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Palin Trooper Scandal Could Become Problem

STEVE QUINN | September 1, 2008 06:32 PM EST | AP

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the GOP vice presidential candidate, is being represented by an attorney in the investigation into the firing of her public safety commissioner.

The Legislature is investigating whether Palin fired public safety commissioner Walt Monegan after he refused to fire a state trooper who had divorced Palin's sister.

The Legislature's investigating committee disclosed the attorney's hiring on Monday. The committee released an e-mailed letter it had received from the lawyer on Friday, the day McCain announced she would be McCain's running mate.

"We have been hired to represent the Governor and the Governor's Office" in the investigation, Anchorage attorney Thomas V. Van Flein wrote. "We fully welcome a fair inquiry into these allegations. ... Please know that we intend to cooperate with this investigation."

Tucker Eskew, a senior McCain adviser, said the state, not Palin herself, hired the attorney to represent her in her capacity as governor, and he has been working for several weeks.

"The governor of every state gets legal counsel and this attorney is part of a weeks-old effort to provide this governor defense in a series of outlandish politically motivated charges," Eskew said. "This legal defense is neither new nor uncommon nor at all political. It is a matter of her job and is not recent and it is not related to her selection on the McCain-Palin ticket."

Van Flein requested a copy of all witness statements and documentary evidence from the Legislature's investigator, Stephen Branchflower. Sen. Hollis French, an Anchorage Democrat who heads the panel, said he has instructed Branchflower not to comply with the request.

In July, a legislative oversight committee approved $100,000 to investigate whether Palin abused her power in firing Monegan.

This political he-said, she-said has dogged Palin for nearly two months and is likely to do so for another two months leading to the Nov. 4 presidential election.

The little-known vice presidential candidate faces accusations of firing public safety commissioner Walt Monegan in what amounts to a messy Palin family drama dating to her pre-gubernatorial days.

The accuser is blogger and rental car executive Andrew Halcro, a Republican-turned-Independent who lost to Palin in the 2006 governor's race.

The accused is Palin, the rising Republican star with a clean-hands reputation who has the most to lose.

The man in the middle is Monegan, who says Palin never told him to fire the trooper, but he felt pressure to do so from members of her administration.

Then there's trooper Mike Wooten, who used a Taser on his stepson, Palin's nephew Payton. Wooten has been reprimanded for violating nearly a dozen laws and departmental policies since December 2001.

It's now in the hands of a state-hired investigator working for a Republican-dominated legislative committee that hopes to sort out the mess.

Palin steadfastly denies the allegations, and with her signature resolve, said she welcomes the investigation. "Hold me accountable," she challenge her critics.

With Palin now in the national spotlight as McCain's choice as running mate, the investigation could get more attention than the federal corruption probes involving Republican Sen. Ted Stevens and others that already is besetting this state.

"With this appointment, you've given an obscure investigation more national limelight than any grand jury," said Democratic consultant Dane Strother. "Think about it, if they come down on her, what is McCain going to do?"

McCain's campaign says it's not worried about the investigation. "The bottom line is Governor Palin has a proven record championing transparency in government and we are confident in that record," said McCain spokeswoman Maria Comella.

Monegan was fired in July, after he declined a transfer to become the director to the state's alcohol control board.

At the time Palin said she wanted the department to move in a new direction. But later, after Monegan said he felt pressured to fire Wooten, Palin at a news conference said Monegan wasn't a team player, didn't do enough to fill trooper vacancies and battle alcohol abuse issues in rural Alaska.

State lawmakers have long said they understand that Monegan and other commissioners serve at will, meaning they can be fired by Palin at any time.

But they want to know if Palin abused her power with the potential motives of this firing being personal rather than work-related.

It began with a July 17 blog posting from Halcro, whose accusations gained momentum when Monegan publicly said he felt pressure from Palin's administration to fire Wooten.

A few days later, the state approved $100,000 to hire an outside investigator, Branchflower, a former Anchorage prosecutor, to look into the firing.

Monegan could not be reached for comment, but he recently told the Anchorage Daily News that he was never directly told by Palin or anyone to fire Wooten. But he maintained that Palin, members of her administration and her husband, Todd Palin, raised the issue about Wooten's employment numerous times.

A month after Monegan was dismissed, Palin revealed that at least two dozens calls were made from her staff members to Department of Public Safety officials, also questioning Wooten's employment. But she denied orchestrating the calls.

One of those took place between Frank Bailey, Palin's director of boards and commissions, and an Alaska state trooper serving as a liaison to the Legislature.

In the recorded conversation, Bailey is heard saying: "Todd and Sarah are scratching their heads, why on earth hasn't, why is this guy still representing the department? He's a horrible recruiting tool. ... You know, I mean from their perspective, everyone's protecting him."

Palin has said she had no knowledge of the call, and Bailey told The Associated Press that he made the call without direction from anyone.

This investigation is separate from a higher profile federal probe of corruption of Alaska politics.

Stevens, the longest serving Republican in U.S. Senate history, faces trial later this month for allegedly lying on federal disclosure forms to hide $250,000 in gifts from VECO Corp. The state's only congressman, Rep. Don Young, also is under investigation. Five former and current state lawmakers have either been sentenced to federal prison or await trial on bribery and conspiracy charges.

This investigation into Monegan's dismissal has more than its share of subplots as well. The probe into Palin's involvement if any was ordered by a Republican-dominated state legislative council that includes one of the lawmakers under a federal bribery indictment. And Branchflower, the investigator, is a former Anchorage prosecutor whose wife used to work for Monegan at the Anchorage Police Department.

Wooten did not a return message left Sunday on his cell phone by The Associated Press.

___

On the Net

http://www.andrewhalcro.com/

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the GOP vice presidential candidate, is being represented by an attorney in the investigation into the firing of her public safety commissioner. The...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the GOP vice presidential candidate, is being represented by an attorney in the investigation into the firing of her public safety commissioner. The...
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10:41 PM on 09/13/2008
Scraping the barrel are we! The cop was a drunk, drinking in the patrol car and tazered an eight year old boy. They're calling it troopergate. What a joke. What about Sinclairgate? AuchiGate? Rezkogate? Ayergate?
08:24 PM on 09/20/2008
thank god someone else on here agrees with me
01:30 AM on 09/11/2008
Obama Must Call for Palin's Removal from the Ticket
Headlined on 9/10/08: by Rip Rense
Full story: http://www.opednews.com/articles/Obama-Must-Call-for-Palin-by-Rip-Rense-080910-784.html

To quote W.C. Fields, The Democrats must "take the bull by the tail and face the situation." Sarah Palin must be dealt with, and without restraint. No more of this focus-group pre-figuring all the language, all the angles, of each carefully staged "attack." That will focus-group Obama right out of the White House.

The fact is that the woman is now the central issue of the campaign. The fact is that the woman is unfit for office.


Obama must call for her removal from the ticket in the interests of national security, and call into question McCain's impetuous, imperious, nutball "judgment."
02:16 AM on 09/06/2008
Todd Palin has access to the Governor Palin's e-mail, directs employees, attends meetings and utilizes government resources — which may be a security concern.
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/259345
02:53 PM on 09/05/2008
My question is why did Palin's husband, who is not a state employee, call Monegan about the firing of the state trooper which is a government personnel issue? This surely indicates to me the personal nature of the reasons behind the firing.
02:13 AM on 09/06/2008
Todd Palin has access to the governor's e-mail, directs employees, attends meetings and utilizes government resources — which may be a security concern.
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/259345
09:25 PM on 09/04/2008
Then there's trooper Mike Wooten, who used a Taser on his stepson, Palin's nephew Payton. Wooten has been reprimanded for violating nearly a dozen laws and departmental policies since December 2001.

I think the first question should be why a Trooper who tasered his child is still a Trooper. That's no trooper I'd want in my state, I can tell you that
06:16 PM on 09/02/2008
More stuff from washington post

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/09/02/palin_scrubbing_car_wash.html

Palin Scrubbing Turns Up a Car Wash

By Matthew Mosk
ST. PAUL -- In addition to being a mayor and raising four children, Sarah Palin found time for another venture in her Wasilla years -- she was part-owner of an Anchorage car wash.

Palin and husband Todd each held a 20 percent stake in Anchorage Car Wash LLC, according to state corporation records filed in 2004.

The venture was not entirely smooth sailing, though. State records show the business ran into trouble with Alaska's division of corporations business and professional licensing after Palin became governor of the state in 2006.

A Feb. 11, 2007 letter to the governor's business partner advises that the car wash had "not filed its biennial report and/or paid its biennial fees," which were more than a year overdue.

The warning letter was written on state letterhead, which carried Palin's name at the top, next to the state seal.

On April 3, 2007, the state went further and issued a "certificate of involuntary dissolution" because of the car wash's failure to file its report and pay state licensing fees.
07:14 PM on 09/02/2008
Were women against this women! How can they say were doing the sexism thing or any thing alse against her!
05:48 PM on 09/02/2008
This "ethics" witch hunt reflects poorly on the liberal lawyer who is leading it, and the liberal, cheerleading media, not Palin.

It's time for McCain to stand up and denounce this anti-Palin garbage dump. All he needs to say is that it has been clear from the start that the media are in love with Obama, and their anti-Palin feeding frenzy is just a part of their efforts to elect him. And Palin's 17 year-old daughter Bristol is nothing but collateral damage to the liberal media, who have pulled out all the stops for Obama.
05:55 PM on 09/02/2008
At least you've moved on from denial into anger. That's sorta progress.
09:28 PM on 09/02/2008
Just how do you know he's a liberal lawyer anyway?
05:48 PM on 09/02/2008
This sounds just like the selective outrage at Bush's dismissal of a handful of US Attorneys when the media barely made a peep when Bill Clinton fired every sitting US Attorney.

And here's another little tidbit that The New York Times does not want you to know about, and in fact left out of their story--the trooper who Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan refused to fire threatened to kill Governor Palin's father if he got a lawyer for his daughter in the custody fight. And then the trooper lied about this in an internal investigation.
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08:12 PM on 09/02/2008
As I recall, the media did report that (historically) presidents have replaced most (if not all) of the US Attorney's in place when they took office from a member of another party ... including Clinton (I am not sure what "barely a peep" means for you, but I recall reading this fact in many articles related to this story when it was topical).

The odd element of the Bush Admin firings (that you failed to reference) was that the Bush Admin fired attorney's that they had appointed at a rate significantly higher then average (historically) ... and that those attorney's that were fired had some compelling evidence (even for those of us that are non-partisan centrists) that their firings were owing to their prosecutions not being partisan enough for their bosses ...
09:14 PM on 09/02/2008
Yeah, as usual we're talking about two different things. Clinton replaced the Bush attorneys as all new presidents do - no investigation, no hearings. Bush replaced his own attorneys because they wouldn't investigate Dems prior to an election. He politicized their jobs (not a good thing for fed attorneys) and then fired those who put the law before politics. We've seen this abuse of power over and over for eight years. ENOUGH! No McCain, No Way, No How.
08:36 PM on 09/20/2008
I love how you claim your "non-partisan centrists" as if any of us are dumb enough to believe it.
05:46 PM on 09/02/2008
In the first instance this "ethics" investigation surroundin Palin's firing is being led by Senator Hollis French, a Democrat and a Massachusetts born, Cornell educated lawyer who advocates socialized medicine. In other words, a liberal. The other thing you won't get from the liberal media is that this Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan was appointed by Palin and according to the Anchorage Daily News, "she had a right to fire him for any reason." This will shock you, but that important detail was left out of the Times story. But if this is an investigation into whether Palin abused her power by firing Monegan, as the Times says, the investigation should be over already--she had the legal right to do what she did. Hollis French, as a liberal lawyer, should know this. That the investigation continues shows that it is nothing but a partisan witch hunt.
06:11 PM on 09/02/2008
There's an example of law and order Republicans. "We can fire law enforcement officials juts cause we feel like it."
08:41 PM on 09/20/2008
No Mike, its called the standards that people should adhear to. Both these men by all accounts were not worthy of the positions they held. Governor Palin made what seems to be the correct and justified decision. Unlike the 100 and some present votes Barrack Obama cast.
09:16 PM on 09/02/2008
Well, the partisan witch hunt was started in Alaska by her own Republican legislature. We're just learing about it. Most of us knew nothing about it until Friday, but it's been going on for awhile. I love it how Reps always want to blame Dems for their failings of their candidates. So sad.
11:39 AM on 09/02/2008
I'm starting to worry more about OUR own ticket, rather than what happens to THEIRS. (The GOP? I couldn't care less.) Our ticket is showing signs of weakness, and everytime I bring that up here, I get called Repub. But here's the latest:

"CBS News reported Monday that Obama"s post-convention bounce is less than a third of what Al Gore received in 2000 and Bill Clinton received in 1992. Even Bob Dole, following the 1996 Republican convention, received a 4-point bounce in the polls, 1 point more than Obama."

And: "A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll and a Zogby Interactive flash poll, both completed over the weekend, have found the presidential race is in a dead heat. According to both polls, Obama attained no statistically significant convention bounce."

The above, from here: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0908/13068.html

And don't tell me the pollsters aren't picking up cell phones and such -- they're using automatic dialers, and getting EVERYONE!

This isn't good.
09:20 PM on 09/02/2008
Obama is trending upward and will continue to do so with the mess of the McCain campaign. The country is split down the middle and has been for some time.

Zogby was an internet poll from what I understand. I don't know much about it, but Zogby was consistently the least reliable during the primaries. The other polls show Obama opening a lead of 7 to 9 pts.over McCain. We'll have to wait and see, but it's the electoral college that matters anyway. I think t hat the Palin pick hurts McCain in a lot of battleground states. That's where it matters. The national polls are interesting, but they won't decide an election. Just get to work and do all you can to help elect Obama.
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oscartucker
"Let us march on 'til victory is won"
10:01 AM on 09/02/2008
A comment on sexism: All Pat Bucchanan, a Republican, can say about Palin is "that Gal" or "this Girl". Bucchanan said a friend told him that Alaska may have the coldest voters, but they have "a govenor who is hot". Now, when people start talking about "sexism", remember the republicans. ***When Palin was first named, Bucchanan kept saying "this gal can shoot", "this gal hunts moose"; Chris Matthews told Pat that he thought the best word to use for a 44-year old female would be "woman".
09:13 AM on 09/02/2008
Troopergate....How about Bill using Arkansas state troopers to provide him with concubines?
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CaptainSunshine
09:18 AM on 09/02/2008
Bill's not running and if he was he'd be qualified.
01:07 AM on 09/16/2008
I miss Bill.

He was a rascal for sure but Wow! 8 years of Peace AND Prosperity.

*sigh*
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10:22 AM on 09/02/2008
You may wish to look up the definition of concubine.
09:05 AM on 09/02/2008
It seems funny to me. As hard as the dems dig. We find out she has a normal American family. Then this comes out which is anything new but more dirt being tossed. Look how is the source and where is starts. The guy how lost his job to her, is the person tossing this out there. Anybody paying any mind to that. Just imagine if you tried for this job and the crap the could dig about you. Look at all the crap on everybody in the picture for candidates and it is the same old stuff. Dirt is dirt and we all have dirt.
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CaptainSunshine
09:15 AM on 09/02/2008
I don't know of too many normal families whose parents are under federal investigation. I don't know too many normal American families that belonged to fringe political groups that want to secede from the United States and form their own nation. I don't know to many Americans that support Senator Stevens and Pat Buchanon. Palin is normal alright. She's the normal corrupt Republican politician from Alaska.
04:58 PM on 09/02/2008
The republican campaign has released Palins, voting record, so the rumor surrounding Palin's attachment to the Independent party has be rebuked. Given the facts mentioned in the above article, "Palin Trooper Scandal Could Become Problem," written by Steve Quinn how can you still be certain as to her curruption? The way I see it, if she were out to exact vengence for Moegan not firing Wooten, who she have in fact offered him another job as the director to the state's alcohol control board. It is my belief that you read the headline and made your assumptions from there; otherwise you are just flat out ignorant and overly objective. As for her family being abnormal becaus "the governor is under investigation, i think your a little off kilter there; first of all there can only be 50 families in the US that have a state governor for a parent, and additionally not many p;arents have a state budget of 6.6 billion to manage or 18 state agencies to oversee. Get a grip, and note a few facts, before you start slinging mud. People like you should have to take a literacy test before your allowed to vote.
04:45 PM on 09/02/2008
What's really funny is wingnuts like you keep trying to defend her. Saying there's nothing wrong with abusing her powers as governor, lying about fighting the Bridge to Nowhere, her association with the Alaska Independence Party. It's like you have your hands over your ears and are going LA LA LA. Not listening!
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CaptainSunshine
07:16 AM on 09/02/2008
My goodness, Palin was a member of the Alaskan Independence Party, a group that has been pushing for a legal vote for Alaskans to decide whether or not residents of the 49th state can secede from the United States.

Who vetted this woman? George Bush?
07:26 AM on 09/02/2008
I love it. If any of her legal problems lead to a jail term, she will be the first candidate to conduct her campaign from her jail cell.
08:24 AM on 09/02/2008
even if she did anything illegal she would never go to jail for it......reality please.......she tried firing someone that was a bad cop
03:05 AM on 09/02/2008
This ethics investigation is total garbage. It's led by a partisan democrat lawyer, and Palin did nothing wrong in dumping an ineffectual police commissioner.

Not WRIGHT for America (www.notwrightforamerica.com) does a good job destroying this alleged "ethics investigation" and demonstrating what it really is--a partisan witch hunt.
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CaptainSunshine
07:13 AM on 09/02/2008
Not to worry. She got her own partisan investigation going. There are actually two investigations going on simultaneously.
05:31 PM on 09/02/2008
its a non issue knucklhead! its a governor's prerogative . . . . . . . .A Prerogative is an exclusive legal right given from a government or state and invested in an individual or group, the content of which is separate from the body of rights enjoyed under the general law of the normative state. It was a common facet of Feudal law. Did anything happen to Clinton when he fired every sitting US state attorney . . . . NO! Did anything happen when Bush cleared the bench? NO! This is pure slander on the part of the liberal press.