By Kane Webb on 3.16.07 @ 12:08AM
"It looks a lot like politics."
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- If you knew Tim Griffin only by what you'd
read about him in the press of late, here's how you might describe
the new U.S. attorney from Arkansas:
Political hack. Hatchet man for the Republicans. Legal degree no
doubt from Shyster Sam's Law Schools R Us. Shoe-shiner for Karl
Rove. Wholly unqualified for any post higher than, well,
shoe-shiner for Karl Rove. Torpedoed the career of one of the Most
Distinguished Lawyers in Arkansas -- no, the world -- as a reward
for, well, shining Karl Rove's shoes.
The final blow: Having been a major player in the Great U.S.
Attorneys Purge and having raised the suspicious ire of nice-guy
Mark Pryor, Arkansas' junior U.S. senator and leading Griffin
opponent, Griffin must be Evil Incarnate. End of story. Start of
caricature.
The other day, in an Editorial Observer column for the New
York Times headlined "Why Have So Many U.S. Attorneys Been
Fired? It Looks a Lot Like Politics," Adam Cohen took aim at Mr.
Griffin, who replaced his former boss as the U.S. Attorney for the
Eastern District of Arkansas. Wrote Cohen:
The firing of H. E. Cummins III is raising...questions.
Mr. Cummins, one of the most distinguished lawyers in Arkansas, is
respected by Republicans and Democrats alike. But he was forced out
to make room for J. Timothy Griffin, a former Karl Rove deputy with
thin legal experience who did opposition research for the
Republican National Committee....An obvious question is whether the
administration was more interested in his successor's skills in
opposition political research -- let's not forget that Arkansas has
been lucrative fodder for Republicans in the past -- in time for
the 2008 election.
Given his recent press -- nearly all of it bad -- you might suspect
that J. Timothy Griffin of Magnolia, Ark., also had three heads to
go with his obligatory horns, tail and pitchfork.
Luckily, lots of Arkansans know the real Tim Griffin, a
fifth-generation Arkie, politico and lawyer who has a reputation
for being aggressive, smart, and loyal. But just who is that H. E.
Cummins III fellow? Oh, Cohen must mean Bud Cummins. He's a swell
guy who seemed to do fine as a U.S. attorney, but probably not even
ol' Bud would describe himself as "one of the most distinguished
lawyers in Arkansas." At least not with a straight face.
Cummins ran for Congress in the '90s, then served briefly in the
Arkansas governor's office as legal counsel before being appointed
U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas. Nobody
complained about ol' Bud's legal experience.
NOW LET'S LOOK CLOSER at Griffin's "thin legal experience," shall
we? First off, Griffin is a cum laude graduate of Tulane's law
school in New Orleans and is a member of both the Arkansas and
Louisiana bars. He studied at Pembroke College in Oxford, England,
and received his undergraduate degree in economics (again cum
laude) at one of Arkansas' finest private institutions, Hendrix
College. (Locally famous, irony of ironies, as a liberal enclave.)
Second off, he's spent 10 years as an officer in the Army Reserve,
during which time Major Griffin of the Judge Advocate General's
Corps served as a prosecutor at Fort Campbell, Ky. You may remember
the notorious case about the private who tried to murder his
platoon sergeant. Major Griffin prosecuted it -- and 40 other
criminal cases.
This also isn't his first stint in the U.S. attorney's office in
Arkansas. He previously served as a special assistant in that
office, under Distinguished Counselor Cummins, and handled drug and
firearm cases. He organized a state-federal effort to reduce gun
violence, an exercise styled Project Safe Neighborhoods. Assessing
this "thin legal experience," an editorialist in the Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette wrote of Griffin: "For a partisan appointee,
Tim Griffin makes a pretty nonpartisan law-and-order guy."
Indeed, Adam Cohen's favorite lawyer, Bud Cummins -- excuse me,
H. E. Cummins III -- once called Griffin his "right hand" in the
U.S. attorney's office. But the most impressive endorsement of all
comes from Griffin's superior officers. Consider this from his
Officer Evaluation Report in 2005, before he was promoted from
captain to major: "[Captain] Griffin is an extraordinary soldier
and attorney.... In addition to his outstanding management and
leadership skills, [Captain] Griffin's reputation for cogent and
precise legal analysis, writing and advocacy is outstanding." --
Lieutenant Colonel Scott Romans.
And this from another superior officer, Lieutenant Colonel
Stephen Price: "[Captain] Griffin's legal analysis and advocacy
skills are superb....He maintains the highest ethical
standards...."
Another superior called Griffin "a born litigator." And because
of his background and evaluation ratings, Griffin was chosen to
deploy to Iraq shortly after he began work as a special assistant
to the president at the start of Bush's second term. Surely a Rove
Flunkie could have gotten out of that, no?
But none of these facts matter when it comes to partisan
politics. Legal expertise, military experience, glowing evaluation
reports, promotions, duty to country... all that is meaningless to
the usual partisan suspects. Why? Because J. Timothy Griffin not
only has the audacity to be a loyal Republican but had the
unmitigated gall to help George W. Bush get re-elected.
Scandalous!
AND GET THIS, KIDS: He wasn't ashamed of it. Google up Tim Griffin
and you'll find stories like "Oppo Man On the Attack" in the
Washington Post circa 2003 -- complete with photos and
quotes and everything. Griffin may have thought he was just being
up-front and honest, but what he ended up doing was handing some
cheap ammo to the demagogues, which, uncharacteristically, seem to
include Arkansas' Senator Pryor.
Pryor usually isn't one for personal attacks or vendettas. His
father, former U.S. Senator David Pryor, is legendary in Arkansas
for his gentlemanly manner. And it's clear Pryor the Younger got
the good-guy gene.
But the current Senator Pryor seems personally offended by the
political appointment of Tim Griffin to this political post. Could
it be because Griffin was dispatched to Arkansas by the RNC in the
waning weeks of Pryor's '02 campaign for U.S. Senate against
Republican incumbent Tim Hutchinson? And that Griffin's job was,
yes, Oppo Research in an effort to turn out the GOP vote -- such as
it is in true-blue Arkansas? (Pryor won easily.)
Do we hear a "Duh" from the cheap seats?
Although Camp Pryor has complained about the interim appointment
of Griffin circumventing the precious Process of nomination and
subsequent senatorial circus, listen to what Pryor's spokesman
Michael Teague, told the Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette:
"The one thing that stands out is that [Griffin] worked
for Karl Rove in the West Wing of the White House. Is he getting
special treatment?...Is he going to make good legal decisions or is
he going to make political decisions?"
Because, you see, not only is Tim Griffin a Republican, which is
bad enough, but he has a connection to...Karl Rove! Which clearly
trumps everything else on his impressive resume, including that
year he spent dodging IED's just outside Baghdad.
A few days ago, Mark Pryor's office sent out a press release
expounding upon the senator's strong support for military men and
women, how he's spent "much of his time in office fighting for
military personnel and their families." Just not, apparently, Major
Tim Griffin.
The senator's press release would be kind of funny if it didn't
look a lot like politics.
topics:
Economics, Law, Military, Iraq, NATO