U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller |
That tip pretty much came true late today as Fuller announced that he will resign his lifetime appointment in the Middle District of Alabama, effective August 1. The resignation will take effect almost one year after Fuller was arrested on charges of beating his wife in an Atlanta hotel room last August.
Here is what our source wrote in an e-mail at 8:48 a.m. on May 21:
I suspect from rumblings I am hearing that now that the Siegelman case is off their plate that they are going to be letting Fuller go.
The source's words proved to be prescient, but they also raise at least two glaring questions:
* Was the resignation Fuller's idea or did the judicial and political establishment, under fire from groups that take violence against women seriously, force him out?
* Just how connected is the resignation to the Eleventh Circuit's May 20 ruling that denied Siegelman's most recent appeal? After all, Fuller was the trial judge in the Siegelman case, and his actions have been widely criticized by an array of legal experts.
The answer to the first question, in my view, clearly is yes. It's likely that powerful individuals in the judiciary and Congress informed Fuller that he was heading for impeachment--and that could lead to revelations about ugliness in his past that, so far, has been kept under wraps. That could prove embarrassing to high-profile GOP politicos, such as U.S. Senators Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions, who supported Fuller's appointment, It also could prove embarrassing to those in the George W. Bush administration who pushed to get Fuller on the bench.
The second question is much more intriguing--and more difficult to answer. Our source's words could mean several things:
(1) The Eleventh Circuit, as a scheduling matter, simply wanted to get the Siegelman ruling out the way before focusing on the Fuller issue. The two were connected only in terms of timing;
(2) The Eleventh Circuit, and perhaps unknown political figures, came to an agreement to force Fuller out in exchange for upholding the Siegelman conviction;
(3) Option No. 2 was important because corruption connected to the Siegelman prosecution is so ugly that public confidence in the judicial system would be destroyed if it ever came to light;
(4) The best way to keep that unsightly story under wraps was to get rid of Fuller and keep Siegelman in prison, even though the record shows the former governor and codefendant Richard Scrushy were convicted of a "crime" that does not exist under federal law.
I suspect that some combination of items 2, 3, and 4 is in play, and that should sicken any American who gives a hoot about justice. It hints that an innocent man--one that powerful figures know is innocent--is being kept behind bars as part of a cover up. It hints that Siegelman's most recent appeal was not decided on the merits but on what certain individuals saw as the politically expedient path. Most troubling of all, it hints at obstruction of justice, of shadowy figures acting behind the scenes to rig an appellate ruling--and that points to possible criminality.
Getting Mark Fuller off the federal bench is a step in the right direction. But the story is far from over; we see signs that the corruption he helped spawn is far from over.
Great insight Roger
ReplyDeleteYou really should take a bow, LS. Without your reporting on this blog, I think Mark Fuller weathers this storm. Scott Horton is another who deserves a lot of credit, but no one has been on the Fuller story longer, with more consistency and accuracy, than the Schnauzer.
ReplyDeleteBravo!
Thanks for the kind words, @10:44. Without question, the Fuller story was driven by the Web press--mainstream journalists certainly did not do it. Our most important role might have been in reporting on Fuller's 2012 divorce, with signs of drug and alcohol abuse and previous domestic violence. Those earlier accounts showed that this was a pattern of behavior, not a one-off incident, and I suspect that made it much harder for Fuller to get off the hook. The earlier issues, I think, were a major factor in the mainstream press finally taking notice of the story--and in all of the calls for Fuller's resignation.
ReplyDelete"Above the Law" is the most widely read law blog in the country, and it's reporting on Fuller drew heavily on our work about the 2012 divorce. If my memory is correct, we were the site that broke the story and revealed the documents related to the divorce. Journalists are only as good as their sources, and we've had good ones--on this story and many others.
Here is a link to an "Above the Law" article, and it's second page includes divorce documents that originated at Legal Schnauzer:
http://abovethelaw.com/2014/08/federal-judge-accused-of-beating-his-wife-allegedly-has-sleazy-history-with-women/?fb_action_ids=10204308970746561&fb_action_types=og.likes
Looks like you were right about Fuller all along.
ReplyDeleteThe Schnauzer has been right about a lot of things, @2:33. Fuller does not go down without the reporting on this blog. Other non-traditional reporters made big contributions, but this blog was out front longer than anyone. The mainstream press came in at the very end and cleaned up a few scraps. Fuller's still on the bench if this story had been left to the MSM.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.politicususa.com/2015/05/29/trolling-pres-clinton-sex-dennis-hasterts-sex-scandal-worse.html
ReplyDeletetrickle down sickos
Sometimes it's not a knowing decision at all. Sometimes it's the Jedi mind trick. Jedi knights & Sith Lords can use The Force to remote view and sense that which cannot be perceived by the five ordinary senses. If The Force is strong with a Jedi Knight, he may plant suggestions in a remotely viewed subjects' mind & even remotely control his behavior.
ReplyDelete