December 22, 2009 3:35 PM

Killer's Release Puts Romney On Defense

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  This story was written by CBSNews.com political reporter Brian Montopoli.


In June, Daniel Tavares Jr., who was nearing the end of a 16-year prison sentence for killing his mother, was set to go free.

But Massachusetts prosecutors charged that Tavares had assaulted a pair of corrections officers more than a year before, and they asked a judge to hold him on $50,000 bail - effectively keeping Tavares behind bars. A district court judge agreed, but Superior Court Judge Kathe M. Tuttman overturned that decision and released Tavares on his own recognizance in July.

Now Tavares has been arrested for killing a young couple in Washington State. And Tuttman, the judge who released Tavares, finds herself at the center of a growing battle between leading Republican presidential candidates, among them the man who appointed her: Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

"The governor is going to have to explain his appointment, and the judge is going to have to explain her decision, but it's not an isolated situation," former New York City mayor and presidential contender Rudy Giuliani told the Associated Press over the weekend. "Governor Romney did not have a good record in dealing with violent crime."

On Saturday, Romney called on Tuttman to resign. He told reporters that the decision to release Tavares "showed an inexplicable lack of good judgment in a hearing that decided to put someone on the street who had not only in the past been convicted of manslaughter, but had threatened the lives of other individuals and was a flight risk."

One of the "other individuals" Tavares threatened was Romney himself, in a Feb. 2006 letter intercepted by prison officials.

Former Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger, a Democrat, says Romney is "scapegoating" Tuttman.

"If you look at the evidence, you'd be hard pressed to disagree with the judge about what the appropriate disposition was," Harshbarger told CBSNews.com. "That's the basis on which people are saying, 'look, on the facts, and the law, she had no choice.' Now I suppose technically she had a choice. But by any standard of judicial review she acted appropriately."

"He's making a political calculation, and she's an easy target," adds Harshbarger. "She did what 99 percent of judges should and ought to do here as an independent member of the judiciary, and she followed the law."

The judge has not commented publicly.

Edward J. McCormick III, a longtime Boston-area criminal defense lawyer and former Republican congressional candidate, echoes that assessment, arguing that Romney is engaged in "political grandstanding."

"My understanding about Judge Tuttman - she was a prosecutor her whole life," he says. "This isn't some career defense lawyer sitting there with a ponytail testing the marijuana laws every other day. This is a woman who in most cases is at least going to appreciate the prosecutor's viewpoint."

Romney did not make crime a central part of his agenda as governor, according to Boston-area Republican political analyst Todd Domke.

"That's not really what he was known for," says Domke. "Romney had more of a businessman's traditional focus, on fiscal issues."

In the wake of Giuliani's criticism, however, the Romney campaign has gone on the offensive. The campaign yesterday released to reporters a document trumpeting Romney's "solid record fighting crime in Massachusetts," which includes statistics supporting the notion that both violent crime and overall crime rates declined when Romney was governor. Giuliani charges that there was "an increase in murder and violent crime" during that time.

In the 1988 presidential campaign, another Massachusetts politician with presidential hopes, former Gov. Michael Dukakis, found out just how damaging this type of story can be. Dukakis took heavy criticism from Republican nominee George H.W. Bush over a furlough program that allowed convicted murderer "Willie" Horton to temporarily join the general population. Horton failed to return to prison from his weekend furlough and raped a woman before being recaptured. Dukakis, who went on to lose the presidential race, was lambasted for being "soft on crime."

Democratic political consultant Michael Goldman, of the Government Insight Group, says the Romney campaign is not handling the Tavares issue well. He argues that Romney should have pointed out that Tuttman was a prosecutor with a "great record" instead of throwing someone whom he had appointed "under the bus."

"The greatest skill of smart politicians is limiting the story so it doesn't have legs," he says. "Not only did they give the story legs, they basically gave it an engine and propelled it."
By Brian Montopoli

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 38 Comments
by claussanta November 28, 2007 11:45 AM EST
Up and running at:
www.ourtownreport.com
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by adian1-2009 November 28, 2007 9:31 AM EST
Giuliani, if you are going to evaluate a person from an objective ethical perspective, is just not the right candidate for anything but to benefit himself, either in terms of power or in terms of money. Romney is nothing to be proud of and is not far from Giuliani in terms of human stature. Both are birds of the same flock, so to speak. That said, it must be seen that this issue that Giuliani is trying to use against Romney, is pure demagoguery, and in that field nobody beats Giuliani. How in the world was Romney going to anticipate that a judge appointed by him, a number of years after having been in her position, would release a man, all of it in the excercise of her discretion as allowed by law, and that such a guy would kill two other people? In fact, how do we know that that lady judge acted irresponsibly or awkwardly or wrong? Probably she took into consideration a set of facts, using her abilities to the best, and released the man under his own cognizance. Anyways, if the guy had had friends, he coud have posted the $50K bond and gotten released. Maybe the judge concluded that such a bail would be impossible for a convicted inmate to be able to find. So, she used her discretion. So, stop the damagoguery, please! And for Romney to ask for her resignation is simply ridiculous and not so manly!
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by b-easy63 November 28, 2007 8:03 AM EST
CBS (CORRUPT BROADCASTING STATION) You and your staff of corrupt liberal journalists are a disgrace to this great nation. What a sad day for America.

Posted by perception5 at 11:14 AM : Nov 27, 2007

Okay, CBS reports on what a Republican says about another Republican and you blame liberals. Face it, the GOP is eating their own. Own up to your own bs and stop blaming the liberals--everything laid at the Republican doorstep when it comes to failures and corruption, lies and bad wars--is just birds coming home to roost. Blaming somebody else for stating what occurs is pathetic. Get your head out of your arse and grow a pair. Pull up those big girl or big boy pants and take responsibility. The GOP sucks right now--the world knows it--heck! even the GOP knows it, that is why so many are retiring rather than get a guaranteed referendum in the form of the public kicking them in their political arrrrses. Putz.
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by b-easy63 November 28, 2007 7:59 AM EST
"Governor Romney did not have a good record in dealing with violent crime."


Actually, Rudy didn''t either. When you dig beneath the facade of less crime, you find manipulated stats and a Mayor possibly neck deep in bed with the mob, as well as holding hands with corrupt mafia tied henchmen (like the commish). No halos there, and no great crime fighters either. What Rudy is good at is positioning himself. Taking credit for a fall in crime that was partially due to a national trend and partially due to the removal of crime from one area to another...then there was that great opportunity of standing on a pile of 9/11 rubble, speaking through a bullhorn while ignoring the first responders. CLASSIC
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by dlounsbury1 November 28, 2007 4:11 AM EST
"KEVIN BACON RESPONSIBLE FOR COUPLE''S MURDER"

Boston,MA, Courtesty of the Boston Hairold

BPI-For immediate Release

Sources inside the police investigation of Daniel Tavares reveals that Kevin Bacon played a major role in the murder of a young Washington couple.

Kevin Bacon has a cousin named Florence Williams whom he encouraged to go to gradudate school.

Florence Williams got a job working for a Massachussets state senator

Florence was instrumental in scheduling meetings between her boss and Governor Mitt Romney

Florence''s boss suggested a Kathleen Tuttle as a judicial nominee in one of their meetings

Romney appoints Tuttle

Tuttle released Tavares without bail.

It is all Kevin Bacon''s fault.

Florence Williams dropped Kevin Bacon''s name in an interview for a job to be secretary to a driver
Reply to this comment
by dlounsbury1 November 28, 2007 4:02 AM EST
The press excoriated Romney for three days likening this event to Dukakis'' Willie Horton.

It didn''t die down with the Boston Herald (who openly hates Romney for getting elected in their blue state) so Romney pushed back.

Then the press excoriates Romney for calling on the judge to resign. "Throwing her under the bus." Classic mainstream media.

I am voting for the candidate who the press attacks the most and who the Democratic National Committee attacks the most--that man is Mitt Romney. They have him scared. He has no skeletons in the closet. The fact that they are linking the decision of a murderer enabled by the decision of an INDEPENDENT (remember that whole pesky separation of powers thing you learned about in 7th grade?) Judge he appointed shows their desperation. We might as well use their six degrees of separation to blame Kevin Bacon for the murder.
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by dkaw1 November 28, 2007 1:43 AM EST
The only story here is that this murderer needs a lethal injection.
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by denn034 November 27, 2007 11:56 PM EST
Romney called upon that judge to resign so, that''s the end of it as far as I''m concerned. It somehow seems unfair to blame Romney for every wrong decision an appointee makes.
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by vestprophet November 27, 2007 11:41 PM EST
HOPE FOR AMERICA: NO PRESIDENT RON PAUL

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They don''''t call him "Dr. Not that hole" for no reason. The Doctor is in, girls!

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- Thumbass Pain

"Ron Paul doesn''''t represent your Daddy%u2019s school of sexual thought. He represents your Founding Fathers Attitude about Beastiality."
- Me, WestProphet
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by valendug November 27, 2007 11:05 PM EST
I''ll vote for Jewliani if he''s got his pink panties and high heels on.
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