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Ted Stevens Investigation Results To Be Made Public

Ted Stevens Probe

NEDRA PICKLER   02/ 8/12 05:22 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Wednesday rejected arguments from four attorneys who prosecuted the late Sen. Ted Stevens to keep private a report that reveals details of their mishandling of the case, but said he will not hold them criminally responsible for their "ill-gotten verdict."

U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ordered that a 500-page report into the Justice Department's botched corruption case against Stevens be released March 15, along with any written objections the attorneys targeted in the investigation wish to include.

Last November, Sullivan revealed that the special prosecutor he had appointed, Washington lawyer Henry F. Schuelke III, did not recommend criminal charges against any of the federal prosecutors despite finding widespread misconduct, at least some of it intentional. In an order Wednesday, Sullivan formally confirmed that he is accepting Schuelke's conclusions.

Stevens was the longest-serving Republican in the Senate when a jury convicted him in 2008 of lying on financial disclosure documents to hide hundreds of thousands of dollars in home renovations and gifts from wealthy friends, including a massage chair, a stained-glass window and an expensive sculpture. A few days later, Stevens lost re-election to the Alaska seat he'd held for 40 years.

Sullivan dismissed the conviction after the Justice Department admitted misconduct in the case, including withholding from the defense evidence favorable to Stevens. The withheld evidence included notes from an interview with the government's star witness that would have been favorable to Stevens' defense. The witness was Bill Allen, the millionaire founder of a major Alaska company that supported oil producers called VECO Corp. who testified that he oversaw extensive renovations at Stevens' home and sent his employees to work on it.

"The government's ill-gotten verdict in the case not only cost that public official his bid for re-election, the results of that election tipped the balance of power in the United States Senate," Sullivan wrote. "That the government later moved to dismiss the indictment with prejudice and vacate the verdict months after the trial does not eradicate the misconduct, nor should it serve to shroud that misconduct in secrecy."

Sullivan ordered the criminal investigation into the six Justice Department attorneys who tried the senator as he dismissed the conviction. At the time, he said he'd never seen such misconduct in 25 years on the bench.

Sullivan wrote Wednesday that he received motions from two of the attorneys under investigation by Schuelke to permanently seal the report, while two other targeted attorneys objected to the release without making a legal motion to stop it. He did not identify which attorneys made the filings, all under seal. He also said the Justice Department and the two remaining attorneys indicated they do not oppose its release.

Sullivan wrote that the attorneys opposed to releasing the report argued that because Schuelke's investigation was essentially the same as a grand jury investigation, it should be bound by grand jury secrecy rules, particularly since Schuelke is not recommending criminal prosecution. But the judge said the investigation was different from a grand jury proceeding in many respects, including that the subjects were publicly identified from the outset.

"While objecting generally to release of the report as unfair and prejudicial to the opposing attorneys' privacy and reputational interests, those attorneys have not specified any compelling interest that would meet their high burden to justify keeping the report under seal," Sullivan wrote.

Sullivan quoted the report as concluding that "the investigation and prosecution of Sen. Stevens were permeated by the systematic concealment of significant exculpatory evidence which would have independently corroborated (his) defense and his testimony, and seriously damaged the testimony and credibility of the government's key witness."

The judge also said the report found at least some of the concealment was intentional and that much has yet to be publicly revealed. But Sullivan said Schuelke is not recommending contempt charges because the judge never issued a direct order spelling out rules of evidence that the prosecutors disobeyed.

"Having appointed Mr. Schuelke to `investigate and prosecute' criminal contempt proceedings as appropriate, the court accepts his findings and conclusions," Sullivan wrote. "The public can neither understand the basis for Mr. Schuelke's findings and conclusions, however, nor the basis for the court's decision to accept those findings and conclusions, without access to the report."

He also said public disclosure of the report is warranted because the public paid not only the cost of the trial, but the costs of the Schuelke investigation and the legal representation for the attorneys who were targeted by it.

"To deny the public access to Mr. Schuelke's report under the circumstances of this case would be an affront to the First Amendment and a blow to the fair administration of justice," Sullivan wrote.

Subjects of the criminal investigation were prosecutors Brenda Morris, Edward Sullivan, Joseph Bottini, James Goeke and William Welch, who did not participate in the trial but at the time supervised the Justice Department's Public Integrity section and had overseen every major public corruption case in recent years.

Another Justice Department attorney who was targeted in the investigation, Nicholas Marsh, committed suicide in 2010. Sullivan said a pleading on the report was filed on behalf of Marsh's estate, but the judge did not reveal what it said.

Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski said in a statement Wednesday that she is exploring legislation to reform rules of evidence in criminal cases in response to the scandal.

"The legacy of the Stevens trial – not just in Alaska, but nationwide – has become bigger than one man; it's become a national example of abuse of power and a double-standard for the Department of Justice," said Murkowski. "I'm pleased that Judge Sullivan has decided that transparency is not merely the best option, but the only option if Americans are to regain the ironclad and fundamental trust in our justice system."

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WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Wednesday rejected arguments from four attorneys who prosecuted the late Sen. Ted Stevens to keep private a report that reveals details of their mishandling of th...
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Wednesday rejected arguments from four attorneys who prosecuted the late Sen. Ted Stevens to keep private a report that reveals details of their mishandling of th...
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02:19 PM on 02/09/2012
So I guess thats how the democrats get such a majority they investigate top people of the Republicans. They then put them to trial on trumped up charges, lie about the evidence, and ruin the reputation of the Republican. geez the Worlds Dictators would be proud.
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FWJames123
Well behaved women rarely make history
11:44 AM on 02/09/2012
Anyone else notice this article has been rewritten and cleaned up? No more quotes from the late senator Stevens and an added quote from Lisa?
11:03 AM on 02/09/2012
Next! Now let's take a look at Reid and his LV gambling connections, Pelosi and her insider trading, Ted Kennedy's offshore accounts, Jefferson's 90K stashed in the freezer, Chris Dodd's favorable mtg interest from Freddie and Fannie...and Barney Frank's brothel. Then let's find out where Obama got the money to attend US schools...as a foreign student. Let's also dig into why Michelle and Barack both has their law licenses revoked in 1993. Why did Michelle receive a $200,000 raise after Obama was elected to the Senate? Chicago!
09:37 AM on 02/09/2012
Six justice department attorneys don't want their names revealed after what they did to this man?
Hahahahaa...What goes around,comes around. This was all a conspiracy from the top down to destroy Stevens and what he represented. People like power-hungry,socialist Obama, the Democratic party, Acorn, the black panther, and the so-called justice admin. were all in it to spread their agenda; and look what it is doing to the country. Disgusting!
11:06 AM on 02/09/2012
Fanned. A reasonable commentor...for a change.
08:10 PM on 02/08/2012
Why was the headline on the AOL home page "News for ex-Senator not good"? This story is about the dirty lawyers who railroaded him. Shouldn't that be the headline? Besides, Ted Stevens has been dead for years! Shoddy journalism at it's best.
08:40 PM on 02/08/2012
Actually he was killed in a plane crash here in Alaska on August 9, 2010. He did much for MANY Alaskans and is missed.
01:18 PM on 02/10/2012
Agree on the shoddy, andf misleading, headline.

I am fully expecting a future headline to read Bad News For Washington. People will click on the link and find out George Washington's false teeth have termites.
07:59 PM on 02/08/2012
You know what I find so sad? This man gets some renovation and a stained glass window and is vilified and being brought to trial but we have some (or all ) of our politicians taking millions in so called donations and that is ok. We then see them introduce special intrest legislation that benefits only the donor and that is ok.
fitzbeerman
The Truth hurts and I am painfully honest
06:52 PM on 02/08/2012
Who runs the D.O.J.? Also why does anyone believe anything they come up with?
lu386ibew
leftist and proud!
06:37 PM on 02/08/2012
stevens was, along with gingrich and delay, the most mean spirited, corrupt politicians in american history. [and that includes people such as strom thurmond, and david duke.]
08:17 PM on 02/08/2012
He was exonerated by our current Attorney General, a model Democrat from the most transparent administration in history...so what are you saying?? LOL
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Tracy Boudreaux
06:32 PM on 02/08/2012
Explain to me this...Ted Stevens gets the investigation he went through to be made public, so that liberals can further denigrate him and try to tie him to conservatives. But Teddy Kennedy...not only is caught with his secretary, but she is found DEAD in a car the next morning while Teddyboy is sleeping, dry and warm across the lake. THAT investigation is STILL covered up. How about making THAT investigation public?
06:59 PM on 02/08/2012
Spin and a miss.
07:05 PM on 02/08/2012
amen!!!
06:19 PM on 02/08/2012
It sure would be nice if there were more facts in this article specifying how the trial would have turned out differently had Justice not violated rules.... What we know is that they didn't turn over unspecified information that would have been helpful to the defense. We also know that Steven accepted gifts from a major donor who had much to gain from Stevens' role in the senate. Maybe we'll have to wait for the report. Regardless, Stevens was a majore pork producer in the Senate and was emblematic of the corruption in DC. Good riddance.
08:03 PM on 02/08/2012
You're right Activation. Prosecutorial misconduct is fine as long as you don't like the defendant. Moron.
01:02 AM on 02/09/2012
Is English your second language? Did I say prosecutorial misconduct was ok? One can believe he was treated unfairly but still be happy he's gone,
06:17 PM on 02/08/2012
Seems the only good news in this story is the part about the Lawyer committing suicide!
06:13 PM on 02/08/2012
This isn't about any Justice Department: there is a long history of ethics violations, conspiracies, and the such for politicians from Alaska. This particular case involving the late Senator Ted Stevens actually started in 2003 under George W. Bush. The narrow-minded "conservatives" posting here need to wake up and look at the facts.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_political_corruption_probe
randyman12
SELF-MADE SUPER USER!
06:05 PM on 02/08/2012
Even after death, the Government continues to hound people...and I'm not just referring to the late Senator!
lu386ibew
leftist and proud!
06:38 PM on 02/08/2012
he should have spent his final days behind bars.
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FWJames123
Well behaved women rarely make history
08:03 PM on 02/08/2012
Why? Be specific please. What crime did he commit?
08:22 PM on 02/08/2012
The whole investigation and prosecution was a sham. The papers made his house in Girdwood, Alaska sound like an alpine Shangri-La...believe it was not. The remodel job on it was paid for by Stevens and it was all recorded in the muni's offices. So , before you start shooting your mouth off, go a little further in your "investigation" He was exonerated by this attorney general in the Obama Admin.
masontn
conservative and proud of it
05:26 PM on 02/08/2012
Two things that libs live for, old worthless news and somebody else's money
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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gaydood
Denied HC? goto PCIP.gov
05:54 PM on 02/08/2012
Two things that cons live for, old worthless news and somebody else's money
06:40 PM on 02/08/2012
Liberals have been known to reach deep to help others... in someone else's pocket.
07:07 PM on 02/08/2012
oh i get it ...you just change the word...man your soooo original...must be time for your meds now...
06:04 PM on 02/08/2012
You've got it!!
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Jerry Troutman
My micro bio is still empty
05:22 PM on 02/08/2012
Sullivan hasn't seen misconduct this bad in 25 years?!? Where has he been? Come down to the South,we have plenty of cases,Arkansas,Texas,to name a few where there is plenty of misconduct by prosecutors,where no one is held accountable,but men sit on death row,been executed,waste years in prison.Our own Rick Perry had a man a man convicted on junk science,then executed,then tried to cover it up.West memphis 3,another botched case.The judge is now State senator of Arkansas.The list coulod go on,in many other states.
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Tracy Boudreaux
06:35 PM on 02/08/2012
Jerry, corruption isnt just in the south, the only difference is that in the NE the corruption is considered normal behavior of the wealthy, privileged class. And for Sullivan to say he hasnt seen misconduct that bad in 25 years only means he puts blinders on and only focuses on cases that his handlers tell him to look at.
06:40 PM on 02/08/2012
This is different where the prosecutors defrauded the people who entrusted the job to them, destroying a mans career for their own political purpose, I think they should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
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Jerry Troutman
My micro bio is still empty
05:45 AM on 02/10/2012
I disagree that this different.Stevens lost his political career? Politicians come and go,their careers come and go.Look at Rick Santorum,Newt Gingrich.In the cases I'm talking about,they lost lives,came close to losing their lives and spent years in prison in Texas and Arkansas.As far as I know Stevens never spent 1 second in jail.As far as I'm concerned the whole legal system in Arkansas is a joke and Texas is not far behind.