GOP Congress Members Implicated In US Attorney Firing Scandal

GOP Congress Members Implicated In US Attorney Firing Scandal

The firings of eight U.S. attorneys has put the heat on top Justice Department officials--and some GOP members of Congress. The unusual mass dismissals took place late last year, but the controversy escalated last week when David Iglesias, the former U.S. attorney in New Mexico, went public with a dramatic charge: that he had gotten phone calls from two unidentified GOP lawmakers in D.C. last October, pressing him to bring indictments in a high-profile corruption case involving a prominent local Democrat before the November election. Iglesias--a former Navy prosecutor who was the model for Tom Cruise's character in "A Few Good Men"--said he refused to answer. Six weeks later, a Justice official ordered him to resign. This week, Iglesias has been subpoenaed along with three other fired prosecutors to testify before Congress. He plans to name the lawmakers who called him as Rep. Heather Wilson (who was in a tight re-election battle at the time) and Sen. Pete Domenici (who originally sponsored him for the job), according to two sources familiar with his account who asked not to be identified talking about the upcoming testimony. An aide to Wilson said "no comment." Domenici's office didn't return repeated phone calls. A senior Justice official, anonymous because of the confidential subject, confirmed to NEWSWEEK that Domenici "did express general concerns" about Iglesias to senior DOJ officials--but insisted he did not specifically complain about the corruption case. "It's absolutely 100 percent inaccurate" to suggest that Iglesias's failure to bring the corruption case against the Democrat led to his dismissal, department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said.

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