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Jolie Rouge
11-03-2008, 09:49 PM
Report clears Palin in Troopergate investigation
By RACHEL D'ORO, AP Writer
15 mins ago

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Gov. Sarah Palin violated no ethics laws when she fired her public safety commissioner, the state personnel board concluded in a report released Monday. "There is no probable cause to believe that the governor, or any other state official, violated the Alaska Executive Ethics Act in connection with these matters," the report says.

"Gov. Palin is pleased that the independent investigator for the Personnel Board has concluded that she acted properly in the reassignment of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan," her attorney, Thomas Van Flein, said in a statement.

An earlier, separate investigation by the Legislature found that Palin had abused her office. Monegan said he felt pressure from Palin, her husband and her staff to fire a state trooper who had gone through a nasty divorce from Palin's sister. Palin denied the claim, and said Monegan was fired last July because she wanted the department to head in a new direction.

Monegan told The Associated Press on Monday that he was "perplexed and disappointed" by the report. It was prepared by Timothy Petumenos, an independent investigator for the Alaska Personnel Board. "It conflicts with the first investigation and then casts doubts on both of them. So, it doesn't really resolve anything," he said. "If it did, then I could walk away. It does seem to fly in the face of circumstantial evidence."

Alaska Personnel Board investigations are normally secret, but the three-member board decided to release this report, citing public interest in the matter given Palin's status as a candidate for national office. Election Day is Tuesday. Palin had earlier waived her privacy rights, but others in her administration did not and Petumenos sought to keep the matter from playing out in the media.

Documents released Monday did not include transcripts of separate depositions given by Palin and her husband, Todd.

That deposition was the only one given by Sarah Palin. She was not subpoenaed to answer questions in the Legislature's investigation, though her husband, Todd, gave an affidavit in that probe.

Petumenos said that during her deposition given under oath, Sarah Palin denied Monegan's claim — also given under oath — that she had two conversations with him about the trooper. "Both of those conversations were denied in their entirety by the governor," Petumenos said.

Palin initially said she would cooperate with the Legislature's probe. But after she became John McCain's running mate, she said the investigation had become too partisan and filed an ethics grievance against herself with the personnel board.

Telephone messages left with state Sens. Hollis French, who led the legislative investigation, and Sen. Kim Elton, chairman of the Legislative Council, were not immediately returned.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081104/ap_on_el_pr/palin_troopergate

tngirl
11-03-2008, 10:14 PM
Nice to know on the eve of the election.

anothersta
11-03-2008, 10:30 PM
Even the first report said Palin didn't violate ethics laws, then went on to accuse her husband of 'asking too many questions'. It was ridiculous.

This report clears Todd, also. I guess they should hire another third party investigator and take best two out of three. And, since she has an 85% approval rating as governor, my guess is the Alaskans are going to take a good hard look at their representatives.

A few more may lose their seats, and they should.

janelle
11-03-2008, 11:41 PM
It was all silly to begin with but it took the focus off Obama and now the tape of him saying coal companies would go backrupt since he will fine them out the butt is just surfacing. Nice ploy---it worked.

anothersta
11-04-2008, 12:40 AM
Yes, it did. And when all of his supporters start getting frustrated with him, I'll have NO sympathy. They asked for it and sometimes, I think suffering teaches a wonderful lesson.

I know the suffering of my college years built tons of character and I learned the value of a good decision.

Hollis and Elton, you'd better start packing your bags. I don't think the people are going to forget what you tried to do to their FAVORITE governor.

85% approval rating. Have we ever even seen that in a candidate before??

speedygirl
11-04-2008, 01:47 AM
Yes, it did. And when all of his supporters start getting frustrated with him, I'll have NO sympathy. They asked for it and sometimes, I think suffering teaches a wonderful lesson.

I know the suffering of my college years built tons of character and I learned the value of a good decision.

Hollis and Elton, you'd better start packing your bags. I don't think the people are going to forget what you tried to do to their FAVORITE governor.

85% approval rating. Have we ever even seen that in a candidate before??

Nope and we're not seeing it anymore. 68% is still good in her defense and the stimulus check they all receive helps.

http://www.adn.com/sarah-palin/story/542179.html

68 PERCENT: Latest poll shows percentage drop from the 80s.

By CHRIS ADAMS
McClatchy Newspapers

Published: October 1st, 2008 01:11 AM
Last Modified: October 1st, 2008 12:07 PM

Ask a governor if she'd be happy with a 68 percent approval rating and she'd probably laugh at the question. It usually doesn't get much better than that.

For Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, though, that represents a hefty drop.

Since John McCain tapped the first-term governor to be his vice-presidential running mate, Palin's sky-high home-state approval ratings have come down to Earth.

Above 80 percent approval for parts of her term -- she was at 82 percent in a key local poll twice this year -- Palin's popularity has swooned as new information about the local abuse-of-power investigation known as Troopergate has trickled out, and as national and local media pick over her track record as a governor and small-town mayor.

Palin still has overwhelming support among Alaska Republicans. But many Democrats and independents, who gave her positive marks just a month ago, have changed their views.

"My problem is not with Sarah Palin the governor," said Ron Zandman-Zeman, 60, a recently retired school teacher from Anchorage. "She was doing the job she was elected to do. I don't think she can do the job she wants to be elected to do. And that's why I'm here."

"Here" was a rally in a downtown Anchorage park last weekend, where several hundred demonstrators gathered under a brilliant blue sky to protest Palin and her attorney general, mostly for their handling of the Troopergate controversy.

Until this summer, there were plenty of Alaskans who'd supported or been neutral toward their governor. Palin built a reservoir of goodwill during a handful of key issues, including prodding the state's oil industry to cough up more of its profits, which fund the vast majority of state operations.

After McCain shocked the political world by picking Palin, the rest of the country experienced a flash of infatuation with the charming, gutsy governor. But some Alaskans turned against what they saw as her newly aggressive, mean-spirited demeanor.

At the studio of KENI in Anchorage, Andrew Halcro has become a focal point for anti-Palin advocates. Halcro is a former state legislator who was beaten by Palin in the 2006 gubernatorial election. (Running as an independent, Halcro finished third behind Palin and former Gov. Tony Knowles, a Democrat).

Palin had done a good job of governing from the center, he said. But her recent mocking of Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, for example, is a surprise to many Alaskans.

"I see a real change in the callers," he said. "People are seeing Gov. Palin in a different light."

While many demonstrators objected to Palin on partisan or ideological grounds, two issues that clearly rankled Alaskans had nothing to do with party loyalty: openness and independence.

Ivan Moore, a local pollster, recently found that Palin's support had slipped to 68 percent. The poll was conducted from Sept. 20 to 22 among 500 likely Alaska voters and has a margin of error of 4.4 percent.

Inside those numbers was a dramatic drop in support from Democrats and independents, although support from Republicans remained strong at 93 percent. Among Democrats, her approval rating dropped from 60 percent to 36 percent, a 24-point drop. Among independents, it fell from 82 percent to 64 percent, an 18-point drop.

Moore said those numbers were likely driven by the harsher tone Palin has adopted on the national campaign trail, as well as the fallout from Troopergate, which involves the firing of the state's public safety commissioner.

In addition, fiercely independent Alaskans resent moves by the McCain campaign to control what they see as purely state matters.

Sondra Tompkins, a reliably Republican voter, found herself speaking out at the rally -- upset, she said, because of Palin's handling of the trooper issue and the example it sets for children in the state.

"They're listening, they're watching, and they're asking questions," Tompkins called out to the crowd. "Do we tell them it's OK not to tell the truth? Do we tell them it's OK to bend the truth? Do we tell them it's OK to distort the truth if you have a gaggle of lawyers to defend you?

"It's not OK, and I think Alaskans have had enough."

Brad Coker, managing director of Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc., said an approval rating in the 60s for a governor is good. His recent polling in six western states found two governors with approval ratings in the low-80s, two in the 60s and one in the 50s.

The sky-high ratings Palin once had are somewhat unusual, he said -- but not unheard of.

"Governors in smaller states tend to have much higher performance ratings because their constituencies are smaller," he said. "They have personal contact with the voters and so there is more familiarity between them and the constituents. But 68 percent is pretty good."

meltodd69
11-04-2008, 07:21 AM
No fear she will be able to go back to Alaska and continue her good work after today.