Sarah Palin’s Evolving Excuses for Firing Walt Monegan

As each new event plays out in TrooperGate, I can’t help but shake my sense of deja vu: the scandal is so much like the US Attorney purge I feel like I’ve already seen it before.

Today, that sense of deja vu comes from watching Sarah and the McPalin campaign keep changing the reasons they give for why Palin fired Walt Monegan. Andrew Halcro has a detailed chronology, from which I’ve done this summary:

February 29: Palin "really liked" Monegan, except regarding issues pertaining to her former brother-in-law

July 14: "Wanted to change leadership"

July 21: Palin wanted "more of a focus on trooper recruitment and fighting drug and alcohol abuse in rural Alaska" (though she had offered him a job doing just that)

August 13: Monegan wanted too much money for funding (he was fighting to get the funding the Governor had asked for)

September 15: Monegan had a "rogue mentality" (including, specifically, he went to DC without telling Palin in hopes of getting increased funding to fight sexual assault)

Now think of the changing reasons for the firings in the US Attorney purge:

David Iglesias:

  • Referred to as an "up and comer" in 2004
  • Immediately after the firing, DOJ accused Iglesias of being an "absentee landlord" (which would have made the firing illegal, since Iglesias traveled to serve in the Navy Reserve)
  • Later, they claimed Pete Domenici had asked Gonzales to be fired in calls in late 2005 and early 2006 (in fact, Domenici was asking whether Iglesias had the resources he needed
  • The real reason for the firing appears to be twofold: first, that Iglesias wasn’t prosecuting enough voter fraud (though Iglesias was considered a top expert on voter fraud within the department), and second, that Iglesias wouldn’t indict a top Democrat before the 2006 election

John McKay

  • DOJ claimed they fired McKay because he was insubordinate to Paul McNulty in championing a records-sharing system, LiNX
  • Later, they suggested McKay was too negative when trying to find the killer of one of the AUSAs in his office
  • As late as August 2006, McKay was considered for a federal judgeship
  • The real reason for his firing appears to be his unwillingness to push baseless voter fraud cases

Paul Charlton

  • DOJ complained that Charlton fought to tape FBI interviews in child-molestation on reservations (though they had approved a test program for doing so)
  • Gonzales complained that Charlton challenged one death penalty decision

The real reason for his firing may have related to the Rick Renzi investigation

Consider the similarities: Like Monegan, all three of these men were considered superb professionals, with the utmost interest in serving the public. Like Monegan, these men were later attacked for showing initiative in responding to key law enforcement issues. Like Monegan, Iglesias was attacked in an area that he had been asked to focus on. As with Palin on Monegan, DOJ relied on vague claims of insubordination when its other excuses began to crumble.

And like Monegan, all these fictional and changing excuses behind the firing attempted to cover up a real abuse of power.

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  1. radiofreewill says:

    EW – I couldn’t agree more!

    Palin’s “Abuse of Power” Showcase in Troopergate is the State-Level Version of Bush’s “Disloyalty Firings” in USA Purgegate.

    Letting Palin hide her Strongly Alleged and Fact Supported “Abuse of Power” from Legislative Oversight – Prior to the Election – is No Different than saying:

    “Oh, I’ll just drink that Very Possibly Arsenic-Laden Eggnog during Christmas, and Wait till after the New Year to see if it’s really Poisonous.”

    The bitter after-taste of “4 More Years” just might do US All in…

  2. DefendOurConstitution says:

    It’s like an episode of the Twilight Zone. We are caught in the nightmare that is the Bush Administration and, just when we think we have less than 130 days of the horrible nightmare, McCain-Palin swoops in and we are left with the realization that – if they win the election – the nightmare will continue. Let’s hope Obama can finish this episode with a happy ending.

  3. lllphd says:

    yup, this pup has been training in the bush school of executive obfuscation and criminal secrecy.

    either she paid more attention to the usatty scandal than i think we have any right to give her credit for, or someone has been coaching her on the style.

  4. radiofreewill says:

    Slightly OT, but related –

    She’s still repeating the Bridge Lie – word for word.

    Eugene Robinson at the WaPo says:

    In her interview with ABC’s Charles Gibson, Palin ‘fessed up. It was “not inappropriate” for a mayor or a governor to work with members of Congress to obtain federal money for infrastructure projects, she argued. “What I supported,” she said, “was the link between a community and its airport.”

    Case closed. Except that on Saturday, days after the interview, Palin said this to a crowd in Nevada: “I told Congress thanks but no thanks to that Bridge to Nowhere — that if our state wanted to build that bridge, we would build it ourselves.”

    That’s not just a lie, but an acknowledged lie. What she actually told Congress was more like, “Gimme the money for the bridge” — and then later, after the whole thing had become an embarrassment, she didn’t object to using the money for other projects.

    Now, if she can Repeat an “Acknowledged Lie” to the General Public – Over and Over – Why wouldn’t she Lie about everything, especially Troopergate?

  5. Ishmael says:

    CNN just reports that 5 Alaska legislators have sued to stop the Palin investigation, on the grounds of “bias”. Waiting for details…..

    (MUST….NOT….TYPE….. “BREAKING!!!”…..)

  6. freepatriot says:

    hey ew, you missed one

    A BIG ONE:

    NEW YORK, Sept. 13 (UPI) — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, under investigation for the dismissal of a former commissioner of public safety, says she didn’t fire him — he quit.

    liiiiiinkage buuuuudddddy

    (that’s my other Paulie Shore impersonation)

    this one is a GAME CHANGER

    white woman speaks with forked tounge

  7. SparklestheIguana says:

    Has anyone actually ever gotten fired for requesting too much “funding?” What a joke. The response is usually to not provide the funding, not to fire the person.

    freepatriot says:

    Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, under investigation for the dismissal of a former commissioner of public safety, says she didn’t fire him — he quit.

    And hey, there’s even a parallel to Bud Cummins. They claimed he quit too!

  8. JohnLopresti says:

    I believe the ‘too much funding’ problem is real. It is like an ‘activist’ judge who tries to be too fair. Or the US Dept of Agriculture, insisting on conducting yearly surveys of all pesticides and fertilizers, posting that data free on the internet. USDA did that for several decades, but Bush Cheney oversaw the ending of the process, in 2007 posting data for only four crops, and writing to the Federal Register in 2008 the fiat that USDA no longer would collect the data. No data, no problems. Imagine some zealot scientist who wanted to help risk assessment and health studies by lobbying for reinstitution of the cancelled program to gather and publish nationwide pesticide and fertilizer application data. That scientist might be at risk of losing employment in the Bush Cheney government. Recognizing the ploy as a classic Bush Cheney m.o. for hiding and erasing information, a coalition of 50 groups such as Natural Resources Defense Council, wrote a letter in May 2008 to USDA asking the program be reinstated; alternative data collection sources, the organizations stated, had less openness to verification of accuracy of data collection mechanisms, and charged fees for data access too steep for nonprofits’ budgets.

  9. radiofreewill says:

    Alaska AG: Palin subpoenas won’t be honored

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26742379/

    In a letter to state Sen. Hollis French, the Democrat overseeing the investigation, Republican Attorney General Talis Colberg asked that the subpoenas be withdrawn. He also said the employees would refuse to appear unless either the full state Senate or the entire Legislature votes to compel their testimony.

    Colberg, who was appointed by Palin, said the employees are caught between their respect for the Legislature and their loyalty to the governor, who initially agreed to cooperate with the inquiry but has increasingly opposed it since McCain chose her as his running mate.

    • Leen says:

      We have seen this picture before. Meiers, Bolton, Rove ignore subpoenas. These Alaska folks are ignoring subpoenas. Sounds like they are being coached. If I ever get a subpoena I am going to follow suit. Will encourage other peasants to do the same.

      Monkey see Monkey do

  10. Neil says:

    On Tuesday, Governor Sarah Palin’s appointed Attorney General sent a letter to state Sen. Hollis French, the Democrat overseeing the “Troopergate” investigation, and asked that the subpoenas that were issued last week to comple (sic) testimony be withdrawn.

    Attorney General Talis Colberg also stated the employees would refuse to appear unless either the full state Senate or the entire Legislature votes to compel their testimony.
    Anrew Halco.com “Just for the record” link

    Looks like the same play, same play book. We could start a trash talk thread on troopergate.

  11. Boston1775 says:

    Okay gang,
    I’ve run this idea out before with almost no success, but I have to try it again.
    Considering who’s running and advising the McCain campaign, I still find it impossible to believe that they didn’t anticipate that “we” would run down the wide Palin Avenue of stories.
    It was simple to find troopergate, the bridge to nowhere, the sacking of Wasilla, the husband at government meetings, double blackberries with email requiring executive privilege and a past rivaling John Edwards.
    Karl Rove’s protege and Karl Rove himself only needed teh google.

    Come on, don’t you think they’ve weakened the stranglehold of the holy evangelicals on the Republican party?
    Because McCain was going to lose anyway.