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October 12, 2011
Corruption in Maricopa CountyBy Selwyn DukeWhen we think of political persecution, places such as Tiananmen Square may come to mind. Increasingly, however, this tool of tyranny is coming to our shores -- and it is not made in China. It is, in the case I'll discuss today, made in Maricopa County.
Every avid news reader knows about the battles between Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio and the federal government; Leviathan has targeted him because of his principled stand against illegal immigration. What is not quite as well-known, however, is that the sheriff and his supporters -- most notably former Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas -- have long been battling a corrupt local political machine bent on thwarting the rule of law and benefiting itself. Not surprisingly, as in the film Walking Tall, Arpaio's and Thomas's attempt to end local corruption has come at a price: the State Bar of Arizona (SBA) has begun prosecuting Thomas and two of his deputies in a move that reeks of political retaliation.
One of these underlings is ex-Deputy County Attorney Lisa Aubuchon. The other is ex-Deputy County Attorney Rachel Alexander, whom some readers may recognize as the proprietor of the website Intellectual Conservative. Alexander, despite having played only the smallest of roles in a racketeering case against the Maricopa County Supervisors, now faces suspension of her law license and significant career damage. And, outrageously, Alexander's supervisor Pete Spaw, despite playing a far larger role in the RICO case, has not been charged. This has led many to conclude that Alexander is the victim of selective prosecution.
The problems for Thomas and his deputies started when the County Supervisors filed wrongful prosecution charges against them with the SBA, which the County Supervisors' leftist allies in the bar association ran with. What were these local politicians so upset about? John Hawkins at RightWingNews.com provides some background, writing:
This didn't sit well with the illegal alien-enablers in local government. Hawkins continues:
Unfortunately, though, the Maricopa Machine knows how to protect itself. These charges were all transferred to now retired judges -- one of whom resigned in disgrace -- and were dismissed. And the Machine plays dirty. At one point, the supervisors removed Thomas's entire thirty-lawyer Civil Division from his jurisdiction -- until ultimately being ordered to return it by the Arizona Court of Appeals. At another point, they allegedly hacked into Alexander's Intellectual Conservative website, cloaking it so that Google would block it. This severely impacted upon the site's traffic (the hacking damage has since been undone).
To understand the kind of political persecution the SBA is guilty of, note that even some of Thomas's opponents are rallying to his and his deputies' defense. This includes the lifelong Democrat who, along with a Republican supporter of former Democrat governor Janet Napolitano and a third colleague, paid for an advertisement alerting fellow bar members to how their dues are being used for a political vendetta. What follows is an excerpt:
As John Hawkins points out in his piece, when an expert (Hazard) who helped draft the American Bar Association's ethics rules says the SBA's charges are without merit, it should raise a red flag.
Also sounding the alarm is the Maricopa County Republican Committee, which responded to the Machine's injustice by taking the unusual step of condemning the prosecution. In a formal resolution, the MCRC pointed out that "even a columnist for the liberal Arizona Republic, Robert Robb, has denounced the Bar's investigation"; the MCRC concluded with "NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by the Maricopa County Republican Executive Guidance Committee that it demand the State Bar drop the baseless and politically motivated investigation into Andrew Thomas, Lisa Aubuchon and Rachel Alexander."
Yet, in the sea of injustice that is this sordid affair, the charges against Alexander are so outrageous that even some who side with the SBA against Thomas have defended her. For example, Arizona attorney Greg Patterson writes that the case against Alexander -- a woman "well known in the conservative blogging community" -- "is both selective and overreaching." David Roney at SonoranAlliance.com places matters in further perspective, writing:
Without a doubt, crooks are very "embarrassed" when light is shone on their dark deeds. Yet the ideological component cannot be overlooked. There is a full-court press on to destroy Thomas, Aubuchon, and a woman running a website named "Intellectual Conservative" for the same reason the Machine targets Sheriff Joe Arpaio: they were pursuing an agenda some call conservative, but which really amounts to the upholding of the rule of law -- and the antithesis of liberalism.
So this is a story of corruption. There is the garden variety, in which those who walk tall and stand against evil are targeted by those who wish to continue enriching themselves. But then there is the kind that is another hallmark of despotic regimes: political persecution. It is a phenomenon of fascism, whereby those who toe your line get benefits, and those who don't get intimidated into silence or, when they're too stout-hearted, destroyed.
By any means necessary.
Then, once big business and all other prominent people and entities are marching in lock-step, you have complete control over civilization. This is Chicago -- and, it appears, Maricopa -- politics. And we allow it to stand at our own peril.
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