Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Mississippi justice; Meet Judge Oliver Diaz Jr.

Yes, another selective prosecution case in Mississippi. It's a never ending story of the abuse of the power in the Justice Dept. and White House. The chart above is all the connected dots of individuals including the U.S. attorney, herself, connected in the Diaz's case.


The Permanent Republican Majority Part V

In an exclusive interview with RAW STORY, a former Mississippi Republican state legislator who was later backed by Democrats to win a seat on the Mississippi Supreme Court discussed political prosecutions and what he sees as the corruption and politicization of the Department of Justice.
Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Oliver Diaz Jr. was indicted in 2003 on charges relating to his receipt of a loan guarantee from trial lawyer Paul Minor – a personal friend and the largest Democratic donor in Mississippi – to help defray campaign debts. A Bush-appointed US Attorney, Dunnica Lampton, brought charges of bribery against Diaz, Minor and two other Mississippi judges.

Diaz was acquitted of all those charges. A jury acquitted Minor of the charges related to Diaz, but was unable to reach a verdict on other charges. Within days of his acquittal, Diaz was indicted a second time. He was again acquitted.

“Normally, a criminal investigation begins after a crime is committed,” Diaz told me. “Investigators are sent out to gather evidence and a list of suspects is drawn up. Sometimes an investigation is begun after a complaint is made about suspicious activity. In our case neither of these things occurred.”

“In other words,” he continued. “An individual was singled out for examination from the federal government and prosecutors then attempted to make his conduct fit into some criminal statute. This is not how our system of justice is supposed to operate.”

Diaz first contacted me after having read Raw Story’s “Part One – The Political Prisoner” in this series, which reported on the prosecution of former Alabama governor Don Siegelman. Our interview was conducted over a period of several months in telephone conversations and email exchanges.

"The Permanent Republican Majority Part V: Interview with Diaz," is part of our ongoing investigation into the undermining of both the electoral process and the US legal system by corporate interests, their lobbyists and elected and appointed government officials aligned with them.

Prior to being appointed to the judiciary, Diaz served in the Mississippi House of Representatives as a Republican for seven years, representing Biloxi and D'Iberville. Diaz was elected to the Mississippi court of appeals in 1994, and in 2000 he was appointed to the state Supreme Court by Democratic governor Ronnie Musgrove.

What emerges during our interview are allegations of even more aggressive prosecutorial tactics and intimidation than has previously been reported. The allegations seem to fit the pattern of prosecution in Alabama, where another Bush-appointed US Attorney successfully prosecuted a popular democratic governor for bribery. As in Alabama, Diaz was indicted a second time after the first set of charges failed to hold up in court. Diaz was ultimately acquitted and still retains his state Supreme Court seat.

House broken into, wife 'threatened'

“After I was indicted and before my trial, my home was also broken into,” Diaz tells RAW STORY.
“Our door was kicked in and our documents were rummaged. Televisions, computers and other valuables were not taken, despite the fact that we were out of town for several days and the home was left open by the burglars. We could not figure out a motive for the burglary and reported it to the Biloxi Police Department. The crime was never solved.”

As previously reported in “The Permanent Republican Majority Part II” in our investigative series, Governor Siegelman’s home was broken into twice during the trial, and his attorney’s office was broken into at least once during the tortuous process of his case.

In another eerie parallel, Mississippi judge John Whitfield, who was tried along with Diaz and Minor, had his office set on fire. The Alabama Republican whistleblower, Dana Jill Simpson – who alleges White House involvement in the Siegelman case – had her home set on fire and her car run off the road after she came forward.

An FBI agent was also reassigned to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba after he voiced his concerns about the way Lampton was running his investigations. Agent Michael Campbell’s specialty is forensic accounting; so it’s unclear what his role might be at the prison.

Diaz’s wife, Jennifer, was indicted along with her husband. According to Diaz, the US Attorney’s office offered a veiled threat when discussing a plea agreement, making her an offer she could not refuse.

“Just before our trial, federal prosecutors spoke to Jennifer’s attorney and told him that they were willing to make a deal,” Diaz told me. “They explained that she and I were each facing many years in federal prison and millions of dollars in fines. They told her that it would be a shame if both she and I were convicted because they knew that we had two small children.”

“They said that if she would agree to plead guilty to a single count of tax evasion they would guarantee her that she would serve no time and would pay no fine,” Diaz added. “All she would have to do is fully cooperate with investigators by telling them everything she knows and to truthfully testify if they called her to the stand. Not being able to risk the loss of our children, Jennifer accepted this deal.”

Ultimately, Diaz notes, prosecutors did not call Jennifer to testify, as she was not able to add anything to their case.

Timing of indictments helps elect GOP governor

Diaz’s prosecutions – and those of the largest state Democratic donor and other Democrat- supported judges also seem to be part of a larger pattern to use flimsy criminal indictments for political gain.

Diaz was indicted three months prior the Mississippi’s gubernatorial elections. Because he’d been appointment by the incumbent Democratic governor, Republicans used his name as part of a smear campaign to bolster their candidate, Haley Barbour.

Barbour was the Chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1993 to 1997.

“The indictment was used prominently in the Republican campaign,” Diaz said. “The Haley Barbour campaign used the indictments of Paul Minor and me to taint Governor Musgrove. Minor had been one of Musgrove's largest contributors, and I was his appointee to the Supreme Court.

“Minor was also a large contributor to Democratic candidates across the country,” Diaz. “In fact, at the time he was one of John Edwards’ top ten largest contributors. The indictments would also serve to embarrass Edwards, who was considered at that time to be one of the most serious challengers to George Bush in the 2004 Presidential election. A political operative could not have picked a better time to issue the indictments in order to influence the upcoming elections.”


More from Raw Story.

Diaz is not the only case in Mississippi that is politically motivated. Meet Judge Wes Teel.

From Scott Horton of Harper's Magazine:

The more I learn about his case, the more I believe that, like former Governor Siegelman in Alabama, Teel was the victim of an effectively executed but politically motivated prosecution.

Teel was defeated for re-election to his judgeship in November 2002 after papers began running stories linking him to a criminal investigation about campaign finance irregularities. Soon thereafter he learned that he was a target in a federal criminal investigation directed by Jackson U.S. Attorney Dunnica Lampton. “Of course, they were out after Paul Minor,” Teel told me. “I was just collateral damage.”

Was he? Judge Teel was charged together with two other Mississippi judges and trial attorney Paul Minor. The first trial produced a hung jury, but the judge’s posture shifted rather dramatically in the second trial, and it produced some convictions, including Teel’s.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

February this year, a plane crashed in NC, carrying 6 prominent Georgia Republicans. All perished. One was named Frank Ruggiero, a foreman for a construction group called, "The Facility Group" which was building the Paulding County, Georgia court house. All six were friends with Republican Governor Sonny Perdue, and the Republican Speaker.
http://www.ajc.com/search/content/metro/stories/2008/03/15/lawsuit0315.html
Now there is a lawsuit in Mississippi against Georgia's, The Facility Group apparently involving the Mississippi governor.

......The indictment said Moultrie and Cawood carried out a scheme to give more than the allowable $5,000 in campaign contributions to the re-election campaign of the unnamed public official, who is not indicted, intending to influence and reward him for the state selecting The Facility Group to manage the design and construction of the beef plant.
Federal officials would not identify the “public official,” but former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove’s 2003 re-election campaign finance records match the contributions listed in the indictment. Musgrove is now a candidate for U.S. Senate.
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/shared-blogs/ajc/politicalinsider/entries/2008/03/26/head_of_facility_group_indicte.html

Anonymous said...

This Rovian brand of republican must be right in line with other Benedict Arnold's of their nation. He should consider how they are usually dealt with in the end

airJackie said...

I followed how Karl Rove fixed the 2000 election and it was cool. But I must say I am impressed with the way he now has allowed Americans to know about Selective Prosecution. I think it works very well with the Bush Law. Now it's worked so well it should be taught in the Colleges for Law Students to learn. The first time that word was used was with the DOJ attorney firings. Now we see Karl spread it through out the DOJ as we had no Attorney General at the time. Gonzo was just the figure head and had nothing to do with the decisions. Some people who are now in jail have no idea that the White House selected them for a crime they didn't commit. Now we see how the DOJ attorneys had no problem with the Judges appointed to make sure these people got found guilty. The entire Department of Justice has to be cleaned up from the top to the bottom. Musk Rat is just hoping he can last till the end and the Dough boy is looking to kick Musk Rat out so he can have on his resume he was an Attorney General for maybe a couple of months.

Anonymous said...

Republicans are a huge, interlinking Mafia. Maybe they want control of the Southern states and courts so they can get breaks for their cocaine/gun running/drug dealing friends. How do we make them go away and never come back? How can we protect the children from them?

KittyBowTie1 said...

WTF. When did I go to sleep and wake up in Stalin's communist Soviet Union? Should we all keep a bag of food by the door for when they only take away the good people?

SP Biloxi said...

"WTF. When did I go to sleep and wake up in Stalin's communist Soviet Union?"

The day when that Gerbil drunk crawled from the sewer pipe into the WH and stole both elections. Welcome to United Snakes of America.