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'No Skeletons in My Closet!'
Oh yeah? How Michael Mukasey and Bernie Kerik are haunting Rudy's run.
by Wayne Barrett
October 23rd, 2007 12:00 AM

Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, left, and former Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik march in the St. Patrick's Day Parade in 2002.
photo: Richard B. Levine
Additional research provided by Adrienne Gaffney, Samuel Rubenfeld, and Danielle Schiffman
The Democrats who questioned attorney general nominee Michael Mukasey at his recent Senate confirmation hearing outdid one another in a frustrating effort to get the former judge to assert his independence from the Bush White House. With his predecessor, Bush pal Alberto Gonzales, finally forced from office, the senators were hoping for a nominee with fewer complicating relationships.

Fat chance. The question for Mukasey is not what he'll do at Justice for the soon-to-be- departing Republican president, but what he'll do for the putative next one, his lifelong friend Rudy Giuliani. Mukasey and Giuliani were young federal prosecutors together in the early 1970s and then practiced at the same Manhattan law firm, Patterson Belknap, where Mukasey returned in 2006 when he retired after 18 years on the federal bench in New York. Giuliani chose Mukasey to swear him in at his inaugurals in 1994 and 1998.

The question of Mukasey's strong ties to Giuliani got the light touch from Senator Pat Leahy, the Judiciary Committee chairman who opened the two-day proceeding by saying that he assumed Mukasey would "totally recuse" himself from "any involvement with Mr. Giuliani or any other candidate for president." Mukasey laughed at the question, as if the answer was obvious, and quickly agreed. But that chuckle rings a little hollow when you look at who had come with him to the hearing: his wife Susan, who volunteered almost daily in the Giuliani mayoral campaigns; his stepson Marc, who was a staff assistant in one campaign and currently is a partner at the Texas-based law firm that Giuliani recently joined, Bracewell & Giuliani; and Louis Freeh, the former FBI director who recently endorsed Giuliani and worked closely with him as a federal prosecutor. Marc Mukasey is currently representing Giuliani Partners in the federal probe of Bernard Kerik, a onetime member of the consulting firm. Freeh's appearance, sitting beside the family, was a stark indication of just how unconsciously political Mukasey's key relationships are. (For Democrats on the committee, the sight of Freeh, who led multiple probes of both Clintons, might have been an indication of Mukasey's partisanship. In Freeh's recent autobiography, he concluded that "the presidency hit an all-time low" under Bill Clinton—who named him to head the FBI, only to wind up as the target of multiple Freeh probes—adding that if he were Clinton, "I might never show my face in public again.")

Mukasey has so far indicated that he will recuse himself in the ongoing probe of Kerik, the ex–police commissioner and onetime Giuliani-backed nominee for homeland security secretary, who has already pleaded guilty in a state case and is facing a mountain of federal charges. But Mukasey's recusal shouldn't really be a problem. The Justice Department agreed months ago to extend the statute of limitations on the case against Kerik to November 17, when his expected indictment may suddenly emerge as a national story haunting the Giuliani campaign. The case is so layered in conflict that Alberto Gonzales is a likely witness. It was Gonzales who vetted Kerik for the homeland-security post in 2004 and was swamped by false claims about him emanating from the fax machines and computers at Giuliani Partners' Times Square headquarters. The Washington Post reported in April that Kerik was "likely" to be indicted for "bald-faced lies" during the White House clearance process, including possible misstatements on forms filled out with the assistance of Giuliani's firm.

The Daily News has more recently reported that Kerik may also be indicted on bribery charges connected to a 1999 meeting in a Tribeca bar with Giuliani's cousin, Ray Casey, who ran the city's trade-waste commission. Kerik was pressuring Casey on behalf of an allegedly mob-tied contractor, which was then seeking a license from the commission to develop a waste-transfer station. The company was already involved in the extensive renovations of Kerik's apartment.

But Kerik is just one of the possible Giuliani-tied cases that Mukasey might be faced with as the new head of Justice. The list of Giuliani connections could also include the California proportional-representation ballot initiative financed by vulture-fund billionaire Paul Singer, which is designed to split up California's 55 electoral votes—the single largest state total—which are routinely won by Democratic candidates. Singer assumed a formal title in the Giuliani campaign-finance committee and became his biggest early fundraiser, with Giuliani embracing him despite worldwide condemnations of his dunning of debt-ridden third-world countries. Giuliani has even been flying around the country on Singer's corporate jet, yet his campaign insists that it played no role in the California initiative, which appears designed to benefit Giuliani, the only Republican who polls well in the state. If Giuliani's campaign was involved, the scheme would violate federal campaign laws. That's why a complaint has already been filed with the Federal Election Commission and why the campaign is currently trying to distance itself from Singer, even as a second effort to place the initiative on the state ballot—this one headed by Anne Dunsmore, a former Giuliani finance-committee staffer—is getting underway. Continue

More by Wayne Barrett
Hillary and the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy
The strange case of conservative pundits and their love for Barack Obama

We Come to Bury Rudy
The evil that men do lives after their mayoral stints—and even 9/11

Delegating Authority
As McCain and Romney fight for the nomination, New York’s G.O.P. has a lot to lose

Who Built Rudy's House in the Hamptons?
Giuliani's contractor might not have had a 'hire standard' on illegal labor

Giuliani's Immigration Problem
Much as he hates to admit it, Rudy loved (most of) those huddled masses

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Helen Frigo on Sat Nov 10, 2007, 11:39, says:
your article was too long, so maybe I missed Rudy refusing to prosecute FBI agent Lynley DeVecchio for selling $60,000 worth of handguns in PA, in 1976 (p.433 of "Triple Cross" by Peter Lance. Mukasey is on p.208, "quipp(ing), Yes we saw him (Ali Mohamed) on that splendid videotape". The video tape the FBI took of Ali teaching Rabbi Kahane's killer, and 2 of the 1993 WTC attackers, among others, of how to shoot AK-47's at the Calverton shooting range on Long Island. But Mukasey did not insist Fitzgerald and the other feds produce Ali, even though Ali was working for the Feds, and had confessed in 1993 to being a member of al-Qaeda.
Eliot Bernstein Iviewit on Wed Oct 31, 2007, 12:18, says:
All roads of political corruption in New York lead to www.iviewit.tv whereby high level government officials became entangled in efforts to protect lawyers from leading firms (Proskauer Rose, who tried to tap Guiliani and Foley and Lardner, Michael Grebe) who got caught robbing trillion dollar patents through fraud on the United States Patent Office. The patents have been suspended pending ongoing investigations (FBI OPR, DOJ OIG, USPTO, USPTO OED, NY First Dept http://exposecorruptcourts.blogspot.com/2007/10/new-york-law-journal-on-whitewashed.html , etc.) Of note to New Yorkers are the First Department Unpublished Orders for investigation of former NYSBA Pres Steven Krane, up to replace Judith Kaye and others:

M3198 - Steven C. Krane,

M2820 Kenneth Rubenstein,

M3212 Raymond A. Joao and,

Cahill was transferred for Special Inquiry and Investigation to Martin Gold

Thomas J. Cahill – Special Inquiry #2004.1122 Pending Ongoing Investigation by Special Counsel

Martin R. Gold after transfer of the Cahill Complaint to Paul J. Curran and Related Cases (separate motion attached);

Kenneth Rubenstein – Docket 2003.0531 First Department;

Raymond Joao – Docket 2003.0532 First Department,

Steven C. Krane (former President of the NYSBA and currently nominated for Chief Judge) – Docket 2004.1883 First Department;

The law firm Proskauer Rose, LLP and,

The law firm Meltzer Lippe Goldstein Wolfe and Schlissel

The Complaints and Petition were filed by Eliot I. Bernstein, Pro Se and P. Stephen Lamont Both Individually and On Behalf of Shareholders of: Iviewit Technologies, Inc. and Iviewit Holdings, Inc.

To find out more visit

www.iviewit.tv

http://iviewit.tv/CompanyDocs/book

or call me

Eliot Bernstein, Inventor, Iviewit Technologies, Inc. 530-529-4110


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