Even after the last eight years, this stands out as brazen:
Despite
the finding of a legislative report that she had broken the state’s
ethics law in the scandal dubbed Troopergate, Alaska Governor Sarah
Palin said Saturday that the report actually cleared her of any “legal
wrongdoing or unethical activity.” ***
The investigation said
she violated Alaska Statute 39.52.110(a) of the Alaska Executive Branch
Ethics Act, which states, “… each public officer holds office as a
public trust, and any effort to benefit a personal or financial
interest through official action is a violation of that trust.”
Palin said she’s happy the report affirmed her right to fire Monegan. But
she said she still doesn’t think she abused her power like the report
says she did. In fact, she said she considered herself vindicated.
In
a brief conference call with press reported by the Anchorage Daily
News, Palin said, “I’m very, very pleased to be cleared of any legal
wrongdoing … any hint of any kind of unethical activity there. Very
pleased to be cleared of any of that.”
Maverick!
I
don’t know how to react to this. I really just don’t. When someone is
that willing to look at you and just flat out make shit up and reject
facts, there really is nothing you can do without driving yourself
insane. I would just love to see a press conference with her, but the
McCain campaign knows better than to let that happen.
*** Update ***
Heh:
McCain
campaign spokeswoman Meg Stapleton dismissed the report as the product
of “a partisan-led inquiry run by Obama supporters.” But there could be
more land mines ahead. Some weeks ago, the McCain team devised a plan
to have Palin file an ethics complaint against herself with the State
Personnel Board, arguing that it alone was capable of conducting a
fair, nonpartisan inquiry into whether she fired Monegan because he
refused to fire Wooten, who had been involved in a messy custody battle
with her sister. Some Democrats ridiculed the move, noting that the
personnel board answered to Palin. But the board ended up hiring an
aggressive Anchorage trial lawyer, Timothy Petumenos, as an independent
counsel. McCain aides were chagrined to discover that Petumenos was a
Democrat who had contributed to Palin’s 2006 opponent for governor,
Tony Knowles. Palin is now scheduled to be questioned next week, and
the counsel’s report could be released soon after. “We took a gamble
when we went to the personnel board,” said a McCain aide who asked not
to be identified discussing strategy. While the McCain camp still
insists Palin “has nothing to hide,” it acknowledges a critical finding
by Petumenos would be even harder to dismiss.
Indeed. Maybe what she could do is just release another report
from the McCain campaign clearing herself right before the State
Personnel Board report is released. Because having her release a report
clearing herself as a rebuttal to the State Personnel Board report that
was completed because she filed an ethics complaint against herself
would be a superb ending to this.
J.Cole