By The Prowler on 6.1.09 @ 6:09AM
Meet Bruce Cohen -- and Mrs. Cohen. Also: Silencing the Obama
stimulus.
LEAHY'S BRAIN
As Vice President Joe Biden's
staff continues his PR offensive to make it clear he and his
senior aides will be critical to the confirmation of Supreme
Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, lost is the far
greater influence to the process: Judiciary Committee staff
director and key legal counsel to the committee chairman, Sen.
Patrick Leahy, Bruce A. Cohen.
Cohen, who earlier in his career worked with Arlen
Specter in a Philadelphia law firm and followed Specter
to Capitol Hill when the "new Democrat" was elected to the
Senate, is considered the key driver for the Democrat majority on
the Senate committee. Over the years he has waged battles over
Republican court nominations, such as appeals court nominee
Priscilla Owens. Current and former Judiciary
Committee staff say that Cohen was also influential in
maintaining support among Democrats on the committee to
filibuster George W. Bush nominees to the court of appeals:
Janice Rogers Brown, an African-American jurist,
and Miguel Estrada, a jurist of Hispanic
heritage. Brown was later confirmed to the D.C. Court of Appeals
after a two-year filibuster. Estrada withdrew himself from the
nomination process.
"The key argument that Cohen and others made was that to allow
either on the D.C. Court of Appeals would be an acknowledgement
that either was acceptable to Democrats as a potential Supreme
Court nominee down the road," says a former Democrat staffer on
Judiciary. "Bruce was important to that two-year filibuster; he
kept the Senators in line, held a lot of hands when Republican
pressure increased."
Cohen, who on several occasions has turned down opportunities to
be nominated to the federal bench, is not-so-jokingly called
"Leahy's Brain." "Senator Leahy can be petty and vindictive and
highly partisan," says the former staffer. "Cohen gives him the
legal and parliamentary rationale to be all those things within
the rules of the Senate."
Cohen, however, isn't without his own issues. He is married to
Mary Louise Cohen, a name partner in Phillips
& Cohen, one of the leading firms in the country for False
Claims Act litigation, in which an individual who is not
affiliated with the government can file a legal claim against
federal contractors claiming fraud against the government. Her
firm has won or settled cases in the hundreds of millions of
dollars. One of her most high-profile cases was an almost $1
billion dollar suit against TAP Pharmaceuticals over Medicare
fraud claims.
Last month, the Judiciary Committee stripped an amendment from
the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act (signed on May
20th) that would have capped False Claim Act awards.
Judiciary staff said that Leahy was one of the most vocal in
demanding that the amendment be stripped from the legislation,
but staffers interviewed declined to discuss who else was
involved in the decision. They did say that it was unclear
whether Cohen ever recused himself from working on the
legislation.
On the other side of the aisle, there are concerns about Sen.
Jeff Sessions' ability to lead
an aggressive fight against Sotomayor. While Leahy has split
funds to cover research and other expenses related to the
confirmation 50-50, Sessions has built the anti-thesis of Leahy's
staff. Where Cohen serves as both staff director and chief legal
counsel, Sessions, according to sources, has hired four different
people to fill slots that Leahy has filled with just two, Cohen
included. Already, Sessions has called for Republicans to be more
conciliatory in their remarks about Sotomayor by dropping the
charges of racism against some her comments.
"Sessions has to be given a chance; he's hired good people with
solid conservative credentials," says a former Republican staffer
on Judiciary. "He understands what's at stake, and he understands
that he has to fight for a vision of the court that most
Americans support, and that isn't the vision shared by Democrats
on the committee, or Sotomayor, for that matter."
SHUT UP ALREADY
Quietly late Friday, Norm Eisen, Special
Counsel to the President on Ethics and Government Reform,
released new federal rules that barred public comments from
any and all individuals with interests in the federal stimulus
funding program. Already federally registered lobbyists are
barred from making public comments about stimulus programs they
or their clients might be interested in, and which may influence
those federal officials determining where those stimulus dollars
go.
Now, the White House is barring public comment from any
individuals who might have an interest in the stimulus funding.
According to government ethics lawyers, this rule could extend to
a corporate official making a public speech in Washington, D.C.
that might garner extensive press attention.
Eisen claims that the decision to muzzle public discourse on the
stimulus funding was made with input from the Office of
Management and Budget. What Eisen doesn't say is that the
Department of Justice suggested that such a rule might not pass a
legal smell test. "We advised against the White House's
decision," says a career staffer in the DOJ's Office of Legal
Counsel. "It's an ambiguous rulemaking, and based on our input
previously on such issues, it appears to be intentionally so."
Three months into the almost trillion-dollar stimulus spending
plan, the Obama Administration is running into issues with the
program. Already, the administration has been caught overstating
the economic impact of the overall program, as well as lying
about funding. In one situation, White House spokesman
Robert Gibbs had to admit that a much-touted
D.C. housing project had received next to no federal stimulus
dollars, as the administration had previously claimed.
As well, in some cases, hundreds of billions of stimulus funding
will not be made available until mid-2010, a time when President
Obama has claimed the U.S. economy will be growing. "In my view,
that is why this rulemaking is being put in place," says the DOJ
source. "The money isn't going to be flowing out there fast
enough, people are going to be anxious and talking about it, and
the people most anxious are those trying to get the money."