WASHINGTON - US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is getting a two-day
reprieve in his high-stakes appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee
because of the shooting rampage at Virginia Tech.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales appears at a round table
discussion with law enforcement officials about his Project Safe Childhood
initiative in Boston in this March 30, 2007 file photo. [AP]
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Democrats raised new questions
about the roles he and President Bush played in the dismissal of eight US
attorneys.
Gonzales had been scheduled to make his first appearance Tuesday before
Congress in the uproar over the firings. The Senate Judiciary Committee
postponed the hearing until Thursday after the shooting spree on the Blacksburg,
Va., campus.
"I'm sure that he will want to be dealing with the matters of the shooting,"
Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (voting record) of Pennsylvania, agreed that
the delay was appropriate.
Sen. Charles Schumer (voting record), D-N.Y., said Monday that Gonzales'
former chief of staff, Kyle Sampson, told the Senate panel's investigators
during an interview Sunday that the attorney general and Bush had a conversation
in October in which the president mentioned concerns about David Iglesias, the
US attorney in New Mexico who was later fired.
Gonzales related the conversation to Sampson just last month, Schumer said.
Bush told reporters last month that he recalled having a conversation last
fall with Gonzales about complaints from senators about prosecutors, "but I
never brought up a specific case or gave him specific instructions."
"As recently as March 26 the attorney general told NBC News that he did not
remember a conversation with the president," Schumer said. "But only three weeks
earlier, according to Sampson, he did specifically remember such a
conversation."
Iglesias has maintained that he was fired after Sen. Pete Domenici (voting
record), both R-N.M., complained that he was not moving aggressively enough to
bring indictments before November's election in an alleged kickback scheme
involving New Mexico Democrats.
Domenici and Wilson have acknowledged talking with Iglesias by phone weeks
before the election but have denied trying to put any pressure on him.
The White House has pushed for Gonzales to testify as soon as possible, and
the long-scheduled hearing is widely viewed as the attorney general's last
chance to quiet a controversy that has prompted calls in both parties for his
resignation.
In prepared testimony for the hearing, Gonzales said he has "nothing to
hide."