Former Justice official says Congress misled about Griffin
Thursday, May 24, 2007
By Aaron Sadler
Stephens Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON - A former Justice Department official testified Wednesday that the No. 2 man at the department misled a Senate panel about his knowledge of Tim Griffin's hiring as a federal prosecutor, as new correspondence made public showed that Griffin boasted to former colleagues about a published "swipe" at Sen. Mark Pryor.
Monica Goodling told the House Judiciary Committee that Paul McNulty, the former deputy attorney general, was aware of White House involvement to appoint Griffin as interim U.S. attorney in Little Rock.
Griffin was an aide to presidential political adviser Karl Rove.
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In a Feb. 16 e-mail to Rove and four others in the White House political office, Griffin forwarded an Arkansas Democrat Gazette article where he took a jab at Pryor for opposing him.
"I'm glad I did this, especially because Pryor says in the article that Gonzales told him he wouldn't send me through the process and Pryor says he was asking Gonzales," to put his name before the Senate, Griffin said. "Crazy. The swipe ... is in response to a question about whether the White House did me a disservice. I said that Pryor did me a disservice, etc."
Pryor spokesman Michael Teague said the e-mail illustrates why Griffin shouldn't be U.S. attorney.
"Everything's political to him," Teague said. "He e-mails Karl Rove and he's bragging about how he took a swipe at Pryor. This e-mail was sent to the entire White House team right at the time everybody was saying, 'Oooh, Karl Rove's got nothing to do with this.'"
Griffin refused to comment Wednesday.
more:
http://www.arkansasnews.com/archive/2007/05/24/WashingtonDCBureau/342163.html