Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 19, 2014 9:22 pm

This Could Be the Start of Scott Walker’s Bridgegate

By Emma Roller


More than 27,000 emails were unsealed Wednesday after a years-long investigation into Scott Walker's campaign for Wisconsin governor. And, for the first time, Walker has been directly tied to a secret email system that members of his staff used to coordinate his gubernatorial campaign while Walker was Milwaukee County executive.

Among the pile of emails, it was found that Walker also used his campaign email to conduct county executive business. In June 2010, Walker emailed the conservative radio host Charlie Sykes and encouraged him to get information on Democratic groups from his office. "Ask [my official office] and we would be happy to send over the info," Walker wrote.

Some background

Before Scott Walker was elected governor in 2010, while he was still serving as Milwaukee County executive, his staff set up a secret wireless router in the county office over which they would communicate about the campaign. Walker's aides regularly exchanged emails about the campaign during business hours, but for the first time, one of those emails directly implicates Walker in breaking campaign law.

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

"Consider youself now in the 'inner circle,'" Walker's administration director, Cynthia Archer, wrote to Walker aide Kelly Rindfleisch just after the two exchanged a test message.
"I use this private account quite a bit to communicate with SKW and Nardelli. You should be sure you check it throughout the day," she wrote, referring to Walker by his initials and to Walker's chief of staff, Tom Nardelli.
Rindfleisch, Walker's former deputy chief of staff, had more than 5,700 emails with Walker campaign staff. In 2012, Rindfleisch was convicted on one felony count of misconduct, and sentenced to six months in prison and three years probation. Walker has absolved himself of any misconduct, arguing that receiving campaign-related emails doesn't violate campaign law as long as it doesn't use taxpayer resources.

This isn't the end of the line for Walker's legal woes, either—there's a separate John Doe investigation into the funding of Walker's 2012 recall election. In an attempt to prove illegal coordination between Walker's re-election campaign and various conservative groups. One such group, the Wisconsin Club For Growth, has tried to block the investigation, taking its grievances to the state Supreme Court.

So what?

Wisconsin Democrats have been waiting for years for this shoe to drop. The Democratic Party of Wisconsin has been working to link Walker to Gov. Chris Christie since the Bridgegate scandal—Christie heads the Republican Governors Association, which has poured money into Wisconsin for attack ads against Walker's gubernatorial opponent, Mary Burke.

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Still, Walker's story has gotten far less national media attention than Christie's, probably because campaign malfeasance doesn't make for quite as dramatic a scandal as a huge, unnecessary traffic jam. But the two cases bear striking similarities: two Republican governors with national profiles and national ambitions, allegedly using their public office to boost their political standing, all the while distancing themselves from the work their staffs sullied themselves with.

Nonetheless, this could haunt Walker into his 2014 election and beyond. Burke, who's been running a pacifist's campaign so far, now has ample ammunition.
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby NeonLX » Wed Feb 19, 2014 9:54 pm

Wish I could be optimistic about this. I want to see that fvcker get tossed out and put behind bars.

But this state has gone into some kind of coma. A really mean, stupid coma.
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Feb 20, 2014 9:40 am

As reporters and campaign operatives poured over the trove, a number of embarrassing details leaked out. Among them, that Walker’s chief of staff forwarded an email joke that read, “I can handle being a black, disabled, one armed, drug-addicted Jewish homosexual…but please, oh dear God, don’t make me a Democrat;” that Walker personally ordered the firing of a doctor at a county mental health facility because she had once worked as a thong model; that when the Walker campaign was criticized for a death at a mental health facility, a top aide wrote “nobody cares about crazy people.”


http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... ngers.html
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jun 20, 2014 1:57 am

Prosecutors Allege Scott Walker At Center Of Campaign Finance Criminal Conspiracy
Posted: 06/19/2014 6:11 pm EDT Updated: 06/19/2014 6:59 pm EDT Print Article SCOTT WALKER INVESTIGATION

WASHINGTON -- Prosecutors allege that Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) was at the center of a criminal conspiracy to illegally coordinate the activities of independent conservative groups during recall elections in his state in 2011 and 2012, according to documents released Thursday and first reported on by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Prosecutors contend in the documents that Walker had direct knowledge that his top deputies R.J. Johnson and Deborah Jordahl were involved in the alleged illegal coordination between the Walker campaign and 12 conservative groups.

The documents, part of a John Doe investigation, were unsealed in a lawsuit brought by the Wisconsin Club for Growth, the central player in the alleged illegal coordination, and other groups seeking to halt the investigation as a violation of their First Amendment rights. The prosecutors' allegations are based on extensive testimony and findings from the parties involved.

In one unsealed email from Walker to Karl Rove, chief political strategist to former President George W. Bush and founder of the well-funded independent groups American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS, the governor described Johnson's alleged role in coordinating Republican efforts in the recall elections.

"Bottom line: R.J. helps keep in place a team that is wildly successful in Wisconsin," Walker wrote to Rove. "We are running 9 recall elections and it will be like running 9 Congressional markets in every market in the state (and Twin Cities.)"

Johnson sent Walker a document saying that the Wisconsin Club for Growth's activities in the recall elections were overseen by "operative R.J. Johnson and Deborah Jordahl, who coordinated spending through 12 different groups. Most spending by other groups were directly funded by grants from the Club."

According to an affidavit, Johnson stated, "We own [Club for Growth]."


Other affidavits referenced in the documents allege that Walker aides Mary Stitt and Kelly Rindfleisch were involved in raising money for both the recall campaigns and the Wisconsin Club for Growth. A fundraising consultant, Kate Doner, also coordinated fundraising for the Walker campaign and the Wisconsin Club for Growth, according to the documents.

Walker's chief of staff, Keith Gilkes, is alleged to have been involved in conversations regarding coordination with independent groups in both the 2011 Senate recall elections and Walker's 2012 recall campaign.

Prosecutors also contend that the Walker campaign and the independent groups "tacitly" admitted to the allegations by arguing that the coordination was not illegal because the groups were engaged in issue advocacy, not electoral activity.

The documents portray the Wisconsin Club for Growth as the coordinated campaign's hub of operations, spending money on ads and acting as a "dark money" bank to dole out undisclosed funds to other groups to do the bidding of the Walker camp.

Formerly a small player in Wisconsin, the group pulled in more than $20 million from 2011 through 2012. It then distributed that money to other groups to push messages in the Senate and gubernatorial recall elections and key judicial races.

Citizens for a Strong America received $6.64 million -- all of its funds -- from the Wisconsin Club for Growth during this period, according to Internal Revenue Service forms obtained through CitizenAudit.org and Guidestar. The group then passed that money on to other groups active in the allegedly coordinated campaign. Wisconsin Family Action received $1.2 million, Wisconsin Right to Life received nearly $400,000, United Sportsmen of Wisconsin received $245,000, and Safari Club International got $77,908.

All of this money had to come from somewhere, but since the groups are registered as 501(c)(4) nonprofits, they are not required to disclose their donors. A search of IRS documents, however, reveals that the original donations to the Wisconsin Club for Growth came from a number of major Wisconsin business groups and conservative nonprofits.

In 2011, the Wisconsin Club for Growth raised $1.06 million from the Wisconsin Homeowners Alliance, $988,000 from the Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce Issues Mobilization Council, $227,000 from the Wisconsin Insurance Alliance and $140,000 from the Building Industry Council. The next year, the Wisconsin Insurance Alliance gave another $100,000 and the Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce Issues Mobilization Council added $165,000.

The Wisconsin Club for Growth also pulled in $225,000 from the Center to Protect Patient Rights, a dark money group operated by Walker supporters Charles and David Koch, and $400,000 from the conservative Wellspring Committee.

This support came after Walker fought for a budget bill that stripped members of the state's public employee unions of collective bargaining rights. Protests from unions sparked the push for recall elections, and Walker supporters and anti-union business interests fought back.

The John Doe investigation was temporarily halted when U.S. District Judge Rudolph Randa ruled that prosecutors had violated the First Amendment rights of the Wisconsin Club for Growth and other groups. Randa held that the groups had simply found a loophole in campaign finance law that they were cleverly exploiting.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit is reviewing the case and is responsible for the release of the documents.



[url]Scott Walker Is A Crook, Just Like You Always Thought[/url]
by Abby Zimet
Image

In news that should be more shocking than it is, Wisconsin prosecutors say Gov. Scott Walker was at the center of a wide-ranging "criminal scheme" to coordinate fundraising between his campaign and conservative groups in order to fend off his richly-deserved recall in 2012. In newly unsealed documents, prosecutors say Walker and his GOP cronies were guilty of "criminal violations of multiple elections laws." So much for Walker's gloating claim after his always-questionable victory that "voters really do want leaders who stand up and make the tough decisions." With prosecutors reportedly likewise closing in on Chris Christie, it could be tough for the GOP to find any unindicted presidential candidates.
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby NeonLX » Fri Jun 20, 2014 1:24 pm

The Solidarity Singers are outside the capitol building right now, going at it.

One dude was holding a sign that had a picture of Wanker with the word "CROOK" superimposed.

That's putting it mildly.
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Sep 15, 2016 5:31 pm

Because Scott Walker Asked

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng- ... n-politics


HomeAmerica
Quid pro whoa! Documents link Wisconsin governor to dark money
Published time: 15 Sep, 2016 03:52
Edited time: 15 Sep, 2016 06:45

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker faced threats of losing his title in 2012 during a recall election. He won, but newly-leaked documents show that Walker and his team may have only done so by engaging in questionable fundraising.
Documents recently released to the Guardian show the extent to which Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker had to pursue money during a tough recall in 2012. They reveal the way that politicians rely on private donors and shadowy nonprofits.

According to the documents, Walker may have owed his successful recall election to private donors who were able to secretly fund his campaign using tricks that pushed the limits of the law.

Fundraising isn’t the only fishy aspect of what the Guardian refers to as the “John Doe Files.” Rather, it is the first step in a long chain of events that cast a shadow over Wisconsin’s politics and the cozy relationship between corporations and politicians that is bolstered by campaign finance committees posing as nonprofits.

But to understand the tangled web of 'cheesehead' politics, it begins with the Wisconsin Club for Growth (WCfG), a 501(c)(4) tax exempt nonprofit.

“Did I send out thank you notes to all of our c(4) donors?” Walker asks in one email, referring to individuals and corporations that donated to the WCfG as if they were donating to his campaign.

Read more
Republican presidential candidate and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker (Reuters / David Becker)Wisconsin governor strips workers’ wage protections
When Walker sent that email, he had just won his 2012 recall election, which also threatened the Republican grip on the state.

Walker needed one thing to stay in his office: money – and a lot of it. Katie Doner was Walker’s main fundraiser, and she rose to the task by setting Walker up to meet people like Carl Icahn, a man she described as “the 21st richest American and 61st richest man in the world,” according to an email.

The meeting between Walker and Icahn was arranged in an email from Doner, where she wrote at the top: “BACKGROUND: ***This is for WiCfG Funds.***”

While it is entirely possible that a politically conservative individual would logically donate to a nonprofit like WCfG that describes itself as “pro-liberty, pro-fiscal restraint,” the fact is that Walker was soliciting donations for WCfG instead of Friends of Scott Walker, his personal campaign committee. This speaks to the legal loopholes available for corporations and the richest citizens to take advantage of the campaign finance system.

Contributions exceeding $43,000 to any personal committee must be disclosed. However, donating to third party organizations, such as WCfG, means that the sky's the limit on donations, and none of them have to be disclosed.

This was an important issue to Walker’s team, as one email told him to “Stress the donations to WiCFG are not disclosed and can accept Corporate donations without limits.”

That email was sent in regards to a meeting with Chris Lofgren, the CEO of Schneider National, which is a major trucking company. Walker and Lofgren met in June 2011, and on January 12, 2012, a donation was made from Schneider Enterprise to WCfG for $25,000.

Lofgren was not the only rich man to meet with Walker. The governor had a busy year of scrambling for money. Emails from Doner instructed Walker to go to a forum of business leaders. One of the attendees was hedge fund manager Paul Singer, who Doner told Walker to “grab.”

Singer must have liked what he heard from Walker, as he proceeded to donate $250,000 to WCfG.

Read more
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell © Joshua RobertsMitch McConnell sneaks provisions into budget bill to further enable ‘dark money’
On a very interesting note, Walker became acquainted with Donald Trump during this time. In April 2012, Walker met with Trump on the private 26th floor of Trump Towers. Their meeting was a short two months before Walker would be at the mercy of the Wisconsin electorate. Luckily for Walker, it was a fruitful meeting, and the day after, the WCfG received a check from Trump for $15,000.

All of this is legal under the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling in 2010 that allowed corporations and nonprofits the same First Amendment rights as US citizens in elections. It’s a lot like the meme of dogs who think they’re people, except these are billion dollar corporations that behave like people – and not always good ones.

Case in point: NL Industries. The company was once known as the National Lead Company, but various backlashes against it selling products containing a vicious neurotoxin inspired a rebranding as NL Industries.

During the recall period, NL Industries was owned by Harold Simmons. Simmons has dabbled in elections before, such as when he donated a reported $3 million to the Swift Boat smear campaign against John Kerry in 2004. He was also the head of the Contran Corporation which the Guardian described as “his business empire.”

Simmons and the Wisconsin Republicans were well acquainted before Walker’s recall. When Walker took office in 2011, he pushed through a piece of legislation known as Act 2. This law was meant to tighten tort law – commonly known as hot coffee lawsuits, making personal injury claims more difficult to take to court.

What this actually did for Wisconsin was make it incredibly difficult for victims of lead poisoning from paint to sue lead manufacturers, like NL Industries. The law required that victims prove that the paint that exposed them to lead was manufactured by the defendant company.

Read more
Karl Rove © Gary Cameron‘Complete abdication of duty’: IRS gives ‘social welfare’ status to Karl Rove’s ‘dark money’ group
Again – this may not sound terrible on paper. However, considering that lead paint lawsuits can often times arise years after exposure means that over the course of time, paint tends to build up layer by layer on walls of old houses with new owners and tenants. This measure kept companies such as NL Industries effectively immune from new lawsuits. Within three months, WCfG received a check for $500,000 from the Contran Corporation.

Walker would go to Simmons later that year to court donations for WCfG as his recall election began. Before he did so, his senior campaign advisor Keith Gilkes sent him a memo that told him “so you are aware of what you might need to defend in terms of contributions from donors when these are disclosed.”

A month later, Contran Corporation sent WCfG $100,000. A third check for $150,000 was sent to Walker directly from Simmons’ personal account a month after that.

One more month passed before Wisconsin Republicans introduced a bill to the State Senate that would make former lead paint manufacturers immune from retroactive lawsuits. This bill passed through the Republican-controlled Senate and made its way to Walker’s desk, where he signed it into law.

This could all be a coincidence. It could also be a coincidence that the lawyer representing many victims suing NL Industries discovered under the Freedom of Information Act that NL Industries had paid lobbyists $172,500 for what their own documents refer to as “retroactive legislation.”

If this all seems egregious, you’re not alone. That’s why former counter-terrorism expert turned Wisconsin prosecutor Francis Schmitz got involved. Schmitz alleged that the money collected from the aforementioned donors – and more – were channeled into Walker’s campaign from the WCfG.

Schmitz claimed that RJ Johnson, one of Wisconsin’s top political strategists who worked with Walker, had emailed each other about using WCfG funds for radio ads for Walker. In a subject line titled: “RE: WI CFG – April Donor estimated invoice,” Johnson and his business partner, Deborah Jordahl, talk about “moving forward with radio plans with whatever budget we have left.”

Read more
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. © Molly RileyNY Attorney-General opens investigation into Donald J. Trump Foundation
The case went to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, where it was thrown out. Schmitz was later terminated from his position by Judge David Prosser. But whether Prosser should have even heard the case is up for debate.

Justice David Prosser served on the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 1998 to 2016. But his tenure was almost cut short in 2011 during a difficult reelection period. At that time, he was one of four conservative judges who worked with three liberal judges.

Prosser’s position was very important to many conservatives, particularly in Wisconsin where union busting legislation was on the line. One email from Johnson goes so far as to say, “Club is leading the coalition to maintain the Court. Thus far I have raised 450k and am looking to raise an additional 409k.”

Prosser was re-elected and would go on to preserve the anti-union legislation. When the investigation about Walker’s campaign found its way to Wisconsin’s Supreme Court, letters to the attorneys involved revealed that two people with Prosser’s campaign were named in the investigation.

Prosecutors asked that Prosser and Justice Michael Gableman, another conservative judge, recuse themselves. Both refused.

When Prosser resigned in 2015, he referred to the one person involved in the investigation known as “Unnamed Petitioner,” who wanted money for a campaign “to maintain the Court.”

Does that sound familiar? It should, because that’s something Johnson wrote in an email mentioned earlier. Ergo, according to the Guardian, Johnson was the unnamed petitioner and was serving as a general consultant to Scott Walker.

Prosser was also on the court when they ruled that all files and documents related to the case be destroyed. But the Guardian managed to get its hands on this batch of documents that would have otherwise banished this story from the public conscious.

As The Donald himself once said, “when you give to them, they do whatever the hell you want them to do.”https://www.rt.com/usa/359375-scott-walker-dark-money-pacs/
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby NeonLX » Fri Sep 16, 2016 2:00 pm

WOW!!!

We should be expecting indictments within the hour.
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Sep 22, 2016 2:30 pm

Leaked Documents Show Court's Dismissal of the John Doe Was Based on a False Premise
Submitted by Arn Pearson on September 22, 2016 - 6:36am



Remember 2015? It was just last year that the conservative majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court embraced dark money and turned its back on the state's longstanding bedrock support for transparency in campaigns and elections.

In a controversial ruling that July, the Court voted 4-2 to shut down the John Doe investigation into Scott Walker's secret political fundraising scheme, arguing that coordination between Walker, his campaign consultants, and corporate lobby groups didn't matter because it was all just "issue advocacy."

When the special prosecutor moved for reconsideration later that year, presenting evidence of express political advocacy, the court's conservative majority, led by Justice Gableman, promptly fired him.

It was Wisconsin's version of the Saturday Night Massacre, when Richard Nixon had Archibald Cox canned (by Robert Bork) as the special prosecutor in the Watergate scandal.

The legislative majority beholden to Walker's dark money machine for the recalls moved quickly to rewrite Wisconsin's campaign finance laws to enshrine the Court's radical ruling, dismantled the state's nonpartisan ethics board, and stripped district attorneys of the power to use the John Doe process to prosecute future campaign finance violations, erasing decades of anti-corruption reforms in the process.

Never mind that the Wisconsin Supreme Court's novel legal theory about coordination is without precedent and flies in the face of multiple U.S. Supreme Court decisions. That is the subject of an appeal that the nation's highest court will consider when it reconvenes after its summer break on September 26.

The big story is that the Wisconsin highest court's ruling is based on a false premise—a lie that could only survive under the court's draconian secrecy orders.

CMD's analysis of the John Doe documents published by The Guardian and political ads aired in 2011 and 2012 reveal that Governor Walker and his campaign staff coordinated on more than $30 million in express advocacy expenditures—from soliciting huge corporate and personal checks down to where and when political ads would be placed—something that's illegal even under the Wisconsin court's 2015 ruling.

"The Wisconsin court was wrong to say that coordination between a candidate and outside groups only matters if there's express advocacy," said Donald Simon, a prominent national expert on campaign finance law and former general counsel of Common Cause. "But even so, it's clear that many of the ads run by the groups involved in the John Doe investigation qualified as express advocacy under U.S. Supreme Court precedent."

Walker's secret operation to bankroll and coordinate those ads circumvented Wisconsin's contribution limits, the state's longstanding ban on corporate campaign contributions, and its disclosure requirements.

They broke the law.

The Legal Standard at Play

The law of the land at the federal level and in most, if not all, other states is that coordination between candidates and outside political spenders converts otherwise "independent" expenditures into campaign contributions subject to limits and disclosure.

In legalizing independent expenditures by corporations in Citizens United v. FEC, Justice Kennedy reasoned that, "By definition, an independent expenditure is political speech presented to the electorate that is not coordinated with a candidate." Kennedy quoted the Court's 1976 decision in Buckley v. Valeo to back up his conclusion:

The absence of prearrangement and coordination of an expenditure with the candidate or his agent not only undermines the value of the expenditure to the candidate, but also alleviates the danger that expenditures will be given as a quid pro quo for improper commitments from the candidate.

Ruling after ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court over the past 40 years has embraced this logic about coordination. In McConnell v. FEC, for example, the Court concluded that coordinated expenditures "made after a 'wink or a nod' will be 'as useful to the candidate as cash'" and can therefore be regulated just like direct contributions.

The conservative majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, however, ducked this line of cases and instead relied on Wisconsin Right to Life v. FEC to reach its decision that coordination doesn't count unless the expenditure at issue contains express advocacy or its "functional equivalent." But WRTL did not deal with coordination.

Unless and until that legal sleight of hand is overturned, the law in Wisconsin is that an expenditure will not be considered for "political purposes"—and therefore subject to limits and disclosure—unless it involves "express advocacy and its functional equivalent, as those terms are defined in Buckley and WRTL II [Wisconsin Right to Life]," even if it is coordinated with a candidate.

Under the WRTL decision the Wisconsin majority relied on, an ad is considered the "functional equivalent" of express advocacy "if the ad is susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate." The ads considered in that case were held to be "genuine issue ad[s]" because "their content lacks indicia of express advocacy:

"The ads do not mention an election, candidacy, political party, or challenger; and they do not take a position on a candidate's character, qualifications, or fitness for office."

The ads at issue in WRTL complained about the gridlock caused by the filibuster of judicial nominees, and then asked viewers to contact both of Wisconsin's U.S. Senators to "tell them to oppose the filibuster." They did not praise or criticize a candidate, and focused on a concrete legislative issue.

So here's the standard to apply: Ads that a reasonable person would consider an appeal to vote for or against a candidate, and that mention an election or candidate and take a position on his or her character, qualifications, or fitness for office are considered the "functional equivalent" of express advocacy.

Just mentioning broad issues and then telling people to contact a candidate to praise or criticize them about it may seem clever, but it doesn't cancel out the clear electioneering nature of the message.

Applying the Standard to the Walker Scheme

What does that mean for the Walker scheme? If Walker, his aides, and dark money groups coordinated around fundraising and expenditures for political ads that meet the "functional equivalent" test, they broke the law.

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According to the John Doe papers, the millions raised by Walker and his team and funneled into Wisconsin Club for Growth (WCFG) were then disbursed for ads run under several groups' names, including the shell group Citizens for a Strong America, funded entirely by WCFG, Wisconsin Family Action, and Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce (WMC). Walker's right-hand man, R.J. Johnson, played the lead role in orchestrating the focus of those ads and what groups they would be attributed to.

In addition, Walker's team closely coordinated its efforts and messages with other groups, including the Republican Governor's Association (RGA) and the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC), that were registered in Wisconsin as express advocacy organizations, and that had sworn an oath not to coordinate with candidates or their agents. RGA's Nick Ayers laid out a coordinated battle plan for the groups to Walker and Reince Priebus in March 2011, and documents indicate weekly meetings and other communication between Walker's campaign and RGA.

CMD's review of the ads run by both sets of groups in the recall and state Supreme Court elections in 2011 and 2012 reveals that most, if not all, qualify as the "functional equivalent" of express advocacy under the WRTL standard and not "issue advocacy," as presumed by the Wisconsin court.

The ads follow a general pattern. Unlike the ads at issue in WRTL, they focus on praise or criticism of a specific candidate's character, track record, and qualifications for office. Many end with a fleeting visual or verbal appeal to contact the candidate.

Some of those appeals contain clear electoral signals, like "Don't let Tom Barrett take us backwards," or "Stop Holperin." Some ask voters to thank or criticize the candidate, like "Call Justice Prosser. Thank him for protecting Wisconsin families," or "Tell Shelly Moore we need solutions, not shouting." And others attempt to disguise their political purpose with a vague issue appeal, like "Tell Mayor Barrett you support economic policies that move Wisconsin forward, not back in time," or "Call JoAnne Kloppenburg. Tell her being weak on criminals is dangerous for Wisconsin families."

In the campaign finance world, these types of ads are known as "sham issue ads." They are electioneering ads that carry all the "indicia of express advocacy," placed for an obvious political purpose in proximity to an election.

You cannot magically turn a political ad into an issue ad just by throwing in a last-second vague appeal for voters to call a candidate.

"For some of the ads in question, it's hard to believe that any voters thought they were just about the issues—ads that praise or sharply criticize a candidate just before an election are just as effective as ones that directly solicit a vote," said Brent Ferguson, counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice who has followed the John Doe probe closely.

A sampling of the electioneering ads run by groups under investigation in the John Doe probe can be found here.

A Clear Political Purpose

The John Doe documents show that Walker and his allies believed that coordinating on the electioneering ads was critical to winning the elections they targeted.

Walker boasted of those activities in an email to Karl Rove, crediting R.J. Johnson and Wisconsin Club for Growth as "key to retaining Justice Prosser" and electing Justice Gableman.

And R.J. Johnson wrote up talking points for Walker to use in a donor call in which he touted their coordinated efforts as key to holding the Senate during the 2011 recall elections. "We needed to hold four of the six Republican Senators facing recalls last week in order to maintain our conservative majority in the state senate," Johnson wrote. "With your help and against all odds, we beat back the national unions and held our majority by a margin of 17-16."

Johnson went on to specifically discuss how Walker's dark money machine defeated Senate District 14 challenger Fred Clark.

"We also defined Democrat Fred Clark early. We used his horrendous driving record, failure to pay child support, and a recording of him saying he wanted to call a female constituent back and smack her around, to illustrate how Clark behaves when he thinks no one's watching. This angle was particularly helpful in eliminating Clark's advantage with independent women. We were behind by 2 points when we started this race and we won by 4."

The ad has been taken down and replaced with an odd cartoon, but the content of the ad is available here. Walker's team ultimately ran its ads slamming Clark for his driving record under the name of Wisconsin Family Action, a group that otherwise works on anti-abortion and marriage issues. Emails show Johnson confirming a switch from Wisconsin Club for Growth to Wisconsin Family action as the sponsor, and the ads are labeled "Respect: Olsen SD 14 (anti Fred Clark)."

There is no pretense to the ads being "issue advocacy."

Coordinated messaging was also central to Walker's operation. Walker campaign ads said he would take Wisconsin forward and Tom Barrett would take Wisconsin backwards, and ads for RGA and a mysterious group call Wisconsin Recall Action Fund echoed this theme. Wisconsin Recall Action fund may have been under the control of RGA, the new documents suggest.

Legal Implications

The extensive evidence of coordination around electioneering ads during the 2011 and 2012 elections that met the "functional equivalent" of express advocacy standard have the potential to trigger new legal tremors in Wisconsin.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court did not analyze any of the ads in reaching its decision to terminate the John Doe investigation. Instead, it summarily dismissed the case based on false assumptions and ordered the documents destroyed or returned.

Now it has nowhere left to hide.

Even without intervention by the U.S. Supreme Court, the John Doe documents and CMD's analysis reveal solid grounds for renewed legal proceedings to address the evidence of coordination around express advocacy expenditures and to enforce any laws broken by Governor Walker, his campaign associates, and the groups that collaborated with his dark money machine.
http://www.prwatch.org/news/2016/09/131 ... se-Premise
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
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seemslikeadream
 
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Re: Thousands fill the Capitol rotunda in Madison, Wis.

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Sep 28, 2016 5:13 pm

Editorial: Scott Walker’s thinly veiled threats against prosecutors are outrageous and dangerous
Cap Times editorial 9 hrs ago

Prodded by reporters regarding inquiries into alleged wrongdoing by his campaign team and its allies, Gov. Scott Walker last week made statements that can be interpreted as threats to prosecutors who might investigate that wrongdoing. PHOTO BY MICHELLE STOCKER
Gov. Scott Walker has imported into Wisconsin a politics that is more outrageous and more dangerous than anything the state has seen since the days of Sen. Joe McCarthy. Well aware that his ideas are unpopular, and that his approach to governing has frequently failed to keep Wisconsin competitive with neighboring states and national measures, he prevails by raising huge amounts of money from out-of-state billionaires and corporate interests and gaming the process with assaults on voting rights, gerrymandering schemes, and a calculated disregard for the rule of law.

Walker's winner-take-all approach to politics breaks faith with Wisconsin Democrats like Gaylord Nelson, John Reynolds and Patrick Lucey and with Wisconsin Republicans like Warren Knowles, Lee Sherman Dreyfus and Tommy Thompson. They were willing to engage in fair fights because they believed — correctly, it turned out — that they could win them.

Walker knows that he cannot win fair fights, that he cannot govern effectively, and that he cannot withstand scrutiny.

This has made him reckless and irresponsible.

But he has never been so reckless and irresponsible as he was last week.

Prodded by reporters regarding inquiries into alleged wrongdoing by his campaign team and its allies, the governor made statements that can — and should — be interpreted as threats to prosecutors who might investigate that wrongdoing.

Noting that Wisconsin prosecutors have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a ruling by the conservative majority on the state Supreme Court, which blocked an inquiry into his fundraising schemes involving his own campaigns and those of his legislative and judicial allies, Walker said: "I would think most people in the state would think after the U.S. Supreme Court rules on this that there’s certainly not a lack of work to be done in Milwaukee County on issues related to crime and on other issues. We hear, not only in that county, but in other counties, about the need for additional district attorneys and additional resources. I think a lot of people wonder, if they continue to spend time after the U.S. Supreme Court were to rule on this, if that’s really necessary, if they have time to spend on this even after the courts have shut it down."

The governor's office confirmed that his comments were targeting the Milwaukee County District Attorney's Office, which has taken the lead in pursuing a John Doe investigation into the alleged fundraising abuses by Walker and his associates. Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm and prosecutors from other counties asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the controversial decision to shut the probe down by a Walker-allied majority on the state high court.

State Rep. Chris Taylor, an attorney, describes Walker’s threatening comments as “outrageous.”


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"He seems to be sending a warning to district attorneys that they better not investigate any potential criminal activity by him,” explained the Madison Democrat.

Taylor is right.

What the governor is doing is wrong — and it should trouble not just his critics but responsible Republicans who have in the past defended him.

Walker's threatening language represents a serious abuse of his position. Law enforcement agencies and the Legislature have an immediate responsibility to examine whether his comments violate ethical and legal standards that the governor has sworn to uphold. At the same time, media outlets and the voters of Wisconsin have a responsibility to take note of the governor's increasingly erratic and irresponsible behavior.

Walker is under a great deal of stress. Documents published by The Guardian newspaper have exposed his behind-the-scenes maneuvering to raise tens of millions of dollars from billionaires and corporate interests across the country. The governor's own emails outline his efforts to influence legislative and judicial elections, and the emails of his associates have raised new concerns about potential violations of state and federal laws — and of ethical standards.

That's serious.

But what Walker has done now is even more serious.

When an elected executive "seems to be sending a warning to district attorneys that they better not investigate any potential criminal activity by him," the rule of law is threatened. No honorable Wisconsinite, no Democrat and no Republican, no liberal and no conservative, can let such a statement pass without loud and sustained objection.
http://host.madison.com/ct/opinion/edit ... 88811.html
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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seemslikeadream
 
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