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Gonzales: Did He Help Bush Keep His DUI Quiet?--Newsweek

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Gloria Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-05 12:42 AM
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Gonzales: Did He Help Bush Keep His DUI Quiet?--Newsweek
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6857224/site/newsweek/



Gonzales: Did He Help Bush Keep His DUI Quiet?


By Michael Isikoff
Newsweek

Jan. 31 issue - Senate Democrats put off a vote on White House counsel Alberto Gonzales's nomination to be attorney general, complaining he had provided evasive answers to questions about torture and the mistreatment of prisoners. But Gonzales's most surprising answer may have come on a different subject: his role in helping President Bush escape jury duty in a drunken-driving case involving a dancer at an Austin strip club in 1996. The judge and other lawyers in the case last week disputed a written account of the matter provided by Gonzales to the Senate Judiciary Committee. "It's a complete misrepresentation," said David Wahlberg, lawyer for the dancer, about Gonzales's account.


Bush's summons to serve as a juror in the drunken-driving case was, in retrospect, a fateful moment in his political career: by getting excused from jury duty he was able to avoid questions that would have required him to disclose his own 1976 arrest and conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI) in Kennebunkport, Maine—an incident that didn't become public until the closing days of the 2000 campaign. (Bush, who had publicly declared his willingness to serve, had left blank on his jury questionnaire whether he had ever been "accused" in a criminal case.) Asked by Sen. Patrick Leahy to describe "in detail" the only court appearance he ever made on behalf of Bush, Gonzales—who was then chief counsel to the Texas governor—wrote that he had accompanied Bush the day he went to court "prepared to serve on a jury." While there, Gonzales wrote, he "observed" the defense lawyer make a motion to strike Bush from the jury panel "to which the prosecutor did not object." Asked by the judge whether he had "any views on this," Gonzales recalled, he said he did not.


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tjdee Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-05 12:47 AM
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1. So what?
Why do they even bother to print these things.

Like it's going anywhere, or will mean anything at all.

Btw, is this the best their crack reporters can come up with? Any first year j-school student can come up with a dozen more meaty Bush stories. Probably even a few more interesting Gonzales stories.
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GreenPoet64 Donating Member (897 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-05 02:53 AM
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2. I found the article to be interesting. thx. n/t
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ebayfool Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-05 03:23 AM
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3. TY - Every crack in the dam helps! At least it's coming out (MSM yet!)


/snip

In separate interviews, Crain—along with Wahlberg and prosecutor John Lastovica—told NEWSWEEK that, before the case began, Gonzales asked to have an off-the-record conference in the judge's chambers. Gonzales then asked Crain to "consider" striking Bush from the jury, making the novel "conflict of interest" argument that the Texas governor might one day be asked to pardon the defendant (who worked at an Austin nightclub called Sugar's), the judge said. "He raised the issue," Crain said. Crain said he found Gonzales's argument surprising, since it was "extremely unlikely" that a drunken-driving conviction would ever lead to a pardon petition to Bush. But "out of deference" to the governor, Crain said, the other lawyers went along. Wahlberg said he agreed to make the motion striking Bush because he didn't want the hard-line governor on his jury anyway. But there was little doubt among the participants as to what was going on. "In public, they were making a big show of how he was prepared to serve," said Crain. "In the back room, they were trying to get him off."
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