Texas County Indicts Cheney, Gonzales
Charges Against Vice President Relate To Investment In Private Prison Companies
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Vice President Cheney's spokesman declined to comment on the indictment in a South Texas county. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
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The indictment returned Monday has not yet been signed by the presiding judge, and no action can be taken until that happens.
The seven indictments made public in Willacy County on Tuesday included one naming state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. and some targeting public officials connected to District Attorney Juan Angel Guerra's own legal battles.
Regarding the indictments targeting the public officials, Guerra said, "the grand jury is the one that made those decisions, not me."
Guerra himself was under indictment for more than a year and half until a judge dismissed the indictments last month. Guerra's tenure ends this year after nearly two decades in office. He lost convincingly in a Democratic primary in March.
Guerra said the prison-related charges against Cheney and Gonzales are a national issue and experts from across the country testified to the grand jury.
Cheney is charged with engaging in an organized criminal activity related to the vice president's investment in the Vanguard Group, which holds financial interests in the private prison companies running the federal detention centers. It accuses Cheney of a conflict of interest and "at least misdemeanor assaults" on detainees because of his link to the prison companies.
Megan Mitchell, a spokeswoman for Cheney, declined to comment on Tuesday, saying that the vice president had not yet received a copy of the indictment.
The indictment accuses Gonzales of using his position while in office to stop an investigation in 2006 into abuses at one of the privately-run prisons.
Gonzales' attorney, George Terwilliger III, said in a written statement, "This is obviously a bogus charge on its face, as any good prosecutor can recognize." He said he hoped Texas authorities would take steps to stop "this abuse of the criminal justice system."
Another indictment released Tuesday accuses Lucio of profiting from his public office by accepting honoraria from prison management companies. Guerra announced his intention to investigate Lucio's prison consulting early last year.
Lucio's attorney, Michael Cowen, released a scathing statement accusing Guerra of settling political scores in his final weeks in office.
"Senator Lucio is completely innocent and has done nothing wrong," Cowen said, adding that he would file a motion to quash the indictment this week.
Willacy County has become a prison hub with county, state and federal lockups. Guerra has gone after the prison-politician nexus before, extracting guilty pleas from three former Willacy and Webb county commissioners after investigating bribery related to federal prison contacts.
Last month, a Willacy County grand jury indicted The GEO Group, a Florida private prison company, on a murder charge in the death of a prisoner days before his release. The three-count indictment alleged The GEO Group allowed other inmates to beat Gregorio de la Rosa Jr. to death with padlocks stuffed into socks. The death happened in 2001 at the Raymondville facility.
In 2006, a jury ordered the company to pay de la Rosa's family $47.5 million in a civil judgment. The Cheney-Gonzales indictment makes reference to the de la Rosa case.
None of the indictments released Tuesday had been signed by Presiding Judge Manuel Banales of the Fifth Administrative Judicial Region.
Last month, Banales dismissed indictments that charged Guerra with extorting money from a bail bond company and using his office for personal business. An appeals court had earlier ruled that a special prosecutor was improperly appointed 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.
The indictments were first reported by KRGV-TV.
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But Dubai doesn''t extradite criminals. He may get off scott free.
JFK didn''''t get out of Texas fast enough....
I suggest all Dumboturds should take a lesson and get out as fast as possible.
Posted by Obama_Dkhed
You know, I''ve been reading the reantings of this closet racist for a while now and I have just two words for them
Bite me.
Texas is dealing wiht these Unamerican GOP Incompetent
war criminals at the grass roots level.....
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Posted by Strangeworld at 11:05 AM : Nov 19, 2008
I think you''re on to something here. Maybe have work camps or prison farms for the less violent, so they can actually pay for their incarcarations. There is no way the tax payers should be shouldering the burden for non-violent offenders.
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Posted by honestabe8 at 11:18 AM : Nov 19, 2008
+ report
I agree with you; some should be returned to society and placed on a leash for awhile.
Too bad not the opening indictment by a Federal Grand Jury regarding his and Bush''s last eight miserable Republican years.
It is expected that nothing will come of the indictments against both criminals, as it is expected that the Great Emperor Bush II will issue executive pardons for absolutely ANYTHING either crook has done from the beginning of the world to the end of time, but it does show that many out there KNOW WHO THE CRIMINALS REALLY ARE!
When, I wonder, will it be the Great Emperor Bush II''s turn to face some kind of JUSTICE????
SIG HEIL, THEY''LL NEVER TAKE ME ALIVE!!!, BUSH!!!!
Posted by downsteamjim at 08:05 PM : Nov 19, 2008
Can''t get him on the Neanderthal bit. He IS a Neanderthal. That sneer is because he is trying to figure out what those sounds are.
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by elewis33
November 20, 2008 6:15 PM PST
- I suspect this is not the last indictment we''ll see for both of these gentlemen.
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