Linda Sanchez

March 11, 2008 - 11:44am

Ashcroft in heated exchange with Sanchez

John Ashcroft displays copies of The Record to defend Chris Christie's corruption-busting record: Getty Images PhotoJohn Ashcroft displays copies of The Record to defend Chris Christie's corruption-busting record: Getty Images Photo
WASHINGTON -- In a combative exchange with Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA), former Attorney General John Ashcroft jumped to U.S. Attorney Chris Christie’s defense.

After Sanchez asked whether the selection process complied with the type of guidelines the Justice Department laid out yesterday, Ashcroft said that she was implying that Christie was a “law violator.”

“I really don’t believe that Mr. Christie is a law violator. His record as a prosecutor is an outstanding record,” Ashcroft said.

Ashcroft then held up two copies of Bergen Record headlines about Christie’s public corruption convictions and insinuated that there were partisan motivations behind today’s hearing.

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March 11, 2008 - 11:29am

Ashcroft talks tough to critics

U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie with U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft at a Justice Department news conference in 2003U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie with U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft at a Justice Department news conference in 2003
WASHINGTON - Testifying at today, former Attorney General John Ashcroft mainly explained why he’s qualified to be a federal monitor, but had some combative words for his critics.

Ashcroft compared the type of criticism he’s faced for being assigned a lucrative federal monitor contract by U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie to the political attacks he faced during his term as Attorney General. He did not single out any of his critics by name.

“As you may or may not recall there were many people who attacked me in the way that I chose to defend America from terrorists. Those assaults did not shake my commitment to protecting American lives from terrorism attacks,” he said. “Similarly, a monitor should be immune to pressure and should not allow attacks from whatever sources that contaminate the cause of justice. I will not allow external pressures to compromise my responsibilities as a monitor.”

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March 11, 2008 - 11:02am

House Dems not satisfied with Justice Dept. reforms

WASHINGTON -- If the Justice Department hoped to allay Democrats’ concerns about deferred prosecution agreements by changing their guidelines yesterday, they weren’t successful.

At hearings today that were first for called by Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ), Democrats said they weren’t satisfied with the proposed rule changes that would take some power out of the hands of U.S. Attorneys in deciding who gets assigned monitoring contracts.

Pascrell called for hearings after it was reported that U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie gave an oversight contract to former Attorney General John Ashcroft worth $28-52 million.

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March 4, 2008 - 1:55pm

Ashcroft to appear before Congressional subcommittee next Tuesday

Former Attorney General John Ashcroft will testify at a Congressional hearing on Tuesday, March 11, regarding a multi-million dollar federal monitoring contract he received after he left the Bush Administration.

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March 11, 2008 - 5:37pm

Pallone and Pascrell unsatisfied with hearings, still want Christie to testify

WASHINGTON -- New Jersey Reps. Frank Pallone and Bill Pascrell say they aren’t satisfied by today’s Congressional hearings on deferred prosecution agreements.

The two Democrats hope to investigate the matter further and will continue to push the committee, on which they do not sit, to get U.S. Attorney Chris Christie to testify.

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March 11, 2008 - 5:17pm

Ashcroft hearing: The man who wasn’t there

WASHINGTON -- United States Attorney Christopher Christie didn’t attend today’s Congressional hearing, but his presence loomed over the proceedings.

The hearing of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law was broken up into two panels: the first consisted of former Attorney General John Ashcroft, U.S. Attorney David Nahmias, University of Virginia Law Professor Brandon Garrett and attorneys Timothy Dickinson and George Terwilliger III. The second panel consisted of New Jersey Democrats Bill Pascrell and Frank Pallone.

Republican members of the committee stressed that deferred prosecution agreements were vital to keeping companies that employ thousands solvent, and noted that monitors were not paid with taxpayer dollars. Democrats questioned whether corporations were getting a separate form of justice from blue collar criminals.

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February 25, 2008 - 6:47pm

House set to authorize Ashcroft subpoena, but not Christie

U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie with U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft at a Justice Department news conference in 2003U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie with U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft at a Justice Department news conference in 2003
When the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law meets tomorrow, it will likely authorize committee chairman John Conyers to subpoena former Attorney General John Ashcroft regarding the federal oversight contract he received to monitor a medical implant company.

But not on the agenda tomorrow is whether to subpoena U.S. Attorney Chris Christie, who gave Ashcroft, his former boss, the contract. Ashcroft stands to make anywhere from $27 to $52 million overseeing the company, which agreed in a deferred prosecution agreement to accept oversight rather than face prosecution.

“I don’t think it would be correct to say it hasn’t been considered. It just hasn’t been done,” said Michael Torra, Chief of Staff to Subcommittee Chairwoman Linda Sanchez (D-CA). “Of course it’s a different situation between considering someone who’s now a private citizen versus a sitting federal prosecutor.”

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