November 15, 2007

Trust Fund For Gonzlaes Legal Defense Grows

Former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has friends in high places raising money for the embattled lawyer’s trust fund set up for his legal defense.

Gonzales resigned from his position as the country’s top lawyer on September 17, 2007.

David Leitch, Ford Motor’s General CounselAccording to the Washington Post, Ford Motor Co.’s General Counsel David Leitch (inset) is spearheading the fundraising effort. He worked under Gonzales as White House Deputy Counsel when Gonzales served as White House Counsel.

Leitch’s Ford bio says that, while working for Gonzales and Bush, “he advised the President and his staff on a variety of legal issues, including issues involving the war on terror, judicial nominations, legislative proposals and ethics.”

George J. Terwilliger, III, Alberto Gonzales’ D.C. lawyerAlthough he is not currently facing criminal charges of wrongdoing related to the politically-motivated firing of career federal prosecutors, Gonzales retained high-powered D.C. white collar criminal defense lawyer George J. Terwilliger, III at White & Case in all matters related to the Justice Department Inspector General’s ongoing investigation of the firings debacle.

According to an ABA book on the Patriot Act, Patriot Debates: Experts Debate the USA PATRIOT Act, Terwilliger, takes a hard line against illegal immigration — the very route that brought his Gonzales’ family to Texas from Mexico decades ago.

The book explains that:

George Terwilliger urges aggressive legal action to control illegal immigration. He supports a national identity card, an approach to applicants for entry that differentiates by likely threat, an end to the release of asylum claimants while their cases are pending, the exclusion of illegal immigrants, with jail terms for repeat offenders, and the fingerprinting of all foreign visitors and immigrants.

Terwilliger’s law firm bio also notes that he “was a leader of President George W. Bush’s legal team during the Florida election recount,” and ensuing Bush v. Gore litigation.

August 15, 2007

Proposed Rule Would Allow Attorney General Fast-Track Death Penalty Appeals

U.S. Attorney General Alberto GonzalesUnder a proposed rule being finalized by the Justice Department, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales would be allowed to shorten, or ‘fast-track,’ inmate appeals in death penalty cases.

The controversial proposal came about under a little known provision in amendments to the Patriot Act.

The language in the Patriot Act modifies provisions in death penalty cases under 28 U.S.C. 2261, et seq..

Death row inmates would have less time to file habeas petitions in federal appeals courts challenging their convictions and resulting death row sentences. Instead of a full year to file an appeal, they would get less than half that time — 180 days. Federal appellate judges would also have less time to decide death row appeals.

L.A. Times’ D.C. reporter Rick Schmitt, broke the story yesterday, warning that “the move to shorten the appeals process and effectively speed up executions comes at a time of growing national concern about the fairness of the death penalty.”

The DOJ’s is seeking public comment on the proposed rule. That means anyone has until September 24, 2007 to write the DOJ to critique or praise the proposal.

Justice Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse told the Washington Post that the DOJ wanted “to ensure ample opportunity” for pubic comment about the changes so that advocacy groups had time to detail their objections to the proposed changes.

While this blog does not yet know exactly where you need to send objections to the proposal rules that would let the Attorney General potentially speed up death row executions, you can contact Roehrkasse at the DOJ to find out just how to do that.

Brian Roehrkasse
Director of Public Affairs
U.S. Department of Justice
E-mail: Brian.Roehrkasse@usdoj.gov
Tel: (202) 616-2777

Interested parties may also wish to mail and fax the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Policy here:

Office of Legal Policy
U.S. Department of Justice
Room 4234 Main Justice Building
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20530-0001
Telephone: (202) 514-4601
Fax: (202) 514-2424