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Judge orders release of Cheney visiting logs

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Robert L Bass

Jan 1, 1970
0
WASHINGTON - A federal judge has ordered the Bush administration to release information about who visited Vice President Dick Cheney's
office and personal residence, an order that could spark a late election-season debate over lobbyists' White House access.

While researching the access lobbyists and others had on the White House, The Washington Post asked in June for two years of White
House visitor logs. The Secret Service refused to process the request, which government attorneys called "a fishing expedition into
the most sensitive details of the vice presidency."

U.S. District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina said Wednesday that, by the end of next week, the Secret Service must produce the records or
at least identity them and justify why they are being withheld.



The Secret Service can still try to withhold the records but, in a written ruling Thursday, Urbina questioned the agency's primary
argument - that the logs are protected by Cheney's right to executive privilege.

Republicans have suffered a spate of bad news lately. Ohio Rep. Bob Ney pleaded guilty in the Jack Abramoff lobbying investigation,
Florida Rep. Mark Foley resigned after reports of his sexually explicit Internet conversations with teenage House pages, and the FBI
intensified its corruption investigation into Pennsylvania Rep. Curt Weldon.

Further ammunition for Dems?
If Cheney's visitor logs show meetings with lobbyists, releasing them just weeks before Election Day could provide ammunition to
Democrats.

"The political price is very high," said L. Sandy Maisel, director of the Goldfarb Center for Public Affairs at Colby College. "Even
more than that, Cheney has a vested interest in keeping them out of public eye at a time when people will pay attention to them.
After the election, they will pay much less attention."

The newspaper sought logs for anyone visiting Cheney, his legal counsel, chief spokesman and other top aides and advisers.

The Secret Service had no comment on the ruling Thursday. In court documents, government attorneys said releasing the documents
would infringe on Cheney's ability to seek advice.

"This case is about protecting the effective functioning of the vice presidency under the Constitution," attorneys wrote.

A lawsuit over similar records revealed last month that Republican activists Grover Norquist and Ralph Reed - key figures in the
Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal - landed more than 100 meetings inside the Bush White House.

The Post cited those records, which were released to the Democratic Party and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington,
as evidence that the documents should be released.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
 
P

Petem

Jan 1, 1970
0
here we go again


Robert L Bass said:
WASHINGTON - A federal judge has ordered the Bush administration to
release information about who visited Vice President Dick Cheney's office
and personal residence, an order that could spark a late election-season
debate over lobbyists' White House access.

While researching the access lobbyists and others had on the White House,
The Washington Post asked in June for two years of White House visitor
logs. The Secret Service refused to process the request, which government
attorneys called "a fishing expedition into the most sensitive details of
the vice presidency."

U.S. District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina said Wednesday that, by the end of
next week, the Secret Service must produce the records or at least
identity them and justify why they are being withheld.



The Secret Service can still try to withhold the records but, in a written
ruling Thursday, Urbina questioned the agency's primary argument - that
the logs are protected by Cheney's right to executive privilege.

Republicans have suffered a spate of bad news lately. Ohio Rep. Bob Ney
pleaded guilty in the Jack Abramoff lobbying investigation, Florida Rep.
Mark Foley resigned after reports of his sexually explicit Internet
conversations with teenage House pages, and the FBI intensified its
corruption investigation into Pennsylvania Rep. Curt Weldon.

Further ammunition for Dems?
If Cheney's visitor logs show meetings with lobbyists, releasing them just
weeks before Election Day could provide ammunition to Democrats.

"The political price is very high," said L. Sandy Maisel, director of the
Goldfarb Center for Public Affairs at Colby College. "Even more than that,
Cheney has a vested interest in keeping them out of public eye at a time
when people will pay attention to them. After the election, they will pay
much less attention."

The newspaper sought logs for anyone visiting Cheney, his legal counsel,
chief spokesman and other top aides and advisers.

The Secret Service had no comment on the ruling Thursday. In court
documents, government attorneys said releasing the documents would
infringe on Cheney's ability to seek advice.

"This case is about protecting the effective functioning of the vice
presidency under the Constitution," attorneys wrote.

A lawsuit over similar records revealed last month that Republican
activists Grover Norquist and Ralph Reed - key figures in the Jack
Abramoff lobbying scandal - landed more than 100 meetings inside the Bush
White House.

The Post cited those records, which were released to the Democratic Party
and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, as evidence that
the documents should be released.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
 
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