WASHINGTON
(By
Jennifer Talhelm, AP) March 6, 2007 — A fired federal
prosecutor told a Senate committee Tuesday that he felt
"leaned on" and sickened as Republican Sen. Pete Domenici
hung up on him in disgust last fall when told that
indictments in a corruption case against Democrats would not
be issued before the fall elections.
"He said, 'Are these
going to be filed before November?'" former federal
prosecutor David Iglesias, one of eight U.S. attorneys
summarily fired in recent months, told the panel. "I said I
didn't think so. And to which he replied, 'I'm very sorry to
hear that.' And then the line went dead."
Iglesias said he received the call at home on Oct. 26 or
27th and that it lasted two minutes, "tops."
"I felt leaned on. I felt pressured to get these matters
moving," Iglesias testified.
Asked by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., whether such a call
was unusual in Iglesias' experience, the former prosecutor
answered, "Unprecedented."
Six of eight prosecutors fired by the Department of
Justice in recent months were expected to appear before
House and Senate panels. Justice officials have said most of
the eight were dismissed for performance-related issues, an
allegation those testifying staunchly denied.
Democrats accuse the Bush administration of firing the
prosecutors to make room for Republican allies and using a
new provision of the Patriot Act to install new U.S.
attorneys without going through the Senate confirmation
process.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has denied that charge
and said he intends to submit all of the names of his
appointees to the Senate confirmation process.
At least one Republican said he isn't sure that the
agency acted properly.
"If the allegations are correct, then there has been
serious misconduct in what has occurred in the terminations
of these United States attorneys," Specter said. He
cautioned his colleagues to withhold judgment on the mass
firings and the charges of cronyism leveled against the
Justice Department.
But as a former district attorney in Philadelphia, he was
clearly troubled by reports that two lawmakers — Domenici
and Rep. Heather Wilson, both New Mexico Republicans —
contacted their state's U.S. attorney about a pending case.
Domenici and Wilson have acknowledged making the calls, but
denied placing political pressure on prosecutor David
Iglesias.
"United States attorneys have to be allowed to do their
job in an unfettered way," Specter said.
For their parts, six former U.S. attorneys said they got
little or no information about why they were fired.
Domenici had complained repeatedly to high-level Justice
Department officials about New Mexico prosecutor David
Iglesias, the department said. Wilson said that she, too,
had spoken with Iglesias about "the slow pace" of federal
corruption probes in the state.
Iglesias told the panel he received a call from Wilson
about two weeks earlier, in which she asked him about sealed
indictments — a topic prosecutors cannot discuss. Wilson's
question "raised red flags in my head," Iglesias said.
"I was evasive and nonresponsive to her question,"
Iglesias told the panel, saying he talked generally about
why some indictments are sealed. "She was not happy with
that answer. And she said, 'Well I guess I'll have to take
your word for it." The call ended almost immediately,
Iglesias said.
Asked by Schumer if he felt pressured by that call,
Iglesias replied: "Yes sir, I did."
Like Domenici, Wilson denied pressuring the New Mexico
prosecutor. She said earlier Tuesday she had called Iglesias
because she had received an allegation "by a constituent
with knowledge of ongoing investigations" that he "was
intentionally delaying corruption prosecutions." She said
Iglesias denied that allegation, saying he simply had few
people to handle corruption cases. "I told him that I would
take him at his word, and I did," Wilson said.
In a joint statement ahead of Tuesday's hearings, six of
the eight former prosecutors made clear that some of them
had differences with the Department of Justice.
"When we had new ideas or differing opinions, we assumed
that such thoughts would always be welcomed by the (Justice)
department and could be freely and openly debated within the
halls of that great institution," six of the attorneys said
in a joint statement released ahead of the hearings.
Iglesias has also said he would relate details of a
conversation with two members of Congress who he says
pressured him to rush indictments in an investigation into
an alleged Democratic kickback scheme that could have helped
Republicans in the November 2006 elections.
Domenici said over the weekend that he had contacted
Iglesias in October 2006 to ask about progress of the probe,
though he denied putting any pressure on the prosecutor.
In her statement Tuesday, Wilson said the department
dismissed Iglesias "without input from me." Her telephone
call was not politically motivated, she said, and the
conversation was "brief and professional."
"If the purpose of my call has somehow been misperceived,
I am sorry for any confusion," Wilson said.