White House Denies Forgery Charge

By Fact-esque

Well, they'd have to, wouldn't they? But they language they're using is a league beyond the usual arrogant dismissals, as if they can barely be bothered with something so off-the-wall. No, this time - after McClellan did them some heavy damage with their own people - they're going all-out. It's "gutter journalism". It's "absurd".

In BushSpeak, that's tantamount to an admission that Suskind's right.

The Bush administration joined former top CIA officials in denouncing a new book's assertion that White House officials ordered the forgery of Iraqi documents to suggest a link between Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and the lead hijacker in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

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Suskind, who has written two previous investigative books that contained criticism of Bush administration policies, described the alleged forgery as a deliberate "misusing of an arm of government, the kind of thing generally taken up in impeachment proceedings." White House condemnations of the book were equally dramatic, with officials blasting it as "gutter journalism." In separate statements, several former and current CIA officials disputed portions of the account, including two named by Suskind as key sources.

"The notion that the White House directed anyone to forge a letter . . . is absurd," said White House deputy press secretary Tony Fratto.

Suskind's two major sources are now claiming they never said anything Suskind says they said, but Suskind says he's got it on tape.

Many of the interviews were taped, he said. Suskind added that he understood "the enormous pressure that can be brought to bear" on sources who formerly worked for the government and still have professional ties.

The "govt" they worked for is the Bush govt, where "Revenge" is their middle name. I'd deny it, too, I suspect.

Justice Department Subpoenas Its Former Lawyers In Civil Rights

Justice Department Subpoenas Its Former Lawyers In Civil Rights Probe
August 6, 2008 12:27 PM

A federal grand jury has subpoenaed several former senior Justice Department attorneys for an investigation into the politicization of the Department's own Civil Rights Division, according to sources close to the investigation.

The extraordinary step by the Justice Department of subpoenaing attorneys once from within its own ranks was taken because several of them refused to voluntarily give interviews to the Department Inspector General, which has been conducting its own probe of the politicization of the Civil Rights Division, the same sources said.

The grand jury has been investigating allegations that a former senior Bush administration appointee in the Civil Rights Division, Bradley Schlozman, gave false or misleading testimony on a variety of topics to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Sources close to the investigation say that the grand jury is also more broadly examining whether Schlozman and other Department officials violated civil service laws by screening Civil Rights attorneys for political affiliation while hiring them.

Investigators for the Inspector General have also asked whether Schlozman, while an interim U.S. attorney in Missouri, brought certain actions and even a voting fraud indictment for political ends, according to witnesses questioned by the investigators. But it is unclear whether the grand jury is going to hear testimony on that issue as well.

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The article goes on to tell who is being subpoenaed.