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Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin listens as her running mate Republican Sen. John McCain speaks during a rally at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Penn., Thursday. A new report issued Friday by the the chief investigator of an Alaska legislative panel concluded that Sarah Palin unlawfully abused her power as governor by trying to have her former brother-in-law fired as a state trooper.
JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
Sarah Palin unlawfully abused her power
as governor by trying to have her former brother-in-law fired as a
state trooper, the chief investigator of an Alaska legislative
panel concluded Friday. The politically charged inquiry imperiled
her reputation as a reformer on John McCain's Republican ticket.
Investigator Stephen Branchflower, in a report to a bipartisan
panel that looked into the matter, found Palin in violation of a
state ethics law that prohibits public officials from using their
office for personal gain.
The inquiry looked into her dismissal of Public Safety
Commissioner Walter Monegan, who said he lost his job because he
resisted pressure to fire a state trooper involved in a bitter
divorce and custody battle with the governor's sister. Palin says
Monegan was fired as part of a legitimate budget dispute.
Monegan's firing was lawful, the report found, but Palin let the
family grudge influence her decision-making - even if it was not
the sole reason Monegan was dismissed.
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"I feel vindicated," Monegan said. "It sounds like they've
validated my belief and opinions. And that tells me I'm not totally
out in left field."
Branchflower said Palin violated a statute of the Alaska
Executive Branch Ethics Act. Lawmakers don't have the authority to
sanction her for such a violation, and they gave no indication they
would take any action against her.
Under Alaska law, it is up to the state's Personnel Board -
which is conducting its own investigation into the matter - to
decide whether Palin violated state law and, if so, must refer it
to the Senate president for disciplinary action. Violations also
carry a possible fine of up to $5,000.
Palin attorney Thomas Van Flein disagreed with Branchflower's
conclusions. "In order to violate the ethics law, there has to be
some personal gain, usually financial. Mr. Branchflower has failed
to identify any financial gain," he said.
Palin and McCain's supporters had hoped the inquiry's finding
would be delayed until after the presidential election to spare her
any embarrassment and to put aside an enduring distraction as she
campaigns as McCain's running mate in an uphill contest against
Democrat Barack Obama.
After a court fight to block the report failed, the panel of
lawmakers voted to release it - though not without dissension. The
panel did not vote on whether to endorse its findings.
"I think there are some problems in this report," said
Republican state Sen. Gary Stevens, a member of the panel. "I
would encourage people to be very cautious, to look at this with a
jaundiced eye."
The report was made public the same day an Anchorage judge
issued a temporary restraining order forcing the state of Alaska to
preserve any government-related e-mails that Palin and top aides
sent from private accounts in what critics contend was an effort to
conceal that they were doing political business while working at
state government jobs.
The state paid Branchflower, a retired state prosecutor,
$100,000 to prepare the nearly 300-page report. He interviewed or
accepted affidavits from about two dozen people in the eight-week
investigation.
"Legislative Council seriously overreached, making a tortured
argument to find fault without basis in law or fact," McCain
campaign spokesman Meg Stapleton said.
The Legislature could vote next year to censure Palin, but
committee members appeared divided over the report and Democratic
state Sen. Kim Elton, the committee's chairman, gave no indication
that would happen.
Stapleton also dismissed the report as "a partisan-led inquiry
run by Obama supporters." The inquiry has been dogged by such
criticism since Democrat Hollis French, who oversaw the
investigation, predicted an "October surprise" for the McCain
campaign.
Elton rejected the accusation of partisanship.
"When we began investigating this, we had no idea that Sarah
Palin would be a part of the national ticket," said Elton, an
Obama supporter.
The report notes a few instances in which Palin pressed the case
against trooper Mike Wooten, but it was her husband, Todd, who led
the charge. Todd Palin had extraordinary access to the governor's
office and her closest advisers and he used that access to try to
get Wooten fired.
Gov. Palin knowingly "permitted Todd to use the governor's
office and the resources of the governor's office, including access
to state employees, to continue to contact subordinate state
employees in an effort to find some way to get Trooper Wooten
fired," Branchflower's report reads.
Wooten had been in hot water before Palin became governor over
allegations that he illegally shot a moose, drank beer in a patrol
car and used a Taser on his stepson. The Palins said they feared
for their family's safety after Wooten made threats against them.
In proceedings revealed by the report, former Alaska State
Trooper Col. Julia Grimes told investigators that Sarah Palin
called her in late 2005 to discuss why Wooten hadn't been fired,
and Grimes told her the inquiry was confidential by law.
"Her questions were how can a trooper who behaves this way
still be working," Grimes said. "I asked her to please trust me,
that because I can't tell her details I would ask her to please
trust me that I would take the appropriate action if and when I
knew what the findings were. ... I couldn't have another
conversation with her about it because, again, it's protected by
law."
Grimes said Todd Palin also contacted her by telephone in late
2005 to discuss the confidential investigation of Wooten.
Wooten's disciplinary case was settled in September 2006 -
months before Palin was elected governor - and he was allowed to
continue working as a trooper.
After Palin's election, her new public safety commissioner,
Monegan, said he was summoned to the governor's office to meet Todd
Palin, who said Wooten's punishment had been merely a "slap on the
wrist." Monegan said he understood the Palins wanted Wooten fired.
"I had this kind of ominous feeling that I may not be long for
this job if I didn't somehow respond accordingly," Monegan told
the investigator.
For months afterward, Todd Palin filed complaints about Wooten,
saying he was seen riding a snowmobile after he had filed a
worker's compensation claim and was seen dropping off his children
at school in his patrol car.
Monegan said Wooten's doctor had authorized the snowmobile trip
and his supervisor had approved his use of the patrol car. Monegan
said Alaska's attorney general later called him to inquire about
Wooten, and Monegan told him they shouldn't be discussing the
subject.
"This was an issue that apparently wasn't going to go away,
that there were certainly frustrations," Monegan said. "To say
that (Sarah Palin) was focused on this I think would be accurate."
Gallery
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Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin listens as her running mate Republican Sen. John McCain speaks during a rally at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Penn., Thursday. A new report issued Friday by the the chief investigator of an Alaska legislative panel concluded that Sarah Palin unlawfully abused her power as governor by trying to have her former brother-in-law fired as a state trooper.
JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
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