Prosecutor in terror case controversy sues Ashcroft http://www.usatoday.com
USA Today Posted 2/17/2004 11:15 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal prosecutor in a major terrorism case in Detroit has
taken the rare step of suing Attorney General John Ashcroft, alleging the Justice
Department interfered with the case, compromised a confidential informant and
exaggerated results in the war on terrorism.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Convertino of Detroit accused the Justice Department
of "gross mismanagement" of the war on terrorism in a whistleblower
lawsuit filed late Friday in federal court in Washington.
Justice officials said Tuesday they had not seen the suit and had no comment.
The suit is the latest twist in the Bush administration's first major post-Sept.
11 terrorism prosecution, which is now in danger of unraveling over allegations
of prosecutorial misconduct.
Convertino came under internal investigation last fall after providing information
to a Senate committee about his concerns about the war on terror. His testimony
came just months after he helped convict some members of an alleged terrorism
cell in Detroit.
The government now admits it failed to turn over evidence during the trial that
might have assisted the defense, including an allegation from an imprisoned drug
gang leader who claimed the government's key witness made up his story.
Convertino is seeking damages under the First Amendment and Privacy Act, alleging
he has been subjected to an internal investigation as retaliation for his cooperation
with the Senate and that information from the internal probe was wrongly leaked
to news media.
The lawsuit states Convertino first complained to his superiors more than a year
ago about Justice's interference in the Detroit terrorism trial, saying Washington
supervisors "had continuously placed perception over reality to the serious
detriment of the war on terror."
The lawsuit includes excerpts of an e-mail from another prosecutor in the case
that Convertino says "identified some of the gross mismanagement which was
negatively impacting the ability of the United States to obtain convictions in
a major terrorist case."
The e-mail from the other prosecutor shows he complained at the time that efforts
by Justice's terrorism unit in Washington to "insinuate themselves into this
trial are, nothing more than a self-serving effort to justify the existence"
of the unit.
"They have rendered no assistance and, are in my judgment, adversely impacting
on both trial prep and trial strategy," the e-mail cited in the lawsuit states.
Convertino also accused Justice officials of intentionally divulging the name
of one of his confidential terrorism informants (CI) to retaliate against him.
The leak put the informant at grave risk, forced him to flee the United States
and "interfered with the ability of the United States to obtain information
from the CI about current and future terrorist activities," the suit alleges.
The prosecutor is being represented by the National Whistleblower Center, which
has represented FBI agents and other whistleblowers in recent cases involving
terrorism. Its chief lawyer successfully helped Linda Tripp win damages under
the Privacy Act for the leak of information from her Pentagon personnel file after
the Monica Lewinsky affair.
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