Tag: Sarah Palin

  • Is John Coale handling another high-profile calamity?

    When Republican Sarah Palin, the soon-to-be-former governor of Alaska, needs advice, she turns to John P. Coale, a Democratic lawyer with an impressive and varied range of connections.

    A Bill and Hillary Clinton confidante, and the husband of Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren, Coale has supported numerous Democratic candidates through the years.

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    However, he endorsed Sen. John McCain, the Republican candidate, after Hillary Clinton lost the Democratic nomination to Barack Obama.

    And during the campaign, Coale met Palin, the Republican vice-presidential candidate, through Van Susteren.

    After the election, he became an adviser to Palin (unpaid, Van Susteren stressed on her blog).

    According to Todd Purdum, who profiled Palin in the August issue of Vanity Fair, Coale helped Palin create a political action committee, SarahPac, after the election.

    He also reportedly assisted Palin in establishing The Alaska Fund Trust, her legal expense fund.

    Coale told The Washington Post that Palin’s decision last week to step down as governor was motivated in part by what she saw as attacks upon her family.

    “She couldn’t ignore the hits on the kids,” Coale said. “She said, ‘It brought out the mama grizzly in me.’”

    Coale and Van Susteren, who is also a lawyer, were married in 1988. For a while, they practiced together, but he is now a partner in the Washington firm of Coale, Cooley, Lietz, McInerny & Broadus.

    Both are members of the Church of Scientology, a religion practiced by Tom Cruise and John Travolta.

    Coale represented another Scientologist, Lisa Marie Presley, in her divorce from Michael Jackson.

    As a lawyer, Coale’s “particular specialty is the high-profile calamity,” wrote Peter Boyer in The New Yorker in 1999.

    The first of his calamity cases was filed in 1979, when Coale unsuccessfully, but prominently, represented a group of U.S. citizens who had been held hostage for months in Iran, asking $10 million in damages for each of the plaintiffs.

    In 1984, Coale heard of a toxic gas leak at a Union Carbide plant that killed thousands in Bhopal, India. He rushed to the scene and signed up more than 60,000 plaintiffs. He didn’t prevail in court as the case was decided in India, rather than in a U.S. court.

    In the 1990s, Coale was one of several lawyers who came together as the Castano Group in suing Big Tobacco.

    To add clout to their suits, Coale, a regular visitor to the Clinton White House, signed up Hugh Rodham, a lawyer and Hillary Clinton’s brother, to work on the case.

    Coale and his colleagues did this, Boyer suggests, to out-brother-in-law Richard “Dickie” Scruggs, the Mississippi lawyer heading up an opposing anti-tobacco lawyers’ group. Scruggs’ wife was the sister of then Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott.

    Scruggs’ group got the better of the settlements, though he is now in federal prison, having been convicted of attempting to bribe a judge in another case.

    After the tobacco suits, Coale turned his attention to organizing municipalities to sue gun manufacturers.

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    1 Comments

    • #1.   highcrowpilenothighprofile 07.13.2009

      don’t forget his ethics complaint for solicitation and ambulance chasing. run right out of west virginia. he and his wife implicated for hiring people to stalk injured people.

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    • Benjamin vows to be America’s family doctor

      July 14, 2009 at 9:22am

      Dr. Regina Benjamin, nominee for U.S. surgeon general, is a medical anachronism who rebuilt a microcosmic health care system.

    • Sarah Palin won’t sit next to Dave any time soon

      Alaska governor and Republican vice-presidential also-ran Sarah Palin will not, repeat not, be appearing on David Letterman’s late night talk show.

      That was just one round in a whizzing contest between the two that began last week when Letterman used a visit to New York by Palin as the subject of his nightly “Top Ten” list of topical gags.

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      Palin, who as a vice-presidential candidate was criticized for spending thousands of dollars of somebody else’s money to snazz up her wardrobe, “Bought makeup from Bloomingdale’s to update her ’slutty flight attendant’ look,” Letterman said.

      But the corker, which has sent Palin and fellow conservatives into a froth of righteous ire and message spinning, was this: “One awkward moment for Sarah Palin at the Yankee game, during the seventh inning, her daughter was knocked up by Alex Rodriguez.”

      Palin was accompanied to the game by her daughter Willow, 14.

      The governor quickly characterized Letterman’s joke as an endorsement of child-rape and encouragement for those who practice it, and accused the talk-show host of perversion. In a statement released to the press, she said:

      “Concerning Letterman’s comments about my young daughter (and I doubt he’d ever dare make such comments about anyone else’s daughter): ‘Laughter incited by sexually-perverted comments made by a 62-year-old male celebrity aimed at a 14-year-old girl is not only disgusting, but it reminds us some Hollywood/NY entertainers have a long way to go in understanding what the rest of America understands – that acceptance of inappropriate sexual comments about an underage girl, who could be anyone’s daughter, contributes to the atrociously high rate of sexual exploitation of minors by older men who use and abuse others.’”

      Letterman sort of apologized for the imbroglio the same night, saying the offending joke referred to Palin’s daughter, Bristol, now 18, who campaigned with her mother, unwed, visibly pregnant and accompanied by her now former fiancée. The Palin camp held her out as a feminist standard-bearer for single teenage mothers.

      “Speaking of stupid human tricks, I stepped into traffic the other day,” Letterman began.

      “We made some jokes about Sarah Palin and her daughter … the girl who actually, excuse me, but was knocked up, is now 18 years old.”

      But, glossing over the fact that it was Willow who was in New York, he repeated another of the Top Ten lines: “The hardest part of the trip was keeping Eliott Spitzer away from her daughter,” adding, “I’m surprised we haven’t heard from Eliott Spitzer either,” referring to the Democratic New York governor who resigned last year in a prostitution scandal.

      “We do stuff all the time and our objective here is to get a laugh, and thank God we don’t have to, you know, go to the Hague before the world court to defend them.

      “I would never, never make jokes about raping or having sex of any description with a 14-year-old girl. I mean, look at my record, it has never happened.

      “Were the jokes in questionable taste? Of course they were. Do I regret having told them. Well, I think probably I do. But you know what? There are thousands of jokes I regret telling on this program.”

      Letterman then invited Palin and her husband, Todd, to come on his show and work things out between them.

      He got a response in another written statement:

      “The Palins have no intention of providing a rating’s [sic] boost for David Letterman by appearing on the show. Plus, it would be wise to keep Willow away from David Letterman.”

      When asked by the Today Show’s Matt Lauer if she was saying Letterman couldn’t be trusted around a 14-year-old girl, Palin replied: “Hey, take it however you want to take it.”

      The goofy foofaraw finally ended, a week after it began, when Letterman unambiguously apologized during Monday’s show. The next morning, Palin accepted.

      “It was kind of a coarse joke, there’s no getting around it,” he said. “But I never thought it was anybody other than the older daughter, and before the show, I checked to make sure, in fact, that she is of legal age, 18,” he said. “The joke, really, in and of itself, can’t be defended.

      “As they say about jokes, if you have to explain the joke, it’s not a very good joke.

      “I feel that I need to do the right thing here and apologize for having told that joke. It’s not your fault that it was misunderstood; it’s my fault that it was misunderstood.

      “So I would like to apologize, especially to the two daughters involved, Bristol and Willow, and also to the governor and her family and everybody else who was outraged by the joke. I’m sorry about it, and I’ll try to do better in the future.”

      The next morning, Palin accepted Letterman’s mea culpa “on behalf of all young women, like my daughters, who hope men who ‘joke’ about public displays of sexual exploitation of girls will soon evolve.”

      This story was updated on Tuesday, June 16.

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      • Muckety this! Red Hot Chili Peppers to Glimmerglass Opera

        June 17, 2009 at 5:39pm

        Can you find the links that connect the rock band to the Glimmerglass Opera? Start with the one member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers who is also a part of the musical super-group Chickenfoot.

      • Sarah Palin withholds medical records

        With less than 24 hours to go before the presidential election, Sarah Palin still has not released her medical records despite her campaign’s earlier pledges to do so.

        Two weeks ago, Palin’s campaign told several reporters that a summary of the governor’s medical history would be made public before Nov. 4.

        Reporters were told that details of Palin’s medical background would be released early last week. Last Thursday, however, a campaign aide backed off that pledge, saying he wasn’t sure when the information would be released.

        John McCain, Barack Obama and Joseph Biden have all provided details about their medical history.

        The campaign’s stonewalling has spurred indignation in the blogosphere.

        “It would be nice if the media highlighted these omissions in the next 24 hours and held Palin accountable for agreeing to release her medical records, not releasing them and not having a press conference,” wrote Huffington Post blogger Karen Russell.

        Atlantic’s Andrew Sullivan takes a more conspiratorial perspective.

        “Why does Sarah Palin refuse to prove that her baby – the baby that has been a campaign prop for two months – is actually one she gave birth to?” he wrote Friday.

        Update: Palin’s campaign released a summary of her medical history late Monday night. According to an Associated Press story filed at 10:59 p.m., Palin’s doctor in Alaska says she’s in excellent health with no known health issues that would interfere with her ability to function as vice president if she and Republican John McCain are elected Tuesday.

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        2 Comments

        • #1.   Carmelfog 11.03.2008

          The nomination of Sarah Palin has signifcantly increased the divide in he Republican party and has pushed many of us to the other side. Rather sad but true. I suspect many Republican politicans themselves will not be voting McCain/Palin.

        • #2.   PuLeez 11.04.2008

          Investigative journalist and former NSA agent Wayne Madsen reported on Sept. 21 that several people who know Palin say Trig is not her baby, but her daughter Bristol’s. http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/articles/20080921

          Search YouTube: Palin pregnancy won’t interfere with duties.
          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkYT0HFAxXw
          Look at her face during this conference. She is not happy. She appears to be 1) lying; 2) very stressed. Note her staff member’s reaction to the news.

          See this video of Palin & host walking vigorously to the AK Capitol bldg. when she was supposedly 6 months pregnant. She ‘likes her guts thrashed’ by running on Juneau’s hilly streets. Not typical pregnant-mom language.
          http://alaskapodshow.com/index.php/2008/02/20/my-visit-to-juneau-alaska/

          Strange Facts: A staunchly religious, pro-life Republican governor hides her fifth pregnancy until the seventh month. Her doctor reveals today that Palin knew Trig was Down Syndrome ‘early in the second trimester’. Palin, age 44, with a history of gaining lots of weight, has no pregnancy symptoms whatsoever until after the press conference March 5, 2008. Trig is born 5 weeks premature on April 18, just hours after Palin flies home from a governor’s convention in Dallas, TX supposedly with a leaking bag of waters.

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        • Domino’s CEO named U-M athletic director

          January 6, 2010 at 8:29am

          The University of Michigan Tuesday named David A. Brandon, the CEO of Domino’s Pizza, as the school’s new athletic director.

        • Sarah Palin’s firing of public safety commissioner probed by lawmakers (Muckety)

          Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin portrays herself as a traditional wife and mother, in addition to a rising star in Alaska politics, who has successfully balanced her myriad responsibilities.

          But tension between her familial and gubernatorial roles is at the heart of one of the more contentious questions dogging the GOP vice-presidential candidate back home: Did she try to use her power as governor to settle a family score by pressuring a top state official to fire her ex-brother-in-law, a state trooper then involved in a bitter custody fight with her sister?

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          A bipartisan panel of the state legislature is investigating that question, and also, whether Palin subsequently fired former Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan when he refused to comply with her request to get rid of her ex-brother-in-law Mike Wooten.

          The panel was slated to release its findings about what the Alaska media have been calling “Troopergate” at the end of October, only days before Election Day.

          Now, in what appears to be a bid to slow down the probe, if not derail it, a private lawyer hired to represent Palin has challenged the authority of state lawmakers to look into ethics questions. Instead, the lawyer, Thomas V. Van Flein, contends the probe should be handled by the state Personnel Board, which he says is “statutorily mandated” to handle ethics cases. The three-member Personnel Board is appointed by the governor.

          Van Flein is also making it difficult for the retired state prosecutor charged with conducting the probe to interview Palin. Van Flein said the investigation is “bad timing” in the middle of a presidential campaign.

          Palin had initially denied that she had pressured Monegan to fire Wooten. She said she had simply raised questions about Wooten, relaying the allegation that he made a death threat against her father.

          But later this summer, she acknowledged becoming aware that her husband, Todd Palin, and several members of her administration had made calls about Wooten to various state officials. In a TV interview in July, Todd Palin confirmed he had talked with Monegan, but said he was just “informing” him about Wooten, not pressuring him.

          A four-page backgrounder put out Monday by the McCain/Palin campaign says that Todd Palin, and members of Palin’s staff had made inquiries “about the appropriate Department of Public Safety procedures for dealing with someone they considered a dangerous person and rogue trooper.”

          Monegan, however, believes that his firing in July was related to his refusal to remove Wooten. He also turned over several emails that he said he received from Palin about Wooten.

          The hiring of Van Flein, an attorney with the Anchorage law firm of Clapp, Peterson, Van Flein, Tiemessen & Thorsness, apparently occurred two weeks ago, but was disclosed Friday by the Legislature’s investigating committee.

          His work started Aug. 21, and he is being paid $185 an hour, lower than his usual rate, to represent Palin and others in the governor’s office, according to the Anchorage Daily News. He is authorized to spend up to $95,000.

          Van Flein has represented the Palin family in the past as a private attorney, according to a McCain aide who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

          But the lawyer himself declined to verify that citing attorney-client privilege. “Did I know the Palins before the state hired me? Yes,” he told The Associated Press.

          “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,” said senior McCain adviser Tucker Eskew. “It is a matter of her job and is not recent, and it is not related to her selection on the McCain-Palin ticket.”

          Here is the affadavit filed by Van Flein requesting the inquiry be handled by the state Personnel Board. Here is his press release about it.

        • Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is McCain’s surprise VP pick

          Sarah Palin, governor of Alaska since 2006, is John McCain’s choice for his vice-presidential running mate.

          The selection is considered a potentially high-risk, but also high-reward gamble to woo conservatives, as well as female voters who may still feel alienated by Barack Obama’s defeat of Hillary Clinton.

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          While relatively inexperienced as a politician, Palin, 44, is a bona-fide conservative with a compelling life story. A mother of five, she has one son who will deploy to Iraq next month as an Army infantryman, and a four-month-old infant with Down syndrome.

          She is also a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association and an opponent of abortion, whose pick is expected to reassure the evangelical base of the Republican party.

          In a rousing introduction, Palin portrayed herself as a reform-minded governor of Alaska who has challenged the party’s old guard, attacked pork-barrel spending and taken a strong interest in energy issues.

          “I stood up to the special interests, the lobbyists, the oil companies and the good old boy network,” she said, noting she had turned down federal funding for the “bridge to nowhere,” a project championed by two Republican congressmen from Alaska that became a symbol of wasteful spending.

          Sarah Palin
          Sarah Palin

          Expectations had been that McCain would choose a more experienced politician. High on the list of potential VP candidates were Minnesota Gov. Tom Pawlenty, failed presidential candidate Mitt Romney, former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge and Sen. Joe Lieberman.

          But picking a woman from outside the beltway could pay dividends with voters looking for confirmation that McCain is a maverick determined to change politics as usual. It also gives the McCain campaign the ability to claim that it, too, is potentially historic.

          Palin went out of her way to invoke the precedents set by Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman on a Democratic presidential ticket, as well by Clinton, saying she had left “18 million cracks” in the highest glass ceiling in the land.

          Then, making a direct appeal to Clinton’s supporters, she said, “It turns out that the women in America aren’t finished yet, and we can shatter that glass ceiling.”

          The down side of the selection, however, is that by putting a first-term governor on the ticket, GOP attacks on Obama’s youth and inexperience may now ring hollow.

          In addition, McCain and Palin have disagreed on energy policy, an issue that will play a major role in the general election. As governor of Alaska, Palin supports drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Earlier this week, The Weekly Standard described her as “the nation’s most prominent advocate” of drilling in the wildlife refuge that environmentalists see as one of America’s most precious natural wilderness areas.

          McCain, who recently reversed his position on offshore drilling, had long opposed oil exploration in the wildlife refuge.

          In her first remarks on a national stage, however, Palin stressed their shared belief in the need to challenge the status quo. “This is a moment when principle and political independence matter a lot more than the party line,” she said.

          The daughter of a science teacher and school secretary, Palin is a former Miss Alaska runnerup, who holds a degree in journalism from the University of Idaho. She describes herself as “a hockey mom,” who initially got involved in politics through the PTA.

          Palin served two terms on the city council of Wasilla, a suburb of Anchorage, AK, from 1992 to 1996, was elected mayor in 1996, and ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor in 2002.

          After charging then-Republican Gov. Frank Murkowski with misconduct, she won election in 2006, by defeating the incumbent governor in the Republican primary, and then a former Democratic governor in the general election.

          Details of Palin’s personal life have contributed to her own image as a political maverick. She hunts, eats moose hamburger, ice fishes, rides snowmobiles, and owns a float plane.

          Her husband, Todd, is a commercial fisherman and, she noted in her introduction, “a proud member of the United Steelworkers union.” Outside the fishing season, he works for BP at an oil field on the North Slope and is a champion snowmobiler, winning the 2,000-mile Iron Dog race four times.

          The couple have three daughters: Bristol, 17, Willow, 13, and Piper, 7. Three days after giving birth to her second son, Trig Paxson Van Palin, on April 18th, she returned to the office.

          As governor, Palin is facing a state investigation related to her firing of Public Safety Commissioner Walter Monegan who alleged that his removal was due in part to his reluctance to fire an Alaska state trooper, Mike Wooten, who had been involved in a divorce and child custody battle with Palin’s sister, Molly McCann.

          Palin disputes that charge, asserting Monegan was dismissed for not filling state trooper vacancies, and because he “did not turn out to be a team player on budgeting issues.”

          In a prepared statement yesterday, the Obama campaign portrayed Palin as an ideologue without the experience to govern.

          “Today, John McCain put the former mayor of a town of 9,000 with zero foreign policy experience a heartbeat away from the presidency,” said campaign spokesman Bill Burton. “Governor Palin shares John McCain’s commitment to overturning Roe v. Wade, the agenda of Big Oil and continuing George Bush’s failed economic policies – that’s not the change we need, it’s just more of the same.”

          To hear McCain’s introduction of Palin, click here:

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