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The Spitzer Scandal: asking that question |
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From the nanosecond after the New York Times posted its story about Governor Eliot Spitzer’s use of high-priced prostitutes (the story has been repeatedly updated, and, to be honest, only details one interaction, though the implication seems to be that Spitzer was a regular client), tongues were wagging, keyboards were clacking, and thumbs were making whatever noise they do while texting. Everybody had the same outraged, indignant question: What in god’s name was Spitzer thinking?
Well, almost everybody. Well, at least, kind of. . . I’ll explain in a moment.
Here’s what we seem to know: On at least one occasion, New York Governor Elliot Spitzer paid to have sex with a woman who was not his wife. This woman worked for a rather expensive multinational booking service that saw four of its principle operators arrested at the end of last week. Spitzer is not named in the affidavit, but it is generally agreed that he is “Client 9â€; there are nine other unnamed clients in the affidavit. The woman that met Spitzer was contracted in New York to travel to Washington DC, where she met Spitzer in a hotel room that Spitzer procured for the encounter under the name George Fox. (George Fox, it turns out, is a real person and a friend of Spitzer’s, but Fox says he had no knowledge of this transaction.)
As of this writing, Spitzer has made a public statement of apology, though he did not specify for what. Rumors are that there is a debate among his family and close advisors over whether he has to resign. If Spitzer resigns, NY Lieutenant Governor David Patterson, a Democrat, assumes the office of Governor for the remainder of the term. New York Senate Majority Leader and Spitzer nemesis Joe Bruno, a Republican, would assume the duties of Lieutenant Governor.
Here’s what else we seem to know: This case was not begun as an investigation of a prostitution ring that then just happened to turn up the name Eliot Spitzer. This scandal (I think we can call it that—it already has a name: The Eliot Mess) began as an investigation of Spitzer:
[IRS] investigators conducting a routine examination of suspicious financial transactions reported to them by banks found several unusual movements of cash involving the governor of New York, several officials said. …
The money ended up in the bank accounts of what appeared to be shell companies, corporations that essentially had no real business.
The transactions, officials said, suggested possible financial crimes — maybe bribery, political corruption, or something inappropriate involving campaign finance. Prostitution, they said, was the furthest thing from the minds of the investigators. …
Because the focus was a high-ranking government official, prosecutors were required to seek the approval of the United States attorney general to proceed. Once they secured that permission, the investigation moved forward.
At the outset, one official said, it seemed like a bread-and-butter inquiry into political corruption, the kind of case the F.B.I. squad, known internally by the designation C14, frequently pursues.
But before long, the investigators learned that the money was being moved to pay for sex and that the transactions were being manipulated to conceal Mr. Spitzer’s connection to payments for meetings with prostitutes, the official said.
What was that suspicious financial transaction exactly? It reportedly was something called “structuring,†which, I am told, is the movement of small amounts of money (under $10,000) that appear designed to obscure the movement of larger amounts (e.g. instead of just moving, say, $10,050, you move $4,000, $2,500, and then $3,550 in some short period of time). This structuring triggered an investigation that showed money moving into a shell company. . . which triggered an investigation of Spitzer for what was believed to be graft of some sort. . . that investigation pulled back the curtain on a “prostitution ring†known as the Emperor’s Club. . . .
That revelation led to a warrant for a wiretap—several wiretaps, actually—on those running the Emperor’s Club. Stories imply that this is a federal warrant.
Those wiretaps are apparently what provide us with the transcripts that include Spitzer’s arrangement to move a woman across state lines for “immoral sex†(that’s the Mann Act talking, not me) on February 13th of this year.
Which brings us to our first problem. Prostitution is usually not prosecuted as a federal crime. It becomes a federal crime when Spitzer contracts to have a New York sex worker meet him in DC. But that didn’t happen until after the warrants were issued—and the Feds presumably only know of this interstate commerce because it was picked up on a tap under those warrants.
The affidavit telling of the alleged crimes of the four prostitution ring leaders include many quotes from the calls surrounding that February tryst. One charge goes to great length to explain that Client 9 wanted to do something “unsafe†with the woman, but that woman had ways of telling her clients that if they wanted to have sex, unsafe wasn’t an option.
Problem number two: having unsafe sex, to the best of my knowledge, is not a crime—state or federal—at least not any more of a crime than having protected sex with a prostitute. (There are a few cases where persons who had AIDS and knowingly set out to infect others have been prosecuted, but that is in no way part of this story.) So, why are these details part of the indictment?
Let’s backtrack just a bit.
This investigation is managed by the Department of Justice’s Office of Public Integrity (I’ve also seen it called the Public Integrity Section of the DoJ). The OPI/PIS, as is noted by Harper’s Scott Horton, has been intimately involved with a scandal of its own concerning “politically directed prosecutions.â€
During the Bush Administration, his Justice Department has opened 5.6 cases against Democrats for every one involving a Republican. Beyond this, a number of the cases seem to have been tied closely to election cycles. Indeed, a study of the cases out of Alabama shows clearly that even cases opened against Republicans are in fact only part of a broader pattern of going after Democrats. So here are the rather amazing facts that surface in the Spitzer case:
(1) The prosecutors handling the case came from the Public Integrity Section.
(2) The prosecution is opened under the White-Slave Traffic Act of 1910. You read that correctly. The statute itself is highly disreputable, and most of the high-profile cases brought under it were politically motivated and grossly abusive.
Yes, there’s that darn Mann Act again. (Horton and Digby both detail its long, antiquated, and sordid history.) The problem is, as mentioned, according to the affidavit (at least in Spitzer’s case), that the violation of the White-Slave Traffic Act doesn’t occur until months after the investigation was opened.
In fact, in a different New York Times story related to the Eliot Mess, we read that the call that links Spitzer to a violation of the Mann Act was swept up in a massive trawl:
The conversations, according to the affidavit, were among more than 5,000 telephone calls and text messages that the federal authorities intercepted during the course of the investigation into the prostitution ring, which began last October. Investigators also seized more than 6,000 e-mail messages, bank records, and travel and hotel records, and conducted physical surveillance.
This level of investigation would have to be approved all the way up the chain of command, through the appropriate United States Attorney, to the United States Attorney General.
The US Attorney for the Southern District of New York is Michael Garcia (more on him shortly), but over the course of the last year, we’ve actually had three US AGs—the October start date places approval in the lap of acting Attorney General Peter D. Keisler, who served between the resignation of Alberto Gonzales and the swearing in of Michael Mukasey. Keisler, a cofounder of the Federalist Society, former clerk for Robert Bork and Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, has been thrice nominated by George Bush to fill a spot on the DC Circuit.
Michael Garcia was an assistant to then US Attorney Mary Jo White during the prosecution of the 1993 Trade Center bombers. In 2003, Garcia, a registered Republican, was tapped to head the INS as it was brought inside the Department of Homeland Security and renamed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In 2005, Garcia—whom has been called a “Chertoff cronyâ€â€”was named as the USA for the Southern District.
Garcia was apparently ready to roll with an indictment of “a public figure†a couple of months ago, but first needed authority granted to him by the Attorney General (now Mike Mukasey). Garcia kept investigating until he was granted that authority—which appears to be normal procedure—but the only references to Client 9 in the Emperor's Club affidavit are all from less than a month ago. I do not have an explanation for this apparent discrepancy.
Oh, but there’s more. . .
I am confused by this revelation in the ancillary NYT story:
Then, with the assistance of a confidential informant, a young woman who had worked previously as a prostitute for the Emperor’s Club V.I.P., the escort service that Mr. Spitzer was believed to be using, the investigators were able to get a judge to approve wiretaps on the cellphones of some of those suspected of involvement in the escort service.
The informant had previously worked for the escort service, but the investigation didn’t turn up the prostitution angle until after Spitzer was being investigated for structuring. . . which seems to indicate that the informant had left the Emperor’s Club before the period that concerns the part of the investigation that involves the governor. It could be that parts of the timeline have yet to be reported, but as I read it, there seems to be something circular about the logic that permits investigators to tie Spitzer to a specific sexual contract.
And, (almost) finally, with all of the talk of Spitzer’s political downfall, and the governor’s fights with Joe Bruno, I thought about the rather substantial—like half-a-million dollars substantial—donation made by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg to the state GOP. . . just last week. . . after Bloomberg put an end to rumors about a bid for US president. . . after the state Republicans lost a special election that shaved their Senate majority to one. . . after Bloomberg let slip the idea that he might be something other than president, like, you know, governor. (Jane Hamsher had similar thoughts, among several others.) With the relationship between Bloomberg and Mukasey known to be close, is it at all possible that Mayor Mike heard anything from US AG Mike about a soon to be weakened NY governor?
At this point I should hasten to add that Eliot Spitzer has yet to be charged with anything. None of the clients listed in the affidavit have been charged (and only Spitzer has been linked to a number). Further, if Spitzer is charged with a crime, the reports seem to indicate that it will be for the structuring—trying to conceal financial transactions—rather than anything to do with the actual sex.
Since Spitzer has prosecuted so-called “prostitution rings†in the past, and has made public pronouncements about the morality of such crimes, he is likely guilty of rank hypocrisy, what else he is guilty of remains an open question.
Which brings me back to the beginning: What in god’s name was Spitzer thinking?
When most of the myriad talkers and typers were asking that, they were no doubt thinking: What was Spitzer doing frequenting prostitutes? Is he nuts? He has a wife! He wants to be President! Prostitutes?!?
I suppose that’s a valid question, but, to me, it is not a particularly interesting one.
Here's the thing—I am not really that amazed that an aggressive and powerful politico thought that he could get away with paying for sex. Spitzer is hardly the first, and he will certainly not be the last. The morality of this behavior can be debated, but the originality of it cannot.
But here’s what I am amazed by: I am amazed that a Democrat—no, let’s make that any Democrat—thinks that he or she can do anything on the sly and keep it secret these days.
I actually have to wonder, as I've wondered before, if elected Democrats realize that issues like the US Attorney scandal and warrantless surveillance are not just inside baseball, not just about a debatable difference of opinion on the balance to strike between security and civil rights, but are rather about Republican attempts to lock in one party rule.
Does Spitzer or any of the Democratic Party leadership really believe that their calls and e-mails are not being monitored? Ten years ago, maybe I would have broken out the tinfoil hats, but now, after all we know? C'mon!
What in god’s name was Spitzer thinking?
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(cross-posted on capitoilette and Daily Kos)













In related news: If Spitzer resigns, Hillary Clinton loses a delegate. Spitzer is a super delegate pledged to HRC. If he resigns, he loses his status as super-D and cannot be replaced.
to clarify. . . Patterson becomes governor. . . he's still a super-D. . . but the Lt. Governor spot is not officially filled (Republican Joe Bruno just assumes the responsibilities), so it is that spot that is lost to HRC.
Wait, lost to HRC?
You know that the republican will definitely vote for HRC, right? They want to make sure she get the nomination so that they can completely and utterly destroy her. Something like 40% of voting democrats hate her almost as much as the republicans. It would be the single biggest republican presidential win ever.
I'm guessing no one has told Hillary this yet, though.
This is an amazingly detailed, thoughtful and well written piece that explains this situation better than anything else I've read in the last 24 hours. It is so well written, that I was amazed and forced to wonder why you would ruin it by turning it into yet another article about the dirty political tricks of the GOP. I don't disagree with you on any of the arguments that you brought up, and it does amaze me that any democrat would think that they're playing on a level field; but why couldn't this just be an extremely insightful look into the Spitzer scandal? You seem to cheapen your incredibly strong piece by injecting it with partisan critiques.
It's hard to say right now. In my mind, I wouldn't close the door to the idea that partisan politics played into some of the decisions in this case. Before the attorney scandal, I'd have believe in the independent nature of the Justice Department. Now, with all we've been through, I'm not so sure.
Like Red Wind, I'm not sold on this idea quite yet, but I can't dismiss it out of hand…
Come on guys. Spitzer is a democrat in a republican administration. This administration has demonstrated an incredible disdain for accounting for its actions. Subpoenas are not respected, convictions are overturned, lies are part of standard operational strategy and no republican would ever admit to wrongdoing of any kind if he could save his children with it.
D.Taft might not appreciate the partisan angle, but this administration hasn't done anything that was not partisan sofar. If they have the tools at hand, and we know they have, and they are not accountable, and we know they aren't, who -honestly- believes they would not use any and all means at their disposal to further their goals using any and all information they have when it suits them most? When has anyone seen any kind of reluctance on the part of a republican to not use an advantage when it was available?
Spitzer must be 7 kinds of idiot to believe that he can call a prostitute [in the full knowledge that the NSA is hosing up ALL network traffic they can get their hands on] without somebody being made aware of it who is going to use it to bury him?
The democrats would be a whole lot less eager to give telecom immunity if they were aware of how this information is used against them. And guess what McCain is going to have in the way of an advantage when it comes to surveillance…
This has nothing to do with wearing a tin foil hat. You're not paranoid when people are actually watching you.
Republicans have been caught in so many sex scandals recently that I can't really see your point here. I certainly don't want the NSA vacuuming up my phone records without a good reason, but if there really was some kind of concealed movement of currency suggesting money laundering, and the Governor of New York was even peripherally involved, then, seems to me, that should come out in public.
By contrast, Bill Clinton was involved in a civil suit which never ought to have been allowed to proceed while he was still in office, leading to the revelation that he was having ordinary sex with an ordinary woman, with no exchange of money or other related criminal behavior. He was then put into a perjury trap.
The Clinton matter was a totally unwarranted abuse of prosecutorial power. The Spitzer revelations? Not so much. One could argue that his private sexual behavior could have been left out of the picture, but money laundering? Not a nice thing to do.
(If I'm misunderstanding part of the story, please let me know.)
Whaddaya mean, money laundering? It's entirely legal for you or Spitzer to remove any amount of money from savings, $10,000 or more, and use it to pay for a prostitute. But if you do it in one chunk, the IRS will ask you questions which you will have to answer: "Hey, I used the money for sex," and the IRS then says "Well, OK."
Spitzer tried to stay under the radar and failed, but that's still no crime. But it triggered an expensive investigation, to the point where the US Attorney had to either declare the investigation money wasted or come up with something. What he seems to have come up with is a scurrilous leak, possibly with no criminal charges associated.
The problem is, it's not legal. It's against a law called "structuring," where you remove something from bank accounts in a way such as to conceal what it's going to. I think it carries a five year prison sentence.
And there's an ironic (and scary) addendum: it was reported today on NPR that post-9/11, all transactions, of any size, are now reported–we're talking a $9,000 money order, or a debit for a $3.99 Happy Meal–and the info is fed into some ap that hunts for patterns. Spitzer's money movements were flagged by software.
All banks apparently have to comply with this intrusive micro-reporting. Why? According to NPR, because Eliot Spitzer pushed for it.
So, again: What in god's name was he thinking?!?
For what it's worth, this is my take on the Elliott Spritzer affair.
The FBI prostitution sting operation that supposedly inadvertently netted a high profile governor and captured widespread public attention was never aimed, as claimed, at the prostitution ring but instead the governor was always the primary and original target of the investigation.
Consider for a moment whether the timing of the issue was less than coincidental, but part of an deliberate campaign and intentionally planned to divert public attention from explosive news that potentially could be much more damaging to the Bush Administration. What news? Shortly after the publication of an interview in Esquire Magazine (3/11*) where the U.S. Commander of the Pacific fleet, Admiral Fallon, went public with his criticism of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and blew the whistle on government plans for an imminent attack on Iran, a story that is vastly more significant on every level than a politician paying for a prostitute.
That publication sent the entire administration on a hell bent damage control mission with the Secretary of Defense going to extremes to portray the commander opposition to his Presidential policy as little more than a minor misunderstanding. But there was far more here than a little misunderstanding. Fallon also clearly came down on the side of diplomatic engagement with both
Iran and China instead of confrontation, one of most candid and devastating critiques ever voiced by a high level military leader against his civilian bosses.
Now here's a scandal of monumental national and world significance that really warrants extraordinary tactics to divert public attention from a desperate and failing government's last hope to expand the war front, against overwhelming public opposition.Spritzer did double duty, not only as an essential part of the damage control but also helped the Administration gain credits with its big business supporters by removing one of its most ardent critics.
How handy that human peccadillo can be relied on so easily to play its part, both as motivation underlying the New York Governor's behavior as well as the public fascination with salacious news in all its tawdry details. In that regard, the spin masters have been entirely successful in completely removing Admiral Fallon's courageous stand from front-page news.
Thank God, the Administration must be saying, for our all too human and very handy imperfections.
Bob Berke
*www.esquire.com/features/fox-fallon#
Interesting connection with Fallon. There is no question in my mind that this was politically motivated. The investigators have basically said as much. The Fallon connection though…you just might be right.
Did you know that some firefighters also set fires? It happens at a fairly low rate, but it never disappears (see, for example, http://www.state.sc.us/forest/lear.htm). Call it "wanting to get caught" or "maximum excitement" or whatever you prefer — it's part of our nature to cause trouble for ourselves and for others, sometimes in ways that seem utterly incomprehensible.