" . . . U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and a former U.S. Attorney and Attorney General for Rhode Island, today sharply criticized the argument some Republican members of the Committee are making for delaying a vote on the nomination of Attorney General-Designate Eric Holder:I.e., we'll block you 'til you promise not to do your job ( -- exactly what we've had from Repub. gummint for the last 8 years {no one hired unless they could be relied on not to do their job}).
"'Republicans on the Judiciary Committee have asked Eric Holder to make a commitment, before he is even confirmed, that he will not prosecute any Bush Administration officials for their involvement in acts of torture during the last administration.
"'Anyone familiar with the criminal justice system . . . should know that a prosecutor should make no determination about who to prosecute before he or she has all the facts, and particularly not in response to legislative pressure.'"
And if that weren't bad enough:
"'I believe they are delaying Holder's nomination to shorten the time between the day Holder takes over and the day the statute of limitations on [the] violations of FISA [that] Bush committed on March 11, 2004 start to expire -- that is, March 11, 2009, just seven weeks away.I have not personally verified the facts or all of the law re- the statute-of-limitations issue, but I can confirm that if there's an applicable statute of limitations, and no prosecution is commenced before it expires, the "evil-doers" are home-free.
"'At yesterday's Progressive Media Summit, I had an opportunity to remind Senator Sheldon Whitehouse of that timeline. I reminded him, too, that Bush seems intent on delaying the time when an Article III judge assesses the evidence in the al-Haramain document, which probably proves Bush broke the law.'"
If you find this delay unacceptable for that or any other reason, pls tell the two senators blocking the nomination, Senators Spector and Cornyn (I'm especially talkin' to you, Pennsylvania and Texas residents!), which you can do here.
More details here, here, and here.
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