http://www.statesman.com/news/news/rick ... eat/ng3zF/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;A Travis County grand jury Friday indicted Gov. Rick Perry on two charges related to his effort last year to force District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg to resign after her drunken driving arrest.
Grand jurors charged Perry, 64, with abuse of official capacity, a first-degree felony, and coercion of a public servant, a third-degree felony. The first charge carries a punishment of 5-99 years and a fine of up to $10,000. The second charge is punishable by 2-10 years and a fine of up to $10,000.
Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
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Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
The left has been losing their tails lately, so they do this. Since they can't win on merit, they'll throw stuff out there in an attempt to muddy the water and confuse the low information voters.
The really sad thing is that it'll work, to some degree.
The really sad thing is that it'll work, to some degree.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
What he did was wrong. Plain and simple. He has been charged and indicted. He spent too long in office and his arrogance got the best of him.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
A Travis County indictment against a Republican is Chicago-style political crap. It didn't work with Sen. Hutchison or Tom DeLay and it's not going to work with Perry either. The Travis County DA is a drunk who won't resign even after getting a DWI conviction and she's behind this stunt.
Chas.
Chas.
Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
ROSEMARY LEHMBERG BOOKING FOOTAGE FROM TRAVIS COUNTY JAILCharles L. Cotton wrote:A Travis County indictment against a Republican is Chicago-style political crap. It didn't work with Sen. Hutchison or Tom DeLay and it's not going to work with Perry either. The Travis County DA is a drunk who won't resign even after getting a DWI conviction and she's behind this stunt.
Chas.
[video][/video]
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
It's plain and simple democrat retaliation against a republican governor for calling that democrat out on her disqualification for office as a drunk. Democrats would rather keep a drunk with demonstrated poor judgement in office, than to give Perry the chance to appoint a republican to replace her if she steps down.healthinsp wrote:What he did was wrong. Plain and simple. He has been charged and indicted. He spent too long in office and his arrogance got the best of him.
The biggest problem with Obama getting elected and reelected isn't just his bad policy decisions and other disqualifications, it is that it legitimized Chicago dirty politics........a uniquely democrat trait, common to nearly all of the nation's major cities, which tend to be democrat dominated.
And for the record..... I am not a republican. I am merely an observer with eyes, formerly a democrat, and formerly a republican.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
The last time this happened it was a very similar case, except the governor vetoed funding for UT in an effort to get rid of some board members he didn't like.
If the politics were reversed, would the outrage still be the same?
If the politics were reversed, would the outrage still be the same?
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
Glad to be out of that hive of scum and villany, Austin. Has he got a legal defense fund?
ETA:And yes, God forbid he should try to defend the public from that menace, Lehmberg.
ETA:And yes, God forbid he should try to defend the public from that menace, Lehmberg.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
Tom Delay was indicted, charged and convicted. His conviction was overturned on appeal. The appeal ruling makes for interesting reading.healthinsp wrote:What he did was wrong. Plain and simple. He has been charged and indicted. He spent too long in office and his arrogance got the best of him.
Do you understand what legally insufficient means? It means there was no legal basis for the case to begin with. IOW, the only reason this case was brought was because the DA decided to persecute Delay. DAs have that kind of power, but when they exercise it in that way it's called corruption.Appellant Thomas Dale DeLay appeals from judgments convicting him of the offenses of money laundering of funds of $100,000 or more and conspiracy to commit money laundering of funds of $100,000 or more. See Tex. Penal Code §§ 15.02, 34.02. The predicate 1 offense to support the money laundering conviction was a felonyElection Code violation. See Tex. Elec. Code. § 253.003. Because we conclude that the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain DeLay’s convictions, we reverse the judgments of the trial court and render judgments of acquittal.
The same thing is going on with Perry. If you watch the videos and listen to what she says to the Sheriff's Deputies, the DA tries to throw her weight around. When that doesn't work she tries to call in political favors. When that doesn't work she threatens the Deputies with the loss of their jobs. That's the quintessential definition of a corrupt public official. So, Rick Perry asks her to resign. She refuses. He says, OK, I'll defund your department if you don't resign. She refuses. So he exercises his power as Governor and vetoes the bill that funds her department. She STILL refuses to resign. Instead, she convenes a grand jury and goes after Perry.
And you think Perry did something wrong? That's an interesting standard to judge public officials by.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
It's not similar at all. In that case the Governor was trying to use his power to replace people who he didn't like with ones that he did. In Rick Perry's case he was trying to force a DA convicted of a crime to resign from office. I don't know about you, but the last person I want serving as the DA is someone who has been convicted of a crime, especially when you have video evidence that she is willing to exercise her influence to escape prosecution. You cant trust her to do the duties of her office in an ethical manner when she has proven she has no ethics and has displayed it publicly.healthinsp wrote:The last time this happened it was a very similar case, except the governor vetoed funding for UT in an effort to get rid of some board members he didn't like.
If the politics were reversed, would the outrage still be the same?
I'm outraged by DA Lehmberg, not Perry.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
Charles, what do you think the chances are that the legislature will introduce a bill to deal with this sort of abuse? Perhaps make it illegal to serve as a DA once you've been convicted? Or give the Governor the power to remove a DA who has been convicted?
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
Sure, why not? I am very tired of political hardball. Neither the Democratic Party nor the Republican Party are as concerned about the Constitution as they are about their own power, and the result is that they put power politics ahead of actual governance. They BOTH treat governance like the goal was political patronage, not the trust placed in them by the citizens who elected them. If they cared about the citizens, they'd stop blowing our money, they'd take care of the border situation, they would willingly accept term limits AND pay cuts. It's bad enough that that's what they call governance, but they infect the rest of us with their bile. They can ALL go to hades.healthinsp wrote:The last time this happened it was a very similar case, except the governor vetoed funding for UT in an effort to get rid of some board members he didn't like.
If the politics were reversed, would the outrage still be the same?
About the only thing I have come to not like about Texas is the politics. When I was a young man in California (back when republicans actually numbered enough to restrain the other party), if someone tried to run the kinds of political ads we see here now (witness Wendy Davis's sliming of Greg Abbot starting a few days ago over Abbot's [alleged] "support" of a rapist), that person would have swiftly found themselves on the receiving end of a lawsuit for slander......and the plaintiff would have coasted to victory. But here, now, this kind of shoddy political product is commonplace. Heck, republicans do it to each other.
The idea of politics as a "contact sport" is bull. If you're not a gentleman (or woman), I won't vote for you no matter your politics. Your character will weigh as much in my decision-making as much as your politics. I cast my first vote as a republican for Bob Dole against Bill Clinton......not so much because of politics (although the AWB did have something to do with it), but because Bob Dole was a man of character who laid it all on the line for his country and paid a heavy price for it. Clinton, on the other hand, was a faithless serial adulterer. I'll grant that being married to Hillary would challenge any man's morals, but still.......I hold myself accountable to a higher power. I've been faithful to my wife for almost 28 years. IT'S NOT THAT HARD TO DO!!! To behave as Clinton behaved, you have to be a person of loose morals and thin character. So I voted for Bob Dole when Clinton ran for reelection.
My final vote as a Republican was for Romney. It was the act of a politically desperate citizen. After that, I quit. Nobody has my allegiance any more. Both parties have grossly abused my trust. Neither party has my trust any longer.
Our founders were not above this kind of crap either, but that doesn't make it right.........although there was a delicious exchange between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams once, and their various supporters when they ran against one another. An Adams supporter once publically suggested that were Jefferson to become the president, “we would see our wives and daughters the victims of legal prostitution.” A prominent newspaper in Connecticut opined that Jefferson's election would foster a nation in which "murder, robbery, rape, adultery and incest will openly be taught and practiced."
One of Jefferson's supporters countered that Adams was a rageful, lying, warmongering fellow; a “repulsive pedant” and “gross hypocrite” who “behaved neither like a man nor like a woman but instead possessed a hideous hermaphroditical character.”
Stephen Douglas accused Lincoln of being a drunk, claiming that Lincoln could "ruin more liquor" than all the men in town together. Some of my favorite stuff was written by Samuel Clemens in some of his short stories about working as an editor in a small-town newspaper, with all the usual "Twainish" embellishments and hyperbole.
My favorite politician of all times remains George Washington, who didn't want to job, refused at first to take it, relented when everyone begged him to do it, then nearly retired over the question of a second term because he didn't feel that a 2nd term was the right thing to do. He only acceded to it when he had nearly unanimous support in favor of it. My guess is that Washington went to his grave believing that a 2 term presidency was a bad idea.
Question the opponent's qualifications, by all means. Obama's were not subjected to nearly enough scrutiny by a fawning and obsequious media........and we're all living the result of that complete lack of intellectual curiosity. George W. Bush, on the other hand, had the media's willing participation in his character assassination, prior to and during his presidency. That whole national guard thing cooked up by Dan Rather (a passionate democrat) turned out to be smoke and mirrors and an obvious forgery. I wish that the 4th estate had been as curious about Obama.
Question his or her character.........if there is ACTUAL evidence of its lack (exactly the case with DA Wino in Austin). But let's do exactly as you suggest and then some, and switch the D and R after their names to a P and a Q as an exercise in unfreighting your question of ideology:
- Prosecutor Jones (P) gets stupid drunk and blows a 2.3 during a DUI stop, showing extraordinarily bad judgement. Worse yet, Jones (P) behaves like one of those nightmare prisoners down at the county jail.
- A public outcry begins, demanding that Jones step down as Prosecutor. Jones haughtily refuses to follow the will of the people who pay his salary, and he refuses to step down.
- Enter Governor Wilson (Q), who also tells Jones (P) that he should step down because he is no longer morally qualified to head up a division that investigates corruption (drunks can be blackmailed, etc.).
- Again, Jones (P) refuses to step down. Speculation is that the reason for Jones's refusal is the knowledge that Wilson (Q) will appoint another Q to fill Jones's vacated position. If true, and it makes sense because there is no GOOD reason why a drunk should be left in charge of a division which investigates corruption, then Jones has put party ambition ahead of the good of the state and its citizens.
- Now, it is highly probable although not written in stone that if Jones (P) stops down, Wilson (Q) will appoint another Q to fill the job Jones held, but at least the people of the state of Texas would be getting a sober person to investigation corruption, instead of a drunk.
- Governor Wilson (Q), acting as the representative of ALL the people, not just the Qs, threatens Jones (P) with defunding Jones's division if Jones does not step down. After all, why continue to fund a division run by an unrepentant and recalcitrant drunk of poor judgement?
- Wilson (Q) has not just used his power to threaten or coerce a private citizen. He has used it to force accountability in another public "servant" who otherwise refuses to be accountable. That's part of his job as the state's chief executive.
I just think that he is right in this instance.
Last edited by The Annoyed Man on Sat Aug 16, 2014 8:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
Tom DeLay's life was changed by an indictment from a liberal Austin DA that I didn't understand at the time. Did he not loose the Speakership of the US House, just simply because of the indictment? Now ten years later he has been acquitted, but it is being appealed? (not sure if I have ever heard of a criminal case being appealed by the prosecution) At the time the whole thing seemed politically motivated.
Now another liberal Austin DA had done the same thing to the Governor. I'm not sure I understand this one either. This seems politically motivated to prevent him from becoming President. (I don't think he has a chance, VP maybe)
I was a fan of Tom DeLay and I felt that whole thing was unfair. Now I'm not a big fan of Governor Perry, but this seems just as unfair.
Do we need to move the Capital of Texas out of Austin, so this kind of thing can't happen any more?
Now another liberal Austin DA had done the same thing to the Governor. I'm not sure I understand this one either. This seems politically motivated to prevent him from becoming President. (I don't think he has a chance, VP maybe)
I was a fan of Tom DeLay and I felt that whole thing was unfair. Now I'm not a big fan of Governor Perry, but this seems just as unfair.
Do we need to move the Capital of Texas out of Austin, so this kind of thing can't happen any more?
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Re: Rick Perry indicted on two felony charges
The Annoyed Man wrote:Awesome post
I'm trying not to be defeatest here but something makes me seriously wonder if Davis will catch onto this and ride it as momentum right into the Governor's mansion?
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