alabama Legislature, as if that were a crime.

Assistant U.S. Attorney William Athanas, who works under Martin, claimed the prosecutors plan on bringing the case to trial again, although that is doubtful, according to legal experts.

“The prosecution had no case at all,” said New York attorney and writer Scott Horton, who has followed the Justice Department scandals for Hapers.org. “The great surprise was that the court allowed this case to go to the jury in the first place.”

Schmitz was the first legislator to be tried in the political federal investigation of Alabama’s two-year college system. Former state Rep. Bryant Melton, D-Tuscaloosa, pleaded guilty to charges that he used his legislative discretionary money for personal gain and has been sentenced to 15 months in prison, according to the conservative AP. He agreed to testify against Schmitz in exchange for a lighter sentence.

Another legislator, state Sen. E.B. McClain, has been charged with conspiracy and is scheduled to be tried Jan. 12 in Birmingham. His trial may also now be in doubt, considering the hung jury in Decatur.

According to Birmingham attorney Doug Jones, who is representing other legislators targeted in the Alice Martin-Bush Justice Department probe, the mistrial puts a serious block on what the prosecution thought would be a “slam dunk.”

“Any mistrial is a setback for the government, but this one has to give them concern about going forward on a number of fronts, not just a possible re-trial,” he said. “Regardless of the breakdown of the jury vote, this mistrial calls into question the entire theory of the government in trying to make performance in employment that the government doesn’t think was up to par into a crime. The entire trial seemed more like an employment hearing than a criminal trial.”

Bookmark and Share