May 10, 2007
Giuliani Would Make a Worse President than Bush
By Paul Craig Roberts
Republican magazines have begun
their pimp operations for the GOP’s 2008 presidential
candidates.
In a recent issue of National
Review, Jennifer Rubin, described as "a freelance
writer in Washington, D.C.," pumps up Rudolph
Giuliani as "America’s mayor" and "America’s
prosecutor." [Rudy
As Prosecutor, April 30, 2007(Subscriber link)]
Giuliani is a media creation.
Giuliani was unknown until in search of name recognition
he staged a stormtrooper assault on the financial firm
Princeton/Newport involving
fifty federal marshals outfitted with automatic
weapons and bullet proof vests. On another occasion he
had two New York investment bankers hauled off their
trading floor in handcuffs.
Giuliani’s victims had
done nothing and were exonerated. But Giuliani’s
media stunts served to turn public sentiment against
white-collar defendants.
Giuliani
once bragged that by giving negative treatment to
his targets,
"the media does the job for me." Giuliani
certainly had no difficulty manipulating Wall Street
Journal reporters James B. Stewart, Daniel Hertzberg
and Laurie Cohen or The Predators’ Ball
author Connie Bruck. Milken, who had done
nothing except make a lot of money by proving Wall
Street wrong about non-investment grade bonds, was
branded the
"Cosa Nostra of the securities world."
Milken’s "junk bonds"
financed such household names as CNN, Barnes & Noble,
Stone Container Corporation, Time-Warner, Safeway, and
Mattel. Milken provided capital to companies with
promising futures that lacked investment-grade credit
rankings. Milken operated out of Los Angeles, not Wall
Street. His earnings and those of his upstart firm,
Drexel Burnham Lambert, aroused
envy and hatred among the Wall Street hot shots.
Milken failed to use his money to purchase political
protection in Washington. Instead, he gave his money to
organizations that help poor black children.
Milken was set up perfectly for an
ambitious and unscrupulous prosecutor like Giuliani.
Giuliani leaked to his media pimps
that a 98-count indictment was coming down against
Milken. As Milken had done nothing and Giuliani had no
case against him, Giuliani’s strategy was to coerce
Milken into a plea bargain. When Milken failed to send
his attorneys to work out a plea arrangement, Giuliani
used Laurie Cohen to report eighteen times in the
Wall Street Journal that Milken would
imminently face an expanded superseding indictment of
between 160 and 300 counts.
To increase the pressure on Milken,
prosecutors threatened to indict Milken’s younger
brother, Lowell, unless Milken made a plea deal. US
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh quipped to his
deputies: "A brother for a brother." Afterwards,
Giuliani’s assistant US attorney, John Carroll, told
Seton Hall Law School students in April 1992 that Lowell
Milken was a "sort of ready chip in the
negotiations." Giuliani even went so far as to send
FBI agents to hound Milken’s 92-year old grandfather.
Milken’s attorneys concluded that
Giuliani, lacking any case, was far out on a limb and
desperate for a face-saving plea. They worked out a
plea to six minor technical offenses that had never
carried any prison time. But Giuliani was determined to
have his victim, and Milken was double-crossed by
sentencing judge, Kimba "Bimbo" Wood, and spent
two years of his life in prison.
Giuliani’s assistant US attorney
John Carroll
later bragged to Seton Hall Law students that in the
Milken case "we’re guilty of criminalizing technical
offenses. . . . Many of the prosecution theories we used
were novel. Many of the statutes that we charged under .
. . hadn’t been charged as crimes before. . . . We’re
looking to find the next areas of conduct that meets any
sort of statutory definition of what criminal conduct
is."
It is a damning indication of the
collapse of American law that an assistant US attorney
can be well received when he brags to law school
students that federal prosecutors frame Americans with
novel interpretations that create ex post facto law and
violate mens rea—no crime without intent—the
foundation of the Anglo-American legal system.
In his book, Payback: The Conspiracy to Destroy Michael Milken and His Financial Empire,
University of Chicago law professor and dean Daniel Fischel proves Milken’s innocence. But when
prosecutors are corrupt, innocence is no protection.
Giuliani’s crimes were not limited
to Milken and Princeton/Newport. After investigating, I
concluded that Giuliani framed Leona Helmsley with the
suborned perjury of one of Helmsley’s accountants, whose
own infraction in helping to defraud the Miller Brewing
Company was dropped in exchange for false witness
against Helmsley.
I wrote about Helmsley’s frame-up
in National Review, [Guilty
of being rich - victimization of hotel magnate Leona
Helmsley, November 15, 1993] and my story was
picked up by one of the TV shows of the era. Both Alan
Dershowitz and
Robert Bork share my conviction that Helmsley was
framed with suborned perjury.
Today National Review is a
Giuliani partisan, as is the editorial page of the
Wall Street Journal. During Giuliani’s
"white-collar crime heyday," the Wall Street
Journal editorial page was busy exposing Giuliani’s
duplicity and misuse of the media to create cases
against innocent targets.
Giuliani rode his prosecutions of
the rich to the NYC mayoralty, just as he rode 9/11 to
become a GOP presidential candidate. Giuliani’s career
never served justice; it served his personal ambition,
his ego. That a person so short on integrity could
become a candidate for president is a damning indictment
of the US political system.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.