December 13, 2007
ABA Names Alberto Gonzales Lawyer of the Year: When Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction
The American Bar Association bestowed Alberto Gonzales with one its biggest honors: it named him Lawyer of the Year for 2007.
What was the rationale of America’s most-respected organization for lawyers? Gonzales was “[t]he most talked-about attorney this past year by a mile…[he] rose from being the grandson of illegal immigrants to the first Hispanic attorney general of the United States.”
According to Edward Adams, the ABA’s Journal’s editor and publisher, choosing Gonzales wasn’t about a popularity contest. “It’s about who has had the most effect in the world of lawyers this year.”
Only in America! Gonzales’s convenient memory lapses of what led to his politically-charged firings of career U.S. Attorneys — telling Congress “I don’t recall” roughly 70 times in one hearing — is unlikely to ever be forgotten.
Nor will Gonzales’s role as White House Counsel in when he wrote a January 25, 2002 memo to Pres. Bush decrying the Geneva Convention as “quaint”, rendering “many of its provisions obsolete.”
Very strange, indeed.








