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2003 Affidavit Raises More Serious Questions About Siegelman Judge
by Scott Horton I have received a copy of an affidavit (8.7Mb PDF) filed by a Missouri attorney in 2003 which details a number of charges of unethical and criminal conduct against Judge Mark Fuller.
The attorney sought Fullers removal from a high-profile litigation which related to a prominent Republican who was close to both the current President Bush and his father.
The attorney, Paul Benton Weeks, had been involved as counsel for
plaintiffs in a civil action called Murray v. Scott & Sevier, which
had originally been filed in Kansas and was later transferred to
Montgomery and assigned to Judge Fuller. Weeks, reached by telephone
this morning, advised me that he did a routine background check to
discover what kind of judge he was up before. I was astonished by what
I found, Weeks said. Immediately after the papers were filed, Weeks
said that Fuller was removed as the judge handling the case.
In
the affidavit, Weeks accuses Fuller of engaging in criminal conduct
both before and after he came on to the bench. The charges include
perjury, criminal conspiracy, a criminal attempt to defraud the
Retirement System of Alabama, misuse of office as a District Attorney,
and an obstruction of his background check by the FBI in connection
with the review of his appointment by President Bush to the bench. (I
faxed a copy of the affidavit to Fullers office and also left a
message asking for comment, but received no reply; if Fuller does reply
Ill update this post.)
Weekss allegations were transmitted
to Noel Hillman, the head of the Public Integrity Section at the
Department of Justice, among other recipients. Hillmans office has
responsibility to conduct investigations into allegations concerning
wrongdoing by federal judges.
This means that at the time that
Fuller was presiding over the prosecution of former Alabama Governor
Don E. Siegelman, a prosecution brought by Noel Hillmans Public
Integrity Section, he was or should have been the subject of an
investigation by the Public Integrity Section.
Weekss allegations are focused on Fullers conduct
in connection with salary spiking involving two of his employees in
the District Attorneys office. Fullers testimony, which Weeks says
was contradictory and which changed materially in the course of the
matter, was disbelieved both by the RSA and by an Alabama court
handling the matter. Weeks calls Fullers statements under oath
perjured. In an interview today, Weeks noted that Fuller was an
absentee district attorney. Many of the people I interviewed in the
district attorneys office insisted that Fuller was simply never
around. He was constantly out of the state, most often in Colorado,
pursuing the business of DOSS Aviation, a company that Fuller
controls.
Weekss affidavit reflects interviews with Fullers
successor in the district attorneys office and with senior officials
at the RSA, who confirm the allegations against Fuller. Judge McAliley
then said that he had met with RSA officials and that every member on
the RSA board believed Mark Fuller had lied and that Fuller had lied
under oath.
Weeks notes that after the affidavit was
transmitted to the Justice Department, no individual from Noel
Hillmans group ever contacted him to follow up on any of the
allegations or to request any of the documentation that was cited in
the affidavit.
The full affidavit can be read here. (8.7Mb
PDF) In the Siegelman trial the relationship between the prosecution
and the judge always looked just a little too cosy, but the Weeks
disclosures create an appearance of serious impropriety. The Siegelman
case presents a bizarre spectacle: a political corruption prosecution
which is itself profoundly corrupt. As time proceeds, the allegations
against Siegelman appear more and more dubious, but the evidence of
criminal wrongdoing by those who brought and handled the case is
mounting.
Update: Prosecutorial Judge-Shopping
Several
attorneys in Alabama have brought an important point to our attention.
When the Siegelman case began it was in the Northern District, and
after one recusal the case was assigned to Chief Judge U.W. Clemon. He
challenged the prosecutions basis for the case and required a prima
facie showing, which the U.S. Attorney, Alice Martin, could not meet
and thus wound up dismissing the case.
Martin (who now is
under investigation for perjury) then applied to the Eleventh Circuit
to have Clemon removed from the surviving case. In her case, which had
been brought with the involvement of Noel Hillman, then head of the
Justice Departments Public Integrity Section, Martin argued to the
Court of Appeals that Clemon should be removed because he was
prejudiced against the prosecution. The basis cited for this prejudice
was that a California U.S. attorney had, a decade earlier, conducted an
inquiry focusing on Judge Clemons sister. The Eleventh Circuit granted
Martins petition and removed Clemon from the case. The facts
surrounding the motion against Chief Judge Clemon were reported in the
student newspaper of the University of Alabama, Crimson White, in an
article entitled Siegelman Indictment: The Rundown, on September 27,
2004.
The Justice Department engaged in amazing and brazen
judge-shopping in connection with the Siegelman case. After having the
case dismissed in the Northern District, they proceeded in the Middle
District, where they could get a new judge. In her Congressional
testimony, Republican attorney Jill Simpson charges that senior G.O.P.
operatives had hand-picked Judge Mark Fuller as the judge who would
handle the Siegelman case because they knew he was a loyal Republican
who bore a deep grudge against Siegelman. Simpsons allegations match
the facts we upturned in our investigative series on Judge Fuller this
summer, and they are borne out by the Weeks affidavit.
And now
we learn that the Public Integrity Section, which was bringing and
managing the case against Siegelman, also had an extremely serious
complaint of criminal conduct against Fuller.
This invites an
interesting comparison with the case involving Clemon. In one a
decade-old case in another district involving a family member mandated
recusal of the judge. In the other, a current case involving the judge
himself did not. What is the distinguishing rule in place? One judge
was a Democratic appointee who was skeptical of the chargesquite
properly, as it turned outand the other was a zealously engaged
partisan Republican with a grudge against Siegelman. Thats what the
Justice Department was looking for. This goes far beyond a double
standard, and it invites more questions as to why the prosecutor
originally assigned to handle the case mysteriously dropped off the
case and then quit the employ of the U.S. Attorneys office.