Recent days have brought two major justice-related stories.
Could they be connected? Let's take a look.
First came a guilty plea from former Justice Department official
Robert Coughlin on conflict-of-interest charges connected
to disgraced Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
Then came word that Deborah Jeane Palfrey, better known as
the D.C. Madam, had apparently committed suicide at her mother's
home in Tarpon Springs, Florida.
In Legal Times splendid account of the Coughlin plea, an
e-mail exchange between two Abramoff lobbyists is cited. The
lobbyists are Kevin Ring and Padgett Wilson, and Ring is telling
Wilson about a celebration to honor Justice Department officials
who helped bring home $16 million for an Abramoff client,
the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. "Come to the
show, baby," Couglin says. Here is how Wilson responds:
"Are there any tickets left?" asked Wilson, now
director of governmental affairs for Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue.
He then submitted: "And as for those DOJ staffers, those
guys should get anything they want for the rest of the time
they are in office -- opening day tickets, Skins v. Giants,
oriental massages, hookers, whatever."
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So there you have it: One Abramoff associate indicating to
another that prostitutes are to be part of the pay off for
Justice Department officials who further the sleazy Team Abramoff
cause.
Then a few days later, we learn that Ms. Palfrey, who ran
one of the most well known high-end prostitution services
in the D.C. area, is found hanging in a shed behind her mother's
mobile home.
Does this prove that Palfrey's death was something other
than a suicide, which is the official version from Tampa-area
law enforcement? No. But could a reasonable mind take these
two events and ask, "Is this one heck of a coincidence--the
public learns that Abramoff lackies evidently were plying
Justice Department officials with hookers and then a few days
later one of the D.C. areas most renowned practitioners of
the prostitution trade is found dead?"
Time magazine was first out with a story saying Palfrey had
discussed the possibility of suicide with a writer named Dan
Moldea. "She wasn't going to jail, she told me that very
clearly," Moldea said. "She told me she would commit
suicide."
But Moldea's account does not square with Palfrey's own words.
One Web site presents audio of Palfrey saying she would not
commit suicide and that she probably would be a victim of
a murder made to look like a suicide.
The Coughlin case also brings to mind the case of former
New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned after getting
nabbed in a prostitution-related investigation. Is anyone
investigating the possibility that Team Abramoff, and their
"friendlies" in the Justice Department, violated
federal law regarding the transport of prostitutes over state
lines? That's apparently what got Spitzer into doo-doo. What
about folks in the Justice Department, the very organization
that led the Spitzer organization?
A major theme of the Bush Justice Department scandal has
to do with double standards. Actions that become federal crimes
when "committed" by a Democrat are ignored when
committed by Republicans, or people associated with GOP supporters.
Could a serious investigation into the Coughlin case and
the D.C. madam suicide unearth evidence of a particularly
noxious double standard?
Here is something else to keep in mind regarding the D.C.
madam death: Hanging is a fairly unusual form of suicide for
a woman. According to statistics at suicide.org, the two most
common methods of suicide for women, by far, are poisons (overdosing,
etc.) at 37.8 percent and firearms at 32.4 percent. Hanging,
strangulation, and suffocation are grouped together and come
in third at 19.7 percent. But if we can assume that true hanging
makes up only one-third of that group, it seems that only
a little more than 6 percent of female suicides use the method
found in the D.C. Madam case.
Note: In our first post on the Coughlin matter, we noted
that one news source had identified Coughlin as a member of
the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section and that
he had been involved in the Paul Minor prosecution in Mississippi.
A source close to the Minor case tell us that the quote that
led to that report was misunderstood. Our source says Coughlin
apparently was not part of the Public Integrity Section and
had no role in the Minor prosecution.