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Archive for November, 2008

Waiting to vote

November
4

It was odd to see lines at the polls here in New York today.

The outcome is usually so forgone that people stay home.

At a school near my home early this morning the line stretched down the street. It was gone by the time I voted later in the morning and I was almost disappointed.

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I used to look at photos of determined first-time voters in countries holding their first elections and envy them their excitement.

But even without the lines, people were excited.

The campaigns went on so long that sometimes it was easy to forget how historic this election is.

PHOTO: Voters in Mount Vernon line up at the polls at the Doles Community Center today. (Ricky Flores / The Journal News)

Posted by Noreen O'Donnell on Tuesday, November 4th, 2008 at 9:56 pm | del.icio.us Digg
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Palin cleared in second investigation

November
3

A second report from Alaska clears Sarah Palin of violating the state’s ethics code when she she fired her public safety commissioner.
The decision from the independent investigator, Timothy Petumeos, conflicts with a separate legislative investigation. The Associated Press has more.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Gov. Sarah Palin violated no ethics laws when she fired her public safety commissioner, the state personnel board concluded in a report released Monday. “There is no probable cause to believe that the governor, or any other state official, violated the Alaska Executive Ethics Act in connection with these matters,” the report says.

“Gov. Palin is pleased that the independent investigator for the Personnel Board has concluded that she acted properly in the reassignment of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan,” her attorney, Thomas Van Flein, said in a statement.

An earlier, separate investigation by the Legislature found that Palin had abused her office.

Monegan said he felt pressure from Palin, her husband and her staff to fire a state trooper who had gone through a nasty divorce from Palin’s sister. Palin denied the claim, and said Monegan was fired last July because she wanted the department to head in a new direction.

Monegan told The Associated Press on Monday that he was “perplexed and disappointed” by the report. It was prepared by Timothy Petumenos, an independent investigator for the Alaska Personnel Board.

“It conflicts with the first investigation and then casts doubts on both of them. So, it doesn’t really resolve anything,” he said. “If it did, then I could walk away. It does seem to fly in the face if circumstantial evidence.”

A separate legislative investigation recently concluded that Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee, abused her office by allowing her husband and staffers to pressure Monegan to fire the trooper. However, it upheld the firing because Monegan was an at-will employee.

Alaska Personnel Board investigations are normally secret, but the three-member board decided to release this report, citing public interest in the matter given Palin’s status as a candidate for national office. Election Day is Tuesday.

Palin had earlier waived her privacy rights, but others in her administration did not and Petumenos sought to keep the matter from playing out in the media.

Documents released Monday did not include transcripts of separate depositions given by Palin and her husband, Todd.

That deposition was the only one given by Sarah Palin. She was not subpoenaed to answer questions in the Legislature’s investigation, though her husband, Todd, gave an affidavit in that probe.

Petumenos said that during her deposition given under oath, Sarah Palin denied Monegan’s claim — also given under oath — that she had two conversations with him about the trooper.

“Both of those conversations were denied in their entirety by the governor,” Petumenos said.

Palin initially said she would cooperate with the Legislature’s probe. But after she became John McCain’s running mate, she said the investigation had become too partisan and filed an ethics grievance against herself with the personnel board.

Telephone messages left with state Sens. Hollis French, who led the legislative investigation, and Sen. Kim Elton, chairman of the Legislative Council, were not immediately returned.

Posted by Noreen O'Donnell on Monday, November 3rd, 2008 at 11:39 pm | del.icio.us Digg
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About the author
Noreen O'DonnellNoreen O'Donnell For the last 20 years, Noreen O'Donnell has written about Hillary Clinton's run for the Senate, rebuilding Ground Zero, the Korean immigrants who travel north each day from Queens to work in nail salons, deadly runaway fire trucks and other stories in Westchester and Putnam counties. Now she's a columnist.



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