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Is Don Siegelman in prison because he's a criminal or because he belonged to the wrong political party in Alabama? Siegelman is the former governor of Alabama, and he was the most successful Democrat in that Republican state. But while he was governor, the U.S. Justice Department launched multiple investigations that went on year after year until, finally, a jury convicted Siegelman of bribery. 

Now, many Democrats and Republicans have become suspicious of the Justice Department's motivations. As correspondent Scott Pelley reports, 52 former state attorneys-general have asked Congress to investigate whether the prosecution of Siegelman was pursued not because of a crime but because of politics.



Ten years ago life was good for Don Siegelman. After he became governor, many believed he was headed to a career in national politics. In 1999, Siegelman's pet project was raising money to improve education, so he started a campaign to ask voters to approve a state lottery. He challenged Republicans to come up with a better idea.

"You tell us how you're going to pay for college scholarships. You tell us how you're going to put state of the art computers inside every school in this state," he said.

But now the applause has long faded. Today, Siegelman is at a federal prison camp in Louisiana. He's doing seven years. The main charge against him was that he took a bribe, giving a position on a state board to businessman Richard Scrushy, who had made a big donation to that lottery campaign. There was a star witness, Nick Bailey, a Siegelman aide who had a vivid story to tell.

"Mr. Bailey had indicated that there had been a meeting with Governor Siegelman and Mr. Scrushy, a private meeting in the Governor's office, just the two of them," says Doug Jones, who was one of Siegelman's lawyers. "And then, as soon as Mr. Scrushy left, the governor walked out with a $250,000 check that he said Scrushy have given him for the lottery foundation."

"Had the check in his hand right then and there? " Pelley asks.

"Had the check in his hand right then," Jones says.

"That Scrushy had just handed to him, according to Bailey's testimony?" Pelley asks.

"That's right, showed it to Mr. Bailey. And Nick asked him, 'Well, what does he want for it?' And Governor Siegelman allegedly said, 'A seat on the CON Board.' Nick asked him, 'Can we do that?' And he said, 'I think so,'" Jones says.

The CON board regulates hospital construction, and Scrushy ran a healthcare company. Both Siegelman and Scrushy were convicted in federal court. 

But, as 60 Minutes found out, the imprisonment of Don Siegelman is not nearly as simple as that. 

"I haven't seen a case with this many red flags on it that pointed towards a real injustice being done," says Grant Woods, the former Republican attorney general of Arizona.

Woods is one of the 52 former state attorneys-general, of both parties, who've asked Congress to investigate the Siegelman case.

"I personally believe that what happened here is that they targeted Don Siegelman because they could not beat him fair and square. This was a Republican state and he was the one Democrat they could never get rid of," Woods says.

 

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Don Siegelman ran the most corrupt administration that the State of Alabama has ever seen.  He made George Wallace and the South AL Boys look like choirboys. 

 

Over the years, government corruption has changed from things like asphalt and road building to cleaner, harder to get caught graft like computer software and hardware.  States might pay a $ million for a tiny little study to tell them where to put their computer resources, only to never follow any of the recommendations.  The study will be quickly sent to file 13.  Warehouses of computers and servers (and software) that a state will pay too much for on top bid will never even be used.

 

The thing about Siegelman's administration is that his hinchmen were outwardly visible--and very bold collectors.  If you did business with this state in Siegelman's time, you can bet they collected their kickbacks.  Don't let anyone tell you anything different about his time. 

 

This and every state deserves better.  The Feds knew what Siegelman was up to, but they ended up indicting him and convicting him on lesser charges just to get him off the streets.  Had he not been so arrogant to think he could beat those charges, he'd been a free man quite sometime ago.

http://www.experienceproject.c...on-Siegelman/3004587

I Support Don Siegelman
A Popular Democrat Was Railroaded By Karl Rove.
Don Siegelman is the former-governor of Alabama, a Republican state, who was railroaded by Karl Rove, and a couple of friends of Jack Abramoff, the former lobbyist who pleaded guilty to "Conspiracy, Fraud and Tax Evasion" in 2006.

Add an incompetent trial judge and a corrupt D.A. and you have a "frame up" , pure and simple.

The frame-up of Gov. Siegelman and businessman Richard Scrushy is so crystal clear and blatant, that 52 former state Attorneys-General from across America,
both Republican and Democratic, have urged the U.S. Congress to investigate
the Bush Administration's use of the Department of Justice to rid themselves of a Democratic governor who they could not beat fair and square, according to Grant Woods,
former Republican Attorney General of Arizona.

Woods says that he has never seen a case with so many red flags pointing to injustice.

Don Siegelman's daughter, Dana Siegelman, has a petition to President Obama
to pardon her father:

To sign the petition and more information, go to:

www.donsiegelman.org

I've long wondered about the possibility that a man who I met in 1999 or 2000 had some part in Siegelman's woes. The man who I met and I engaged in conversation about local school systems while we waited for a conference to begin. This fellow had recently moved back from Montgomery to a rural county here in NW Alabama and he was not all that thrilled about the area's school systems. It seems that this fellow took what he called a very early retirement from a procurement department for a state agency and he moved back to his old stompin' grounds. The reason he gave was that he was getting grief and threats from his boss and he didn't want to be in the prison cell next to the Siegelman appointee who wanted him to play along. I don't know that this fellow was telling the truth, but then again, I saw no proof that he was lying. I still wonder if that fellow made a retaliatory phone call that got things going.

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