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Home Front: Politix
DeLay Offered Deal Before Indictment
2005-10-18
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Texas prosecutor tried to persuade Rep. Tom DeLay to plead guilty to a misdemeanor and save his job as majority leader but DeLay refused, the congressman's attorney said Monday. Dick DeGuerin described such an effort in a letter to the prosecutor in the case, Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle. DeLay has been indicted on conspiracy and money laundering charges in a Texas campaign finance investigation, both felonies. He was obligated to step aside under House Republican rules.

"Before the first indictment you tried to coerce a guilty plea from Tom DeLay for a misdemeanor, stating the alternative was indictment for a felony which would require his stepping down as majority leader of the United States House of Representatives," DeGuerin wrote. "He turned you down flat so you had him indicted, in spite of advice from others in your office that Tom DeLay had not committed any crime," the lawyer contended. "In short, neither lack of evidence nor lack of law has deterred you."
Speaking of lack of evidence:
AUSTIN - Travis County prosecutors admitted Friday they lack physical proof of a list of Republican candidates that is at the heart of money-laundering indictments against U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay and two of his associates. The list is key to prosecutors being able to prove that corporate money that could not be legally spent on Texas candidates was specifically exchanged at the national level for donations that legally could be spent on Republican candidates for the Texas House.

Indictments against DeLay, Jim Ellis and John Colyandro state that Ellis gave "a document that contained the names of several candidates for the Texas House" to a Republican National Committee official in 2002 in a scheme to swap $190,000 in restricted corporate money for the same amount of money from individuals that could be legally used by Texas candidates.

But prosecutors said Friday in court that they only had a "similar" list and not the one allegedly received by then-RNC Deputy Director Terry Nelson. Late in the day, they released a list of 17 Republican candidates, but only seven are alleged to have received money in the scheme.
Sounds like their list is not only "fake" but also "inaccurate".
Posted by:Steve

#5  Isn't going to a second and third Grand Jury double-jerpardy or something like that?

I agree the Procecutor should be locked up and serve time -- the amount of time Delay was at risk for.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2005-10-18 18:29  

#4  'Moose - turn that "or" into "and" and I'm with you all the way. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-10-18 14:48  

#3  DeLay's lawyers should counter with making the DA a counter-offer: withdraw the indictment, or we will press felony charges against you for grand jury tampering, which is the closest thing in Texas to a RICO law.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-10-18 12:10  

#2  A Texas prosecutor tried to persuade Rep. Tom DeLay to plead guilty to a misdemeanor and save his job as majority leader

Only the AP could neglect to mention that the Texas persecutor in question is Ronnie Earle, political hit man. (And yes I know he's indicted Democrats in the past... back in those days political enemies were all in the same tent because there weren't any Republicans to speak of.)

I seriously doubt he tried to persuade him to save his job. The whole purpose of the indictment was to get a seriously effective Republican off the job. Take that to the bank.
Posted by: eLarson   2005-10-18 09:47  

#1  DeLay does not negotiate with terrorists.
Posted by: Phereque Gleang8859   2005-10-18 09:40  

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