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ETHICS
Chris Christie's Cronyism
In September, New Jersey's U.S. attorney, Christopher Christie, announced that the nation's largest manufacturers of hip and knee implants agreed to pay $311 million to settle allegations that they secretly paid kickbacks to surgeons. At the time, Christie touted the case as "groundbreaking" for consumers. Yet the deal also "proved to be lucrative for Christie's old boss," former attorney general John Ashcroft, whose firm received a $52 million no-bid contract to monitor one of the corporations in the settlement. This apparent favoritism is part of a pattern by Christie, who has directed similar contracts to other former Bush administration colleagues. The Justice Department has now opened up an investigation into U.S. attorneys' "procedures for selecting outside monitors to police settlements with large companies," which have gone largely unmonitored. Congressional leaders in both the House and the Senate have also suggested that they will soon be holding hearings on the subject.
POLITICAL FAVORITISM: Last fall, Christie awarded Ashcroft's firm a private, no-bid 18-month contract worth $28 to $52 million to monitor Zimmer Holdings of Indiana, one of the corporations in the settlement. According to SEC filings, the arrangement calls for Zimmer to directly "pay Ashcroft Group Consulting Services an average monthly fee between $1.5 million and $2.9 million. The figure includes a flat payment of $750,000 to the firm's 'senior leadership group,' individual legal and consulting services billed at up to $895 an hour, and as much as $250,000 a month for expenses including private airfare, lodging and meals." Zimmer has confirmed that "Christie had directed it to hire Mr. Ashcroft," who had tapped Christie to serve on his advisory panel in 2004. Christie has insisted that Ashcroft was the best pick to monitor Zimmer because he "understands organization structure and how to get things done." Yet Ashcroft's group isn't even a law firm. A spokesman for Ashcroft also confirmed that the group never lobbied for the contract, but "was pleased by the referral." While Ashcroft's deal with Christie appears to be the most lucrative, three other former Justice Department colleagues received similar contracts from Christie to monitor medical-supply companies.
LARGER SYSTEM SET UP BY BUSH ADMINISTRATION: Christie's contract to Ashcroft may be receiving the most public attention, but he is taking advantage of a larger system set up by the Bush administration. Under this President, "federal prosecutors have increasingly relied on out-of-court settlements with large corporations in criminal investigations that in the past might have resulted in indictments and trials." According to a recent study, "the number of so-called deferred-prosecution or nonprosecution agreements between the [Justice] department and large companies grew to 35 last year from 5 in 2003." These federal prosecutors, therefore, are allowed to award contracts to company monitors with the compensation agreements "almost always [kept] secret." Justice Department officials have confirmed that Christie was actually not legally obligated to seek approval before hiring Ashcroft because "there were few internal guidelines for hiring independent monitors."
INVESTIGATIONS LOOMING: The Justice Department has opened an investigation into how federal prosecutors appoint independent monitors, although it insists that the review was not prompted by the Christie-Ashcroft deal. While the Ashcroft contract was legal, aides to Attorney General Michael Mukasey have noted that they are "concerned about the appearance of favoritism." Lawmakers have written to the Justice Department objecting to the Ashcroft deal, pointing to it as "new evidence of political favoritism in the Bush administration." In November, Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) wrote to Christie, pointing out that these deals invite "the very sort of favoritism, political interference, and back room dealing that your office has been so successful in combating throughout New Jersey." Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) said that he is pushing for legislation "that will provide the necessary oversight" over contracts for federal monitors. Both the House and Senate Judiciary Committee chairmen, John Conyers (D-MI) and Patrick Leahy (D-VT), have also pressed the Justice Department for details on the contract awarded to Ashcroft and other outside lawyers since 2001. Conyers expressed concern that many of the monitoring contracts "have been completely shielded from review by either the legislative or judicial branches of the government." The two committees plan to hold hearings on the issues in the coming weeks.
Under the Radar
HUMAN
RIGHTS -- McCONNELL ADMITS
WATERBOARDING WOULD BE TORTURE IF DONE TO HIM: In
an interview
with the New
Yorker,
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell admitted that the
practice of waterboarding "would be torture" if used against
him. "If I had water draining into my nose, oh God, I just
can't
imagine how painful!" said McConnell. "Whether it's torture by anybody
else's definition,
for
me it would be torture."
He added that there should be a "pretty simple" legal test for torture:
"Is
it excruciatingly painful to the point of forcing someone to say
something because of the pain?" A CIA spokesman, however, was quick to
point out that "DNI McConnell is quoted as saying the United
States does not torture." Last month, Lt. Cmdr. Andrew
Williams, a JAG officer with the U.S. Naval Reserve, resigned
his commission after Brigadier
General Thomas Hartmann refused
to say whether he would consider it to be torture
if Iranians
waterboarded American soldiers. "Thank you, General Hartmann, for
finally admitting the United
States is
part of a long tradition of torturers
going back to the
Inquisition," Williams wrote, explaining his resignation.
IRAN
-- BUSH DISOWNS U.S. INTEL, TELLS
ISRAELIS IRAN NIE DOESN'T REFLECT HIS OWN VIEWS: After
the
recent National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran was released,
Israel publicly challenged the U.S. intelligence community's consensus
that Iran
had stopped
its nuclear weapons program. "In
our opinion," Israeli Defense
Minister Ehud Barak said, Iran "has
apparently continued that program." Just
days after the NIE
was released, President Bush quickly announced he would make
the
first visit to Israel of his
presidency to mend differences over
Iran. In private meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert
this week, Newsweek reports that Bush disowned the
U.S. intelligence
community's judgments, saying
"that he can't control what the
intelligence community says, but that [the NIE's] conclusions don't
reflect his own views." Bush had reportedly briefed Olmert
about
the Iran NIE days before it
was publicly released in late November. According to the New Yorker's
Seymour Hersh, "The
Israelis were very upset about the report.
They think we're naive,
they don't think we get it right. And so they have a different point of
view." But after his private meetings with Bush this week,
Olmert
-- asked whether he felt reassured about the U.S. stance toward Iran --
replied, "I am very
happy."
IRAQ -- SNOW CLAIMS
'EVERYONE
GETS IT WRONG AT THE BEGINNING OF A WAR:
On Friday, former White
House spokesperson Tony Snow was interviewed
on HBO's
Real Time with Bill Maher. Maher discussed how woefully
unprepared
the Bush administration was for post-invasion Iraq. "People
paid in
blood for him to learn"
that more troops were needed for post-Saddam
Iraq, Maher said to applause and cheers from the audience. "Even if
this did work," he added, referring to the surge. But Snow tried to
shrug off Maher's statements, declaring that "everybody gets it wrong
at the beginning of war." Snow added, "I think it's impossible for
anybody to get their arms
around the whole thing. Anybody." "Including the administration?" asked
entrepreneur Mark Cuban. "Including you, me, yeah," said Snow. Snow
seems
to believe that no one could have predicted that fallout
from the invasion, an attempt to exonerate the administration's rosy
view of post-invasion Iraq.
Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi responded, "I didn't get it wrong. We
shouldn't have gone." Not everyone got it wrong -- just everyone
in the
Bush administration did.
Think Fast
Officials in Vice President Cheney's office saw the Iran National Intelligence Estimate "as a death blow to their Iran policy," reports the Wall Street Journal. The report's authors "knew how to pull the rug out from under us," said a "long-time aide to the vice president, referring to the way the key judgments were presented."
"In a closed door hearing scheduled for Wednesday, Congress plans to ask why the CIA destroyed tapes showing interrogations of suspected al-Qaeda operatives. Was it a cover-up?"
75 percent: Americans who think the country is off on the wrong track, matching the highest number ever recorded in the CBS News/New York Times poll.
"Strong evidence is emerging that consumer spending, a bulwark against recession over the last year even as energy prices surged and the housing market sputtered, has begun to slow sharply at every level of the American economy, from the working class to the wealthy."
Soon "after it returns tomorrow, the House is likely to take up contempt of Congress resolutions against White House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten and former White House counsel Harriet E. Miers for their refusal to appear before Congress for questioning about the 2006 removal of nine U.S. attorneys, Democratic leadership aides said."
The de-Baathification law passed by Iraq's parliament on Saturday is "riddled with loopholes and caveats to the point that some Sunni and Shiite officials say it could actually exclude more former Baathists than it lets back in, particularly in the crucial security ministries."
MSNBC uninvites Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH). After initially inviting Kucinich to take part in its debate in Las Vegas on Tuesday, MSNBC announced that it had changed its criteria and told Kucinich he was not allowed to attend.
"Climatic changes appear to be destabilizing vast ice sheets of western Antarctica that had previously seemed relatively protected from global warming." The report came just days after the head of the IPCC "said the group's next report should look at the 'frightening' possibility that ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica could melt rapidly at the same time."
And finally: A survey conducted by pollster Frank Luntz exclusively for Playboy magazine found that Republicans and Democratic voters have more in common than they realize. Among its key finds, the poll reported that "a quarter of Dems and GOPers say they’d have a 'one night stand' with the president, in the White House."
Good News
The United Service Organizations, which "aims to help boost the morale of U.S. troops abroad through donations and volunteers," has seen an estimated 50 percent increase in donations since 2007.
State Watch
OHIO:
Cleveland sues 21 of the nation's largest financial institutions,
accusing them of "flooding the local housing market with subprime
mortgage loans."
MARYLAND:
Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) "is
drawing up plans to
issue separate driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants and legal
residents."
MASSACHUSETTS:
"Domestic violence shelters across the state are becoming overwhelmed
and are increasingly turning victims away."
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell (R-KY): I am the
"godfather of
green."
MEDIA
MATTERS:
Does MSNBC's Chris Matthews have a problem with women?
OPEN
CONGRESS: Open Congress launches
"My Open Congress," which allows
users to be their "own best watchdog."
INFORMED
COMMENT: New Iraqi
de-Baathification law worries ex-Baathists.
Daily Grill
"He told the Israelis that he can't control what the
intelligence community says, but that [the National Intelligence
Estimate's] conclusions don't
reflect his own views" about Iran's nuclear-weapons program.
-- Senior administration official, 1/08
VERSUS
Q: So is it safe, then, to draw from that that the president is fully
confident in the information contained in the NIE?
PERINO: The president accepted the results of the NIE.
-- White House Press Secretary Dana Perino, 12/13/08
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