Tag: Ted Stevens

  • Henry Schuelke brings history of probes to Stevens case

    Henry F. Schuelke III, a lawyer with links to a wide variety of high-profile cases, has taken on the task of investigating the bungled prosecution of former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens.

    U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan gave the job to Schuelke, whose resume includes an in-house investigation of Jack Abramoff, the corrupt lobbyist.

    Hint: Doubleclick on boxes with plus signs to expand, or click the tool bar at left for more options.

    MucketyMap

    MAP HINTS: Boxes with + signs can be expanded by doubleclicking. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For more options, right-click on a box or click on the map tools to the left. (Requires Flash)

    Schuelke will try to determine if six government attorneys committed possible crimes in their handling of the corruption trial that led to Stevens’ conviction last year a few days before Election Day.

    Stevens, 84, a Republican who had served in the Senate for 40 years, lost by fewer than 4,000 votes, his defeat at the polls attributed by many to his loss at trial.

    The Justice Department withdrew the indictment against Stevens last week. Sullivan threw out the conviction on Tuesday, citing prosecution misconduct that included the failure to turn over to the defense evidence favorable to Stevens.

    The Justice Department is investigating the prosecution, as well. However, Sullivan said an outside investigator was needed.

    “The events of this case are too numerous and serious to leave to an internal inquiry by the Justice Department,” Sullivan said.

    Schuelke, 66, a partner in the Washington firm of Janis, Schuelke & Wechsler and a former assistant U.S. attorney, has taken on the investigation of government officials before.

    In 1981, He served as special Democratic counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when it was considering the nomination of Alexander Haig to be secretary of state in the Reagan administration.

    In 1989, he acted as special counsel to the U.S. Senate committee looking into allegations against then-U.S. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato of New York. After a long process, the committee chose not to censure D’Amato.

    In 1996, During the Clinton administration, Schuelke represented Carolyn Huber, the special assistant to the president who found some missing papers related to Hillary Rodham Clinton’s work while at the Rose Law Firm in Arkansas.

    Later Schuelke represented Betty Currie, President Clinton’s personal secretary, during the investigation of the Monica Lewinsky affair.

    Away from government, Schuelke has represented Ben F. Glisan Jr., the former treasurer of the Enron Corporation, and Jack L. Williams, a former lobbyist for Tyson Foods.

    In 2004, Greenberg Traurig LLP hired Schuelke to conduct an internal investigation into the conduct of Abramoff, a lobbyist with the firm who later pleaded guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion.

    Fellow attorneys said this week that Schuelke brings the right blend of experience and temperament to the task of looking into the handling of the Stevens prosecution.

    “He’s somebody who is scrupulously balanced, which I think is what you are looking for,” W. Lawrence Barcella Jr., a litigator with Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, told the Associated Press.

    Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter



    Follow Muckety on Twitter



     Read related stories: Law · Recent Stories  

    0 Comments

    • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

    Leave a Comment


    • Commerce Secy Gary Locke is longtime advocate of Boeing, Microsoft

      April 10, 2009 at 8:49am

      From the outset of his political career, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke was bullish about business.

    • Holder to drop case against former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens

      The slate will be wiped clean for former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens.

      In the eyes of the law, at least, the man who narrowly lost re-election last fall after he was convicted of failing to report more than $250,000 worth of gifts from a contractor seeking political favors, will be considered innocent.

      Hint: Doubleclick on boxes with plus signs to expand, or click the tool bar at left for more options.

      MucketyMap

      MAP HINTS: Boxes with + signs can be expanded by doubleclicking. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For more options, right-click on a box or click on the map tools to the left. (Requires Flash)

      The decision to ask the judge to void the conviction was made by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, after a new prosecution team discovered a previously undocumented interview with the star witness, William Allen, which sharply contradicted his most dramatic testimony in the four-week trial. The information had never been turned over to the defense, the Justice Department said in its motion to void the conviction.

      “After careful review, I have concluded that certain information should have been provided to the defense for use at trial,” Holder said in a statement this morning. “In light of this conclusion, and in consideration of the totality of the circumstances of this particular case, I have determined that it is in the interest of justice to dismiss the indictment and not proceed with a new trial.”

      The government is seeking dismissal of the charges “with prejudice,” meaning that they cannot be filed again.

      The case against Stevens had been plagued by allegations of prosecutorial misconduct. Following his October conviction, an FBI special agent in Anchorage alleged that the lead female agent had had an “inappropriate relationship” with Allen, the chairman of defunct oil-field services company, Veco Corp., who was also the star witness against Stevens. The whistleblower also contended that prosecutors had withheld important information from the defense.

      In February, U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan held four prosecutors in contempt, including DOJ Public Integrity Section Chief William Welch, for failing to produce documents relating to the agent’s claims.

      At that point, the government appointed a new team, led by Paul O’Brien, chief of the Narcotics an Dangerous Drugs Section, whose group substantiated several of the allegations.

      Stevens, who is 85, said in a prepared statement that he felt vindicated, but complained it had come too late to save his political career.

      “I am grateful that the new team of responsible prosecutors at the Department of Justice has acknowledged that I did not receive a fair trial and has dismissed all the charges against me,” he said.

      But he added: “It is unfortunate that an election was affected by proceedings now recognized as unfair. It was my great honor to serve the State of Alaska in the United States Senate for 40 years.”

      Stevens lost his re-election bid to the former Anchorage mayor, Democrat Mark Begich a little more than a week after his conviction. Since then, his lawyers have filed several motions to dismiss the original indictment or to have a judge grant him a new trial.

      While the attorney general’s decision doesn’t exactly exonerate Stevens, it shifts the focus to government misconduct.

      “When you think of Ted Stevens, there will always be a little asterisk,” Sarah Binder, an expert on Congress at the Brookings Institution told NPR. “But this gives you a little pause to think that, in the end, there were allegations that the government couldn’t get it together to prove.”

      Others noted the irony of a Democratic attorney general effectively voiding the conviction of a longtime Republican lawmaker.

      Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), a fierce critic of the Bush Justice Department and a former U.S. attorney, noted that if Republicans wanted to complain that the Justice Department had wrongly cost them a Senate seat, they should recall that it was Bush’s Justice Department which brought the case.

      Holder’s decision comes as a big blow to the Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department, which is responsible for conducting investigations into corrupt lawmakers. Stevens’ conviction was the unit’s biggest win in more than decade. Now that conviction will be tossed out, and prosecutors and FBI agents involved in the case are being investigated themselves.

      Holder, himself a former prosecutor and judge, noted that the department’s Office of Professional Responsibility was conducting a review of the first etam’s conduct, raising the possibility that the prosecutors themselves could now face ethics charges.

      Judge Sullivan ordered a hearing for April 7 on the government’s motion.

      Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter



      Follow Muckety on Twitter


      Muckety's Facebook page


       Read related stories: Crime · Recent Stories  

      0 Comments

      • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

      Leave a Comment