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Cheney's Indictment in South Texas Moves Forward

by: Christopher Sherman  |  Visit article original @ The Associated Press

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An arraignment has been set for Friday for both Vice President Dick Cheney (above) and Alberto Gonzales. (Photo: Evan Vucci / AP)

    Raymondville, Texas - A Texas judge has set a Friday arraignment for Vice President Dick Cheney, former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, a state senator and others named in indictments accusing them of responsibility for prisoner abuse in a South Texas federal detention center.

    Presiding Judge Manuel Banales said Wednesday he will allow them to waive arraignment or have their attorneys present rather than appear in person at the hearing.

    Banales also said he would issue summonses rather than warrants for the indicted since all have served in some public capacity. That would allow them to avoid arrest and the need to post bond.

    After the prosecutor who won the indictments, lame duck Willacy County District Attorney Juan Angel Guerra, was a no-show in court, Banales ordered Texas Rangers to go to his house, check on his well-being and order him to court on Friday.

    That was only the latest development in a situation that has lawyers from Texas to Washington, D.C., scratching their heads.

    Half of the eight high-profile indictments returned Monday by a Willacy County grand jury are tied to privately-run federal detention centers in the sparsely populated South Texas county and the other half target judges and special prosecutors who played a role in an earlier investigation of Guerra.

    "The state of Texas is not present, which is a rarity," Banales said Wednesday. "I will not have a hearing when one of the parties is not present."

    Tony Canales, an attorney speaking on behalf of attorneys for Cheney and Gonzales and representing private prison operator The GEO Group, subpoenaed Guerra's office manager to stand in for her boss.

    Banales questioned Hilda Ramirez about her boss' whereabouts, but got nowhere.

    "I have been calling Mr. Guerra all day. I have not had him answer," Ramirez told the judge. "I don't know what to do."

    If Guerra does not appear Friday, Banales said he would likely appoint a temporary replacement.

    The chance for further delay frustrated a courtroom packed with attorneys. Even though Banales said he would not hear their motions until Friday, they argued the indictments were improperly handled and the product of a vindictive prosecutor. All of the defendants had filed motions to dismiss indictments. They complained that Guerra had time to talk to the media about the indictments Tuesday, but did not show up for court Wednesday.

    David Oliveira, Canales' partner, said after the hearing, "the news media told him there was a hearing today and he ran." Canales asked Banales to consider holding Guerra in contempt. Canales said if Guerra shows up Friday, he will put him on the stand.

    The highest-profile indictment charges Cheney and Gonzales with engaging in organized criminal activity. It alleges that the men neglected federal prisoners and are responsible for assaults in the facilities.

    The grand jury traced a sketchy line between Cheney's influence over the U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agency, which oversees the county's federal immigrant detention center, and his substantial holdings in the Vanguard Group, which invests in private prison companies.

    Combining those interests, the grand jury accused Cheney of a conflict of interest because the more the prison companies were paid to hold inmates, the better he did financially.

    "It is appalling to find that numerous elected officials from different levels of our government throughout our country to our U.S. Vice President Richard B. Cheney, defendant, are profiting from depriving human beings of their liberty," the indictment said.

    The indictment accuses Gonzales of stopping an investigation into abuses at the federal detention center.

    Canales filed two motions Wednesday accusing Guerra of "prosecutorial vindictiveness" and of not presenting the indictments to the trial court.

    In one motion, Canales said Guerra had hijacked "the grand jury process and disregarded the requirements of the Code of Criminal Procedure designed to protect defendants' due process rights."

    T. Gerald Treece, a constitutional law specialist and professor at the South Texas College of Law in Houston, questioned Guerra's jurisdiction over federal officials and federally-run buildings.

    "You can't have district attorneys across the country bringing charges against federal officials," Treece said. If there are issues at the federal detention centers, then Guerra should turn the investigation over to the federal government, he said.

    And even in a federal probe, Cheney and Gonzales have a "qualified privilege" that would protect them so long as they were acting within their jobs, Treece said.

    The attorney for state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., who was indicted on a charge of profiting from his position through his consulting work for private prison companies, said that on the chance the indictment was not dismissed he wanted to go to trial before Guerra's term ended this year. Banales set a Dec. 8 trial date, if necessary.

    "I think it shows that this has just been a game," Michael Cowen, Lucio's attorney, said of Guerra's absence after the hearing.

    At times Wednesday it did seem like a bizarre game.

    Since District Clerk Gilbert Lozano is under indictment, Banales decided he needed to appoint a temporary replacement to handle the cases. He asked Lozano for a recommendation, but Lozano said his top deputy is a witness and his next choice was out of town. Banales instead turned to his left and gave the job to a clerk from the 197th district, whose boss District Judge Migdalia Lopez is also under indictment.

    Some attorneys argued that Banales may not even have the authority to schedule an arraignment because the indictments before him were invalid. One lawyer said Guerra never should have been allowed to present the cases to the grand jury because at least four of the indictments deal with people who h

    "He is the witness, the victim and the prosecutor," said the attorney for Mervyn Mosbacker Jr., a former U.S. attorney who was appointed special prosecutor to investigate Guerra.

    Lozano, the county clerk, District judges Janet Leal and Lopez, and special prosecutors Mosbacker and Gustavo Garza, a longtime political opponent of Guerra, were all indicted on charges of official abuse of official capacity and official oppression.

    The grand jury tied all of their charges to an earlier investigation of Guerra's office.

    Banales dismissed an indictment against Guerra last month charging him with extorting money from a bail bond company and using his office for personal business. An appeals court had earlier ruled that Garza was improperly appointed as special prosecutor to investigate Guerra.

    After Guerra's office was raided as part of the investigation early last year, he camped outside the courthouse in a borrowed camper with a horse, three goats and a rooster. He threatened to dismiss hundreds of cases because he believed local law enforcement had aided the investigation against him.

    Guerra has been in office nearly 20 years, but was defeated for re-election in the March Democratic primary.

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Comments

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Wow! Their going to pull

Wow! Their going to pull Dick and Gonzales in for the small time crime when the justice system has allowed Dick to remain free with all the crimes against humanity that he and his boss, Bush and their cabal, have been conducting since they took office...it's completely ironic and devoid of humor because of the immensity of their crimes!

if we insist it is only the

if we insist it is only the beginning

Indict the 'shotgun'? Hmmm,

Indict the 'shotgun'? Hmmm, seems nice enough. Shouldn't old 'heartless Dick' be standing in the dock at the International Criminal Court at the Hague? Well one could suppose that Bushco et all should be standing in the dock but, we should probably be satisfied with what we can get. Justice? Yup, just about the time that pigs sprout wings and take to flying holding patterns over downtown old Jerusalem.

At the very least, this will

At the very least, this will bring the issue through the field of vision of the many Americans who have willfully ignored the criminality of the illegitimate 'administration.' And it is clear that the unconscionable torture mandate started at the top and was not the product of a few bad apples on the ground.

After living in Texas for

After living in Texas for five years I can say I'm not surprised by anything in this story - including the horse, the rooster, the borrowed camper, the three goats, and the fact that everybody in this story seems to be indicted for something. If anybody goes to jail, it will probably be the AP reporter - for slandering the good citizens of Willacy County. Remember the Alamo!

Cheney and Gonzales will get

Cheney and Gonzales will get off scott free. This is the way it works in America, if you are rich and well connected, the law can be bought off. Better yet, you might even own the law. Might as well not even try to bring these despicable criminals to justice, it's a waste of time. They have already ravaged the country, the constitution, the justice department, a million deaths on their hands, they are the face of the torturers who will see no justice. America will not face up to it's responsibility for equal justice under the law, will not absorb the criminal actions of the past and is no longer America as we knew it. I'll give Obama 6 months after taking office to prove we are a nation of laws, but he has already said there will be no recriminations for the torturers and I am unhappy about that. It tortured our nation's soul and it has forever tarnished our image and criminals must be brought to justice or there is no justice.

I'm interested in obtaining

I'm interested in obtaining a copy of the indictment to post on a website. Does anyone know if it's public, know where to get a copy, or have a copy?

WOW THIS IS INCREDIBLE! Go

WOW THIS IS INCREDIBLE! Go daddy-O! Drag them all to PRISON where they belong!!! Wahoooo!

This is exactly what's wrong

This is exactly what's wrong with America... there is no more equal treatment under the law! People in power - or with money - just don't have to live by the same rules that the rest of us do... and it gets more and more blatant every day. You try ignoring an arraignment hearing and see what happens to you. What a disgusting, low-life government and justice system we've ended up with!! FiltyPigs...all of them!

The Rule of Law says that

The Rule of Law says that everyone is equal under the law. The American people are to blame for allowing a dictator and band of thugs to take over their country and replace the Rule of Law with the Rule of Men.

Cheney should be sent to one

Cheney should be sent to one of his own prisons. Remember when he attempted to murder the TX democrat legislator and pretend it was a "hunting accident"?

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