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March 14, 2007 04:13 PM UTC

Will Senator Salazar say anything about Abu Gonzales?

  • 8 Comments
  • by: Zappatero

Ken sponsored Alberto Gonzales to the Senate for his nomination.

Alberto specifically promised Ken Salazar something – and this little twerp lied to Ken.

He lied to congress.

He lied to the American people.

He wrote the infamous torture memos. He was instrumental in the NSA spying scandal. He said “Habeus corpus, what Habeus corpus?” And he wrote the one-page execution memos so George Bush could sleep well after pulling the plug on killers in the Texas “system of justice”.

Come to your senses Ken. Come to the defense of the Constitution. At least once…….

(somewhat modified from S2.)

Comments

8 thoughts on “Will Senator Salazar say anything about Abu Gonzales?

      1. that the Geneva Convention and prohibitions against torture were “quaint” ideas which had to yield in the war against terrorism.
          Although I think Gonzales should be fired now over his firing of the U.S. Attorneys who refused to indict Democratic politicians prior to last year’s elections, I must confess that I did not oppose Gonzales’ original appointment as A.G. in ’05 because I so wanted to see John Asscraft out of the Justice Dept.

  1. Salazar ‘troubled’ but not calling for Gonzales to resign

    By M.E. Sprengelmeyer, Rocky Mountain News
    March 14, 2007

    WASHINGTON – Sen. Ken Salazar said today he is troubled by allegations that have “blemished” the Department of Justice, but so far he is not joining the parade of Democrats calling for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign.

    “I think we need to know the facts first,” Salazar, D-Denver, told reporters during a conference call.

    “I am troubled by the allegations here, that the arm of the law in the Department of Justice would somehow be used to further a particular political end,” Salazar said. “That would be a misuse of the prosecutorial powers of the Department of Justice, in my view.”

    Several prominent Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., have called for Gonzales to follow his chief of staff’s lead and resign over a series of prosecutor firings that critics claim were politically-motivated.

    Gonzales is in the center of a firestorm over the way eight U.S. Attorneys were replaced late last year.

    Some of the fired prosecutors have said that, prior to their firings, they received inappropriate communications from congressional Republicans pressing them to take action on investigating voter fraud allegations against Democrats.

    Justice Department officials had denied that the White House was involved in the decisions. But Gonzales was forced to admit some mistakes on Tuesday, after the release of e-mails showing that his former chief of staff, Kyle Sampson, had repeated communications with former White House legal adviser Harriet Miers over plans to replace U.S. attorneys.

    Sampson resigned earlier this week. On Tuesday, Gonzales’ acknowledged “mistakes were made” in the handling of the case, but he defended the president’s right to replace U.S. attorneys and said he had no plans to step down.

    Despite Gonzales’ public explanations, the list of Democrats calling for his resignation continues growing, including Reid, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., and others.

    So far, Salazar has not joined the resignation calls, but he said he also is troubled by recent reports about federal investigators’ widespread use of controversial “National Security Letters” to obtain information in terrorism investigations.

    “I don’t think things are looking very bright in the Department of Justice,” Salazar said. “The DOJ at the end of the day should be the one department of our nation’s government that really is viewed by the American people as standing up for the rule of law. Right now, it appears that the Department of Justice and its role in upholding the rule of law has been blemished.”

    . . . .

    http://www.rockymoun

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