Yet another victim of Bush/Rove’s DoJ (this one in Georgia)
Charles Walker is yet another Democratic victim of Bush/Rove’s DoJ–and so his case is yet another grave injustice that Obama/Holder must redress (if they can find the time to do it, while lavishing attention on Republicans alleged to have been wrongly prosecuted).
With Scott Horton’s fine account of Walker’s case I have one little quibble (which I’ve brought to his attention): There’s no evidence that the Republicans “rode a tidal wave of resentment [...] to electoral success in Georgia” because of the retirement of the Confederate flag (with which Walker had a lot to do). The statewide bitterness alleged to have cost
both Sen. Max Cleland and Gov. Roy Barnes their re-elections was “so private,” marvelled the New York Times, “that no polls picked it up.”
So, please, let’s face the fact that the regime responsible for all those groundless and sadistic prosecutions of the likes of Walker, Don Siegelman, Paul Minor and so many other Democrats was every bit as capable of stealing countless votes. (Indeed, that regime never could have come to power without doing so.)
MCM
Via Dana Jill Simpson:
Friends,
Please see visit link for video of the press conference and vote on whether you think Charles Walker should receive a new trial. Also please send to your friends and call John Conyers at 202-225-3951 and email him at john.conyers@mail.house.gov.
Also call Office of Professional Responsibility at (202)-514-3365 and ask them why judge Dudley Bowen preside over the Walker trial. You can cut and paste the articles below.
Ask them to investigate Charles Walker’s case just as they did Gov.Seigelman’s. And ask to them to get to the bottom of why did Judge Bowen preside over Walker’s trial knowing that Walker opposed his judgeship, and forced him to resign from five all white male only clubs in 1979.
Rebel Yell II: Will Georgia’s Charles Walker Get a New Trial?
By Scott Horton
Dramatic developments in Georgia, as federal judge Dudley Bowen, who presided over the trial and sentencing of former Georgia senate leader Charles Walker, acknowledged that he never should have been involved with the case because his “impartiality might reasonably have been questioned.” The announcement instantly triggered demands for a new trial. The recusal thickens the cloud of impropriety surrounding the prosecution. It was initiated by a U.S. attorney who was removed after an internal Justice Department study concluded his conduct was politically motivated and inappropriate. I profiled the Walker case in October 2007 in “The Justice Department Raises a Rebel Yell: The Strange Prosecution of Charles Walker.”
In 1996, Charles Walker, a Georgia publisher and entrepreneur, became the first black American to be chosen as a Senate majority leader in the country. He achieved that in Georgia. And he quickly used his new position to advance some causes that were unpopular with whites in general and with the state’s Neoconfederate Republicans in particular. He pressed an initiative to drop the Confederate battle flag from the state flag of Georgia. Segregationists had adopted the Confederate banner as the state flag in 1956, as an act of defiance in the face of a growing civil rights movement. Walker’s effort succeeded, but it unleashed a tidal wave of resentment that Republicans rode to electoral success in Georgia. And it may have had personal consequences for Walker.
George W. Bush took charge in Washington in 2001, and new U.S. attorneys were appointed in Georgia. Walker suddenly discovered that he was the target of a no-holds-barred criminal investigation-an investigation launched in search of a crime. The U.S. attorney in question was the subject of a Justice Department investigation that found he opened criminal cases which appeared to advance the interests of a Republican candidate who happened to be his friend. The U.S. attorney in question was forced to resign his position, but did so after promising senior figures in the Georgia G.O.P. that the effort to get Walker would proceed just the same. And in fact it did. The case contained 142 counts, arguing that Walker engaged in fraud and corrupt dealings. The counts were for the most part an extreme stretch: at the heart of the government’s case was a claim that Walker defrauded advertisers in his publication by overstating its subscription base, a not exactly earth-shattering practice. But highly abusive practices identified by the Department’s own internal probe-reiterating corruption claims and widely fanning them in the press-drove the case to a dubious conviction.
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Originally posted: Yet another victim of Bush/Rove’s DoJ (this one in Georgia)