The Parable of Lord Cornwallis

June 22nd, 2008

His Surrender at Yorktown

And Questions Answered in the Siegelman Case

gwcubamug.jpgConnecting the Dots
by Glynn Wilson

One of the most interesting and fun things about the freedom that comes with self-publishing on the Web Press is to see how it drives some people absolutely crazy when I speak in parables and communicate through literary abstractions.

A writer is always influenced both by where he or she is and the experiences they’ve had, I try to tell them, over and over again, but it doesn’t seem to sink in sometimes. Maybe one of these days.

Since I spent a good part of my adult life around academic institutions, there tends to be a bit of an academic tint to what I write. Not that it looks anything at all like an article for an academic journal. That’s sort of the point of why I do this now, rather than that, if you get my drift.

Writing for the Web tends to be a tad more conversational, too, like a dinner talk, as compared to the formalized nature of an article for a newspaper or magazine. That’s one of the things that draws some readers to blogs.

If that comes off at times as “lecturing” or “educating” or “preachy” as opposed to “reporting” and turns some people off, so be it. I usually have my tongue in my cheek rather than an angry scowl on my face when I write. Although there have been plenty of times over the past few years when I was definitely pissed off at the Bush administration : )

And who wouldn’t be, Democrat or Republican?

And since I don’t have to please any corporate bosses with what I write here, I am free to experiment with different story frames and forms. If I didn’t find that interesting, I wouldn’t bother doing it. And if some readers didn’t find that interesting, we would not have the large audience we’ve built up here over the past three years.

Well, I have another parable today, but I am going to try and interpret it for you. That’s why we call it “connecting the dots.”

And speaking of connecting the dots, later on I have a few answers for the Montgomery Advertiser, which ran a story today asking a bunch of questions about the Siegelman case.

So please bare with me and I will try to make the point clear in the end. Here goes.

Due to my own consuming interest in American Revolutionary history, something it’s obvious king Bush seems to have skipped in all his Ivy League education – especially as it applies to the politics of today – one of my favorite scenes in American film is from Mel Gibson’s The Patriot.

It comes near the end of the movie and is based on true historical accounts of how the American Revolutionary War was fought and won.

The British general Charles Cornwallis, the 1st Marquess Cornwallis, was standing in the fort at Yorktown looking out on the landscape where General George Washington’s Colonial Army has him surrounded on the landside, while the French Navy had him penned in from the sea.

“How could it come to this,” Cornwallis asks his commanding general with disdain in his voice. “An army of rebel peasants. Everything will change. Everything has changed.”

I say, “Your damn right it changed, MF.”

(For more on Cornwallis and the Battle of Yorktown, check these wikipedia links):

Cornwallis

Yorktown

So why do I laugh and revel every time I see that scene on late night cable TV? And what does that have to do with modern American politics?

For me, it is symbolic both of the times that spawned the American Revolution and should be a lesson for those who observe American politics today.

That is, there are still elitist forces both here and abroad who either forget or never believed in or understood the point of the American Revolution. They think they are the only people qualified to govern and that somehow they deserve through some divine right to be rich and powerful, while most of the population deserves nothing more than serfdom.

The Bush family is obviously in that camp, and maybe the Clinton family is there too.

There are editors and publishers in New York – and Birmingham and Montgomery – who behave like they believe they should still be the gatekeepers of all the information in the world, and the only people who should profit from it too.

Did they just study English or journalism – or business – in college? Is the historical point just lost on them?

This country was set up as a secular, pluralistic democratic republic to be governed by the people, not a king or queen who derive their power from ANY god. A person’s station in life and wealth at birth is not the determining factor in where a person should end up in life’s destiny – nor should the location of his or her church membership matter either!

The point of Web publishing is in many ways the same. It reinforces the point. Those of us who believe in the democratizing power of the Web understand the connection to the American tradition in politics and publishing. Some people still don’t get it, but that’s their problem.

It’s the First Amendment stupid … alive and well but hanging by a thread here on the Web.

As Jill Simpson likes to say, “the truth is marching on.”

Now, to prove the point, let’s get on with answering the Montgomery Advertisers’ questions.

An article appeared in the shell of a newspaper in the state capitol today with a list of questions and no answers, even though the answers to many of these questions have already been provided on the Web.

Questions linger in Siegelman case

A year ago this month, Don Siegelman walked into the federal courthouse in Montgomery with family and friends and left in the custody of U.S. marshals. Ever since Alabama’s former governor got more than seven years in federal prison, the case has stayed in the public eye.

The spotlight has not waned as national media continued to cover the case. Last week, Jon Stewart asked his guest on “The Daily Show” about the Siegelman case. The guest was David Iglesias, one of the U.S. attorneys fired by the U.S. Department of Justice. Iglesias, a Republican appointed by Bush, used a “Star Wars” analogy to describe his own situation: “I thought I was working with the Jedi Knights and I was working for the Sith Lords.”

Iglesias pointed to what he believed to be irregularities in the Siegelman case, including the governor’s release after he had already been sentenced and taken into federal custody. Almost two years after Siegelman was convicted, Gov. Bob Riley, in response to questions from the Tuscaloosa News this month, said he told Siegelman in person that he had nothing to do with the prosecution.

There are many points, a year later, that those on both sides have yet to concede or prove beyond a reasonable doubt. And some points that people simply refuse to acknowledge. And it seems that the more we find out, the more questions there are.

Was the prosecution political? If so, does that prosecution stretch all the way to the White House and did it involve Karl Rove or any of the Rileys or Republican activist Bill Canary, whose wife, Leura, is the U.S. attorney here?

From my days of working for newspapers, I’ve never seen a so-called article quite like this one. In my day, we would have at least gotten on the phone and talked to some experts and provided some wisdom on these questions. But since no one at the Montgomery paper has any answers, maybe they need a little help. So here goes.

Yes, as we have already proven beyond a shadow of a doubt based on sworn testimony, the prosecution was political. No court or Congressional committee will ever provide an ultimate answer to that, even though the information is readily available here.

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta will decide Siegelman’s legal fate based on the law and the arguments of lawyers. The court will never really answer the political question.

Congress may provide some answers with an investigation and a report, but what really matters is the court of public opinion. And since the polls are now showing that a majority of people now understand that it was political and that the Bush administration is corrupt, we already have the answer to that.

Did the prosecution begin before Leura Canary was U.S. attorney for this district, as prosecutors contend? Why does the Justice Department refuse to release hundreds of pages of documents on Leura Canary’s recusal from the case? Why was there a need for hundreds of pages of documents related to the recusal?

Of course it began before that, when then-Attorney General William Pryor first started investigating Siegelman and communicated with the Bush White House about it. U.S. Attorney Alice Martin in Birmingham brought a case first, which was thrown out of court.

Then the task fell to Canary, who made a public show of recusing herself, but never actually filed the proper paperwork and did not stop communicating with the prosecutors chosen to try the case in court. That’s one of the reasons they won’t release the documents.

As for why, that’s a stupid question. I guess you would have to get some experience covering a courthouse to know the answer to that one. Maybe the Advertiser should consider paying real money to hire someone who knows what they are talking about to cover these things.

Riley stated Rove had better things to do than involve himself in the situation – wouldn’t a top White House strategist be occupied with other issues with the nation at war and the fate of Congress in the balance?

Not if one of the key states in the Bush-Rove political machine just happened to be Alabama. And remember, Rove wanted the GOP to take over the country for a generation. Even now, Rove concerns himself with goings on in Alabama. He lives in a house at Rosemary Beach in the Panhandle of Florida, not far from the Alabama line. And the Siegelman case has now reached center stage in the Congressional investigation of him.

Now here’s a relevant question: To what extent did Jill Simpson’s Congressional testimony in this case – and the coverage of her story by the independent Web Press – cause Karl Rove’s forced resignation from the White House last August? Enquiring minds want to know : )

Is Dana Jill Simpson a hero or crazy?

We’ve already answered this question several times, so perhaps the Advertiser needs to teach their reporters how to use Google. I understand that the paper is trying to be politically objective in its approach.

But one of the key hallmarks of real, scientific objectivity is empirical, human observation.

Having met Jill Simpson and after reviewing her documents and testimony, I am here to tell you that Jill Simpson is NOT crazy. She is a hero because she had the courage to turn against a corrupt Bush administration and come out publicly against the Alabama GOP under Riley to try to wrong an injustice.

As a lawyer herself and a true believer in justice, she believed last May and she still believes today that Siegelman and Scrushy did not receive a fair trial under the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

To reiterate from the quote that ended my story in The Nation magazine (which they have not read in Montgomery, apparently):

“It was the right thing to do,” she said. “I just couldn’t walk away from the fact – and there’s no doubt about it – it was a political persecution.”

Riley said her story has no credibility and continues to change. Others contend she is courageous and the only person willing to testify under oath. Why won’t some of the other alleged key players testify under oath if they had absolutely no involvement?

Easy: Because they would have to plead the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination (and everyone would know they are guilty) or they would have to lie under oath (which would be committing perjury).

Did Siegelman really drop his challenge to Riley’s 2002 victory because there were Riley signs planted at a KKK rally in Jackson County, which is what Simpson said in her affidavit?

While this question is a bit inaccurate, it does hint at an open question. It was the threat that the Riley camp would reveal the Siegelman camp’s dirty trick involving the Klan that Ms. Simpson was talking about, along with the threat of a future prosecution if Siegelman did not bow out in 2002 and not run again in 2006. The Canary prosecution pushed by the Justice Department in DC (in communication with Rove) didn’t begin in earnest until Siegelman declared his intention to run for governor again in 2006. If that fact does not support the argument for a political prosecution, I don’t know what fact would convince people.

Would Siegelman and his security not notice that Simpson was following them for months, as she said she did in a television interview? She said she was told to find compromising pictures of Siegelman. If she is so courageous, why was she willing to participate in trying to take compromising pictures? Where was she following him? Why did Simpson come forward only as the sentencing began, not closer to 2002 when the alleged phone conversation occurred? Why not even at the start of the trial a year before?

Maybe they did notice her following them, who knows? Why would that matter? Campaigns spy on each other all the time. She was working as a volunteer for Republicans then, including her friend Rob Riley.

She didn’t come forward before because she was hoping the Scrushy or Siegelman legal teams could prevail over the compromised federal judge and win their release in court.

On the eve of the sentencing, she finally got the courage to come forward in the interest of justice. That really should not be so hard to comprehend. How many people in this country have had the courage to stand up against the Bush family smear machine? Remember, Bush said, “You are either for us, or against us.” Look what happened to little Scotty McClellan just this past week.

Many peaceful activists have been spied on and discriminated against by this administration, so it takes exceptional courage to go against them. And as one friend and source of mine said to me recently who just happens to be in private law enforcement: “Corporate America has all the power and money now. Going up against them, well, you are taking your life in your own hands, believe me. They can be evil bastards.”

Why didn’t prosecutors follow leads against other Republicans implicated by Lanny Young?

Easy. The prosecutors were Republicans doing the bidding of a Republican White House and Justice Department hell bent on political domination for the next generation. There aren’t many career prosecutors who would stand up to that. They would have been fired anyway if they did. Maybe they needed the job to support their families? So they did what they were told.

The court reporter for the case died, but releasing the transcript took more than a year and a half. Why?

One answer: The judge. It’s his responsibility, and he allowed the court reporter’s death to be exploited for a delay. Another indication of a corrupt, biased, partisan judge.

Why did a judge with known political differences with Siegelman hear the case? Should he have recused himself? Why not recuse himself to avoid any appearance of impropriety?

Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller was granted a lifetime appointment to the court by President George W. Bush on the recommendation of Senator Jeff Sessions and other Alabama Republicans for the exact purpose to sit in judgment in cases such as the Siegelman case. With all Karl Rove’s talk of “activist liberal judges,” the activist conservative judges seem to be far worse.

Did the government prove quid pro quo? Was the jury instructed that this had to be proven? If there was no quid pro, wasn’t Siegelman still convicted of obstruction of justice involving the motorcycle?

Finally, we get to a couple of questions that will be answered in court. The three-judge panel in Atlanta will most likely take up those questions – and answer them. They make up key questions in the appeal.

Was Nick Bailey instructed to write his testimony over and over again to get it straight?

That question has already been answered in the affirmative, even though prosecutors denied it in the state’s monopoly newspapers. The facts support the contention, not the press release.

Why did the federal government push for the release of key witness Lanny Young because of the effect of the media attention on him in prison? Why is that cause to release Young and not Siegelman?

Well, duh. Can you say “Be my bi-atch?”

Why, a year after the sentencing, did federal prosecutors decide not to pursue the longer sentences they had requested?

Easy. Their case on appeal and in the court of public opinion was falling apart.

After hundreds of accusations by both sides and articles and reports on “60 Minutes” and in the New York Times and Time magazine (and Harpers.org and LocustFork.Net), so many questions still surround the case. Now, people want to know if the verdict will be overturned or if Siegelman will be pardoned by the next president. This leads to yet another question. How long it will take for this to play out?

Some ending. If the case is overturned, which seems likely by Christmas, there will be no need for a presidential pardon, now will there?

Reach Sebastian Kitchen at 205-240-0141 or by e-mail at skitchen@gannett.com and tell him to read the Locust Fork News and Journal, will you?

Oh, we know. There might be some “bad old” information out there on the “Internets” like the Big Bad Wolf (or Tom Wolfe). And it might corrupt the simple minds of some men and women everywhere. Besides, we don’t sell our product in a box on the street corner or mail it to your house – just your e-mail inbox.

So sue us – we’d get all the publicity : )

A Call to Patriots From Don Siegelman

June 19th, 2008

Interesting meeting of the DFA and PDA and Young Democrats on Birmingham’s Southside tonight. Thanks to Ben and Janis and Tom. More on that later…

This just in from Don Siegelman:

A Call to Patriots

My Dear Friend:

Karl Rove abused his power as an official of the Bush White House and has been inextricably linked to the misuse of The United States Department of Justice.

The Department of Justice was used as a political tool to retain and to gain political power, thus perverting our system of justice and subverting rights and freedoms guaranteed by the U S Constitution.

In connection to these and other criminal conspiracies, Karl Rove has been subpoenaed to appear before the U S House Judiciary Committee. If Rove continues to refuse and fails to appear, The House Judiciary Committee must vote to hold Rove in contempt and that must then be voted on by the entire United States House of Representatives.

It is crucial to the preservation of our democracy and to the restoration of justice that Karl Rove and others, whomever they may be, be held accountable for these crimes against the United States of America.

It is important therefore that each of us do everything within our power to encourage all members of Congress to vote to hold Karl Rove in contempt and to vote to enforce that ” citation”. This is the only constitutional procedure that is available to us as citizens.

Please write, call and email as many members of Congress as possible and pass this request on to as many of your friends as possible.

The Founders of this nation left the preservation of our democracy up to us. It is now our time to take action.

Don Siegelman
Former Governor of Alabama
1999-2003

Please go to www.donsiegelman.com for more action that can be taken to help in this fight for justice.

Media Alert: Glynn Wilson To Give Talk on Siegelman Case

June 12th, 2008

Locust Fork News and Journal editor Glynn Wilson will give a talk in Birmingham June 18 for the Greater Birmingham Democracy for America chapter and Progressive Democrats of America. The title of the talk will be:

How the Political Prosecution of Don Siegelman was Confirmed: The Role of a Whistleblower and the Independent Web Press

See you at Jim and Nick’s BBQ’s Back Room on Southside from 7-8 p.m. There will be a Barbeque Buffet and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided, although the bar will be open : )

Dessert and gratuity paid by sponsor, although a helpful donation of $12 would be appreciated.

RSVP Required by 12 Noon June 18. Space Limited – Call Janis @ 205-492-1976 or e-mail her at: jmartens01@aol.com

A more detailed profile:

How the Political Prosecution of Don Siegelman was Confirmed: The Role of a Whistleblower and the Independent Web Press

Glynn Wilson has been a reporter, writer and photographer for almost 30 years. He spent nine years in academe, holds two degrees from the University of Alabama in journalism and communications, and has done stints as a free-lance writer for The New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, the Dallas Morning News, UPI and some of the best alternative weeklies in the country. For the past 12 years he has experimented with publishing on the Web Press and pioneered in the field of Independent online journalism.

www.linkedin.com/in/glynnwilson

When the story of Jill Simpson’s affidavit broke about Karl Rove’s manipulation of the Department of Justice, Wilson was the only reporter in Alabama really equipped to get the whole story. He tracked down Ms. Simpson and did the first on-the-record, in-person interview with her for eight hours in Rainsville, Alabama, reviewed the key documents, and broke a 5,000 word five part series in the Locust Fork Journal.

Jill Simpson’s Affidavit May Help Justice Prevail in the Siegelman, Scrushy Case

A few days later, New York attorney and writer Scott Horton, who had recently started blogging on the law for Harpers.org, picked up on the story. Then it came to the attention of The Nation Institute. Wilson was awarded a grant from the institute’s investigative journalism fund and published a 2800 word version of the story on The Nation magazine’s Website, which some still say is the definitive investigative news feature summarizing the entire sorted affair.

The Nation: A Whistleblower’s Tale

He also published another version of the story in the Progressive Populist newspaper out of Texas.

Justice Off the Tracks in Alabama

Wilson continues to cover the story as editor and publisher of the Locust Fork News and Journal on the Web at LocustFork.Net.

Riley Slams Jill Simpson's Role in Siegelman Case

June 11th, 2008

by Glynn Wilson

Updates below…

Alabama Governor Bob Riley made an impromptu appearance at the Tuscaloosa News on Wednesday and broke his silence in the political prosecution of former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman. In response to questions from Tuscaloosa News columnist Tommy Stevenson, Riley claimed he had nothing to do with the case.

doc_jill2c.jpg
Glynn Wilson
Rainsville attorney Jill Simpson with her dentist, Dr. Marvin Barron, the brother of long-time state legislator Lowell Barron

He also used the forum to personally slam Alabama attorney and GOP whistleblower Jill Simpson, who is a key source in exposing the role of White House officials in manipulating the Department of Justice into putting Siegelman on trial and firing federal prosecutors who were not so loyal to President George W. Bush’s political agenda to go along with using their offices for corrupt political purposes.

“Dana Jill Simpson has no, zero, credibility. Anyone who has ever talked to her, anyone who has ever listened to her, understands that,” Riley said in response a question from Stevenson. “The only people who give it any credibility are Don Siegelman’s attorneys.”

But the fact is, a number of national news organizations thought enough of Ms. Simpson’s story to write articles and run television news segments about it, and Congressional investigators gave it enough credence to take her testimony under oath. The last part is an odd comment, considering Siegelman’s attorneys have never used Ms. Simpson’s affidavit signed last May in Siegelman’s appeal.

Riley admitted knowing Karl Rove, Bush’s former political adviser, but he denied talking to Rove or soliciting his help for anything in Alabama, including the Siegelman prosecution. But it is well known that Rove’s political campaign consulting firm has been involved in many races in Alabama, including state Supreme Court races and the campaign of former state Attorney General William Pryor, who first started an investigation of Siegelman in the late 1990s.

“It’s interesting with all the investigations going on in Washington, D.C. that Mr. Bob Riley wants to slam me in the press. I’ve not been out lately making any statements,” Ms. Simpson said in an interview Wednesday.

“My best suggestion for him is, instead of running his mouth in the press, he needs to go up there and put his hand on the Bible and raise his right hand and take an oath to tell the truth in front of the House Judiciary Committee.”

Further, she said, his son needs to quit avoiding appearing before the committee.

Rob Riley, the governor’s son who was in contact with Ms. Simpson as a Republican volunteer before she split with the Alabama Republican Party for being asked by their paid operatives to do “dirty, untrue research,” has so far avoided making a statement he promised to make before the House Judiciary Committee, which is investigating the political prosecution of former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman.

A report from the committee in the spring showed that the committee had made an attempt to get Rob Riley to make a statement, and that Riley indicated he would. But since then, sources say, Riley has avoided numerous attempts from the committee to get in touch with him.

Rove is avoiding a Congressional subpoena to testify himself in the investigation, hiding behind a broad claim of executive privilege that protects communications between the president and his advisers. Legal experts say the executive privilege claim in this case is more than a little thin, since Congress is not asking Rove to testify about communications with the president, but with the Bush Justice Department. Some sources say the president was directly in on the political manipulation of justice in Alabama and that in fact he may have been in the loop, so it could be that Rove is threatening to expose the president’s role if he is not protected by the White House. He does not seem to be the type to fall on his sword for the king.

“I would ask the people of Alabama to consider that it is easy to say things in the press that may not necessarily be true, but it is entirely a different thing to put your hand on the Bible and agree to tell the truth and take an oath and do it in front of congressional committee lawyers.” Ms. Simpson said. “I took the oath. I strongly suggest they do the same.”

Ms. Simpson said further that since the governor is using his “powerful position” to attack her credibility, “one would think he would be more than willing to show the citizens of the great state of Alabama that he was telling the truth.”

While Riley said nobody believes her story, she said that is just not true and there is no good reason not to believe it.

“I provided a video tape of the event I declared in my affidavit and phone records, and neither of those things have been disputed as incorrect,” she said.

Riley also said Ms. Simpson’s affidavit and Congressional testimony are “ludicrous” and “have no relation to the truth,” and he tries to say there is some difference between what she is saying now and what she said last summer under oath. “It’s never the same,” Riley says, attempting a little laugh.

But of course she hasn’t said anything in public lately, not since MSNBC ran a small quote from her on video back in March after CBS’s “60 Minutes” ran it’s long segment fleshing out much of the story.

“He wants to say I’ve expanded my story,” Ms. Simpson said. “But I have no control over the different aspects the press covers.”

Riley further says something that is so patently false any follower of this story could spot right away.

“No one’s challenged it (Ms. Simpson’s story),” Riley says. “Everybody has accepted it.”

But the fact is, every major newspaper in Alabama, GQ magazine and the conservative Weekly Standard magazine and a few right-wing bloggers have challenged it with the typical Rovian slant that she is “a loon.”

I’ve already reported many times that I know her personally and have investigated the story and see no reason to doubt its veracity. Rove and Riley and Bill Canary at the Business Council and every other loyal Bush Republican involved in this scandal have refused to testify under oath.

Ad 1: “Dana Jill Simpson is a brave American patriot,” Don Siegelman said when contacted for comment on Riley’s statement. “It is so refreshing, as my family, friends and I have gone through this nightmare, to wake up to the voice of such an angel. Ms. Simpson should give all of us faith, that even in the darkest hours of our country’s history of abuse of power, there is hope because the American people will stand up to fight injustice.”

On it’s Website, the Tuscaloosa News promises to run a full story in the newspaper Thursday, and more of the video on the Web too.

Here’s the video excerpt from Wednesday:

Ad 2: Tommy Stevenson said Riley was doing a tour of editorial boards at his request to talk about other issues, especially the subject of special sessions that might be needed to help bail out Jefferson County. After the editorial board meeting, Stevenson then had the video camera rolling and asked Riley about the Siegelman case.

The day 2 story is here:

Riley Says Siegelman Case Wasn’t Political

Riley Breaks Silence to Spin Siegelman Prosecution Story

June 11th, 2008

Alabama Governor Bob Riley broke his silence today and told the Tuscaloosa News editorial board he warned Don Siegelman against politicizing the corruption case that eventually ended with the former governor in prison, according to a post on the Tuscaloosa News Website.

Riley also said Alabama attorney and GOP whistleblower Jill Simpson “has no credibility” and that “anyone” who has ever listened to her story does not believe it. Of course that’s not true, since I have interviewed her many times at length and the New York Times has run stories along with Time magazine, CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Dan Abrams on MSNBC, and the Tuscaloosa News’s Tommy Stevenson himself.

Riley Denies Involvement in Siegelman Prosecution

Riley has the longest press honeymoon of any governor in Alabama history. Not one single negative word has been published on him in the big three Newhouse papers in the state. But that does not mean Riley has any credibility on this issue. He claims to have never talked to Karl Rove about this, but what he is saying is right out of Rove’s political playbook.