Posted by Chriss Street
With over three-quarters of U.S. voters, including 63% of Democrats, wanting a special prosecutor appointed to investigate the Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of Tea Party groups, President Obama is being forced to nominate Republican James B. Comey to be the next Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Mr. Comey commands bi-partisan respect for his courageous stand, as the Acting Attorney General, blocking the Bush Administration’s efforts to implement broad-based and unwarranted domestic surveillance of Americans.
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Given that FBI Directors usually serve for long periods, the Obama Administration would have been keen on appointing a Democrat with strong ideological credentials. But with four major scandals engulfing the White House, the Administration is in no position to wage a partisan confirmation campaign and decided to nominate a conservative Republican to be the next Director of the FBI.
Mr. Comey and his wife are both registered Republicans and donated to the Presidential campaigns of U.S. Senator John McCain in 2008 and Governor Mitt Romney in 2012.
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Mr. Comey was also the target of tremendous opposition by liberals in 2009,
when it was reported by Politico that his name had been included on a
“short list” for nominees to replace retiring Supreme Court
Justice David Souter. John Brittain of the Lawyers’ Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law stated,
“He was deputy attorney general serving in Bush’s administration. He came in with the Bushies. What makes you think he’d be just an inch or two more to the center than [Chief Justice] Roberts?”
After leaving the FBI, Mr. Comey
served as General Counsel of Lockheed Martin and the $145 billion
Bridgewater Associates Hedge Fund. Currently, he serves as a Hertog Fellow on National Security Law at Columbia University Law
School and is a Board Member of the Board of HSBC Holdings, the second
largest bank in the world.
In the early 1990s, Mr. Comey
made a name for himself as the Deputy Chief of the Criminal Division of the New
York U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecuting the Gambino Mafia
crime family. He later prosecuted the 1996 Khobar Towers
bombing case in Saudi Arabia. Based on his strong national
security credentials, he was promoted in 2002 to be the U.S. Attorney for the
Southern District of New York and led the 911 terrorist attack
investigations. Two years later, he became the number 2 agent at the FBI
and ran the day to day operations for 30,000 employees.
Mr. Comey would replace Robert S. Mueller
III, who has served as FBI Director for almost 12 years, after also
being appointed by President George W. Bush in September of 2001. Mr.
Mueller, a former highly decorated Marine, is credited transforming the FBI
into one of America’s chief weapons in the War on Terror.
In early January 2006, The
New York Times, as part of their investigation into alleged illegal domestic surveillance by
the National Security Agency, reported that Mr. Comey, who was
Acting Attorney General during the March 2004 surgical hospitalization
of John Ashcroft, refused to “certify” the legality of unlimited
warrantless domestic surveillance by the National Security Agency.
President George W. Bush had issued the NSA an Executive Order and
was seeking Justice Department authority to begin blanket monitoring of phone
calls, Internet activity, text messaging, and other communication
involving any party believed by the NSA to be outside the U.S., even if the
monitoring took place within the U.S. Critics claimed that the NSA
snooping was an attempt to silence critics of the Bush
Administration policies.
After Mr. Comey’s refusal to
certify the Executive Order, Andrew H. Card Jr., White
House Chief of Staff, and Alberto R.
Gonzales, then White House Counsel and future Attorney
General, made an emergency visit to George Washington University Hospital, in
an unsuccessful attempt to win approval directly from Ashcroft for the program.
Mr. Comey went to the hospital to give Ashcroft support to withstand White
House pressure.
In testimony before the Senate
Judiciary Committee in May of 2007, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller
III stated that he
agreed with Mr. Comey’s position and that both men were prepared to resign if
the White House ignored the Department of Justice’s opinion on the illegality
of NSA wiretapping. Faced with a Constitutional crisis and a public
relations nightmare, President Bush reluctantly agreed to significant
reductions to the surveillance program’s scale and breadth.
The White House’s willingness to
nominate a pro-privacy advocate as FBI Director, at a time the Administration
is mired in multiple scandals over trashing privacy, demonstrates the desperate
need of the Administration to try to regain the public trust. Nominating
Mr. Comey may be useful for the Obama Administration to remind Americans that
the Bush Administration also tried to trample privacy rights. But with
revelations that a key IRS manager took the Fifth Amendment and the Senate
Judiciary Committee may seek indictment of Attorney General Eric Holder for
perjury, a tuff new Republican FBI Director may soon be investigating the
Administration.
CHRISS STREET & PAUL PRESTON
Present: “The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 10 to Noon http://www.kcnr1460.com/
Follow Blogs: www.chrissstreetandcompany.com & www.agenda21radio.com
Present: “The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 10 to Noon http://www.kcnr1460.com/
Follow Blogs: www.chrissstreetandcompany.com & www.agenda21radio.com
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