Sat 3 Jan 2009
STAPLEYGATE: AZ Republic cheered Democrat AG Goddard for the exact same prosecution a few years ago
Posted by Chewie Shofir under County Government , Crime and Punishment , Freedom of Speech , Government[9] Comments
More on the saga of Arizona’s own Blagojevich
Two years ago, Attorney General Terry Goddard prosecuted state Treasurer David Petersen for doing the exact same offense with which Stapley is charged.
Since the Arizona Republic failed to post online the County Attorney’s op-ed that ran in the paper today, we are reproducing it here. The Republic has been running countless articles and opinions slanted against the Sheriff and the County Attorney, siding with indicted Board of Supervisor Don Stapley instead. What’s interesting also is that they printed yet another editorial to rebut the County Attorney’s submitted op-ed which makes no sense if you didn’t read the County Attorney’s op-ed.
The editorial accuses the County Attorney of being disingenuous, but in fact the Republic was. First, the Republic’s editorial claims they criticized AG Goddard for his prosecution of former State Treasurer David Petersen for the same charges Don Stapley is facing. This isn’t accurate, they only criticized him a year later, after they lavished praise on him for that and other dubious prosecutions in a full-length op-ed page salute to him, all taking place after Sheriff Arpaio and Thomas started their public corruption cases, including one directed at Goddard.
Liberal Double Standards in the Arizona Republic
The Republic’s recent editorial criticizing County Attorney Andrew Thomas for prosecuting the 118-count criminal indictment against Supervisor Donald Stapley is a masterpiece of intellectual hypocrisy and flip-flops.
The Republic claims that Thomas’ office is prosecuting Stapley for “minor acts of carelessness.” Our office strongly disputes this characterization. Regardless, the double standards here are truly amazing.
Two years ago, Attorney General Terry Goddard prosecuted state Treasurer David Petersen for doing the exact same offense with which Stapley is charged. Goddard also prosecuted state Mine Inspector Doug Martin for buying a vehicle for official use outside the procurement rules. Instead of accusing Goddard of prosecuting allegedly minor offenses, the Republic heaped praise on him. The Republic even devoted its op-ed page to a lineup of photos celebrating all the public officials he had prosecuted.
Goddard cited the Arizona Supreme Court’s decision in the case against Governor Evan Mecham as clear precedent for an elected prosecutor serving as both prosecutor and civil attorney for government officials. That same analysis applies to Thomas. Yet the Republic now alleges Thomas is abusing his powers by prosecuting Stapley over the same offenses.
In arriving at this position, the Republic’s editorial board has managed to contradict itself in less than a month. On December 4, the Republic urged everyone to wait to see the evidence in the case. The claim by Stapley’s lawyers that the prosecution was motivated by politics, the editors noted, “sounds very much like blaming others for his predicament.” Twenty days later, the Republic endorsed the claim of unfair prosecution.
By contrast, the Republic sees no abuse of power by activist judges. How else can one explain why the Republic continues to ignore mounting evidence that the judge assigned to the Stapley case is openly biased against the County Attorney’s Office? Or why Presiding Judge Barbara Rodriguez Mundell personally selected the judge instead of using the normal, random selection process?
Likewise, the Republic ignores unlawful conduct by the county board of supervisors. The board has retaliated against Thomas for prosecuting one of their own, illegally hiring lawyers to replace him and seeking to strip Thomas’ office of its civil litigation functions. It certainly doesn’t hurt the board’s cause that they recently hired a former member of the Republic’s editorial board as their public information officer.
When the only way you can tell the Republic’s editorial position on a given subject is to look at the names of the political figures involved instead of the principles at issue, that’s everything you need to know about the ideologically motivated double standards at work. Sheriff Joe Arpaio and County Attorney Thomas did not seek the endorsement of the Republic this last election because the Republic reserves its praise for left-leaning politicians and establishment public officials who don’t rock the boat. Arpaio and Thomas aren’t afraid to rock the boat. That means they won’t be receiving plaudits, or even fair treatment, from the Republic’s editorial board. But it also means they’re doing their job.
Mike Anthony Scerbo is the Public Information Officer for the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office.
January 3rd, 2009 at 1:10 pm
The Republic….is that still around??
January 3rd, 2009 at 3:57 pm
Keeper –
I check it out here for free – http://aznewsonline.weebly.com/republic-amp-tribune.html
As long as the headlines are still updating, it must still be in business. Although the RSS feeds look pretty bad, some of that news is waaaaay old. They haven’t adapted to the web and probably never will.
George
January 3rd, 2009 at 7:09 pm
According to seeingredaz, the Tribune is already done, they’re now free – http://seeingredaz.wordpress.com/2009/01/03/the-end-of-an-era/
January 3rd, 2009 at 7:37 pm
Has this blog just become a mouthpiece for Andrew Thomas? What happened to Josie? I miss her.
January 3rd, 2009 at 7:44 pm
Doesn’t the Republic receive funding from the Democrat party. If not, it should otherwise they are working for free.
January 3rd, 2009 at 9:04 pm
[...] (Source: Sonoran Alliance) [...]
January 3rd, 2009 at 10:05 pm
I don’t get the issue with the claimed double-standard in relation to Goddard. The state Attorney General and the County Attorney General have quite different powers and duties as outlined in the Arizona Constitution. As far as I can tell the BOS is said to have the discretion over how civil actions against or for the county are handled. There is no analogous language in regards to the Governor. At the state level this is the AG’s responsibility.
January 4th, 2009 at 11:59 am
Basil St. George,
Considering the Republic has become the biggest mouthpiece against Thomas – you’d have thought his race was the biggest one in the state last fall the amount of coverage it got – it makes sense for Sonoran Alliance to cover the other side and expose the Republic’s bias. The Republic sees Thomas as the biggest threat in the state, since he has gotten his promises accomplished which aren’t part of their liberal agenda, and they’re afraid he will become governor.
Keep it up gang!
George
January 7th, 2009 at 11:12 am
The argument that Petersen was charged for doing the exact same offense with which Stapley is charged is not sound. Stapley’s case is entirely different. The Republic and most politicos do not have a problem with the charge that Stapley did something wrong. Most would agree that he made several mistakes over many years and did a poor job of filing appropriate paper work. The problem with Thomas’ case is the DEGREE of the charges. He is prosecuting Stapley for felonies, not misdeamnors, which would be more appropriate. Also, Petersen was accused of using his position to promote a character education program in which he had financial ties, hiring a family member at the treasury, as well as accepting payments for speaking engagements as treasurer. The charges were fraud, forgery and misappropriation of public funds. More importantly, while appropriately charged with felony charges, he was convicted on a single MISDEAMNOR and resigned. Might I also add that Goddard is a Democrat and Petersen is a Republican. Is anyone here missing the point that Stapley is a Republican, just like Thomas and The Republic is still defending Stapley?? Come on guys, let’s be more on the ball here. Any self-respecting Republican knows that Thomas AND Arpaio are out of control and a danger to themselves, their party and the county. The ironic shame is that they are biting the hand that feeds them and Stapley is just the poor schmuck who is getting the raw deal.