Travis County DA's office has a history of abuse of power
Power Line:
Many of us recall the baseless indictment of then House Majority Leader Tom DeLay by then Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle in connection with the indictment of Governor Perry yesterday, but does anyone recall the earlier case against Kay Bailey Hutchison brought by Earle? Earle is the predecessor of Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg, whose drunk driving escapades initiated the chain of events that has now culminated in Governor Perry’s indictment.It seems clear that the Travis County DA's office lacks the integrity to bring cases against people it sees as political opponents. The legislature needs to take that power away from them and give it to the Attorney General.
Serving as Texas state treasurer, Hutchison won 67 percent of the vote in the special election held on June 5, 1993, to fill the Senate seat held by Lloyd Bentsen, who had resigned to serve as Secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton administration. It was a matter of months — a little over three, to be precise — before Earle engineered Hutchison’s indictment on charges stemming from her service as treasurer. Hutchison was indicted on felony charges of official misconduct and ordering Texas state employees to destroy evidence.
Hutchison anticipated running for election to a full Senate term in November 1994. A conviction on trumped up charges would have handily served the Demorats’ interest in removing her from the picture. I recall the late political reporter Jack Germond laughing about it at the time. Germond commented: “They play hardball in Texas.” I remember because I failed to see what was so funny about it.
With Hutchinson’s trial just minutes under way the following February, the case against Hutchison was thrown out. The Los Angeles Times reported the acquittal here. She commented at a press conference following her acquittal: “They thought the lady would crack. Well, the lady wouldn’t crack. The lady stood up and fought. The lady showed she could take the worst that a corruption of the political system could give.”
“The only crime I committed,” she said, “was doing a great job as state treasurer and winning an election by a landslide.”
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