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Chris Matthews should be fired
Media Matters
Matthews falsely claimed Democrats accused Alito of being "lenient on the
mob"
November 1, 2005
During MSNBC's October 31 coverage of the nomination of Judge Samuel A.
Alito Jr. to the Supreme Court, Hardball host Chris Matthews repeatedly
misrepresented a document about Alito that was circulated by Democrats.
Matthews falsely claimed that the document accused Alito of being "lenient on
the mob" and made the baseless assertion that, by mentioning a case involving
organized crime, Democrats were "go[ing] after [Alito's Italian] ethnicity." In
fact, the document, available here, made no mention of Alito's ethnicity and
simply noted that he lost a high-profile mob case -- not that he was "lenient"
on anybody.
Though Matthews repeatedly waved the document in front of the cameras, he
quoted from it only once -- and that quote in no way supported his description
of the document.
Further, Matthews's descriptions of the document grew increasingly
inaccurate as the day wore on. In his first reference to it, at roughly 2:30
p.m. ET, he described it as "going after ethnicity"; by the time he interviewed
Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean at 5:45 p.m., that
inaccurate description had morphed into a completely fabricated claim that the
document accused Alito of being "lenient on the mob."
Matthews's comments were approvingly quoted by the Republican National
Committee and by Tim Chapman, a former Republican congressional aide who now
writes for the conservative website Townhall.com. Conservative weblogs,
including Captain's Quarters, RedState.org and Blogs for Bush, accused
Democrats of "smearing" Alito based on the same misrepresentation of the
document, and conservative websites WorldNetDaily and NewsMax repeated
Matthews's false accusation.
Matthews's misrepresentation of the document began during an exchange with
MSNBC host Lisa Daniels:
DANIELS: Joining us right now with more on the nomination of Samuel
Alito is Hardball's Chris Matthews. Always good to get your take, Chris. Of
course, conservatives extremely happy with this nomination. I guess let's cut
to the chase: Do you think that we're going to see a filibuster?
MATTHEWS: Well, I don't know, I mean the Democrats, I've got a, I'm
sitting here holding in my hands a pretty disgusting document. This is a, uh,
put out for not for attribution, but it comes from the Democrats. They're
circulating it, I can say that. And in their complaint sheet against Judge
Alito's nomination, the first thing they nail about this Italian-American is he
failed to win a mob conviction in a trial 20 years ago or -- way back in '88.
In other words, they nail him on not putting, putting some mobst -- Italian
mobsters in jail, the Lucchese family. Why would they bring up this ethnically
charged issue as the first item they raise against Judge Alito? This is either
a bad, a very bad coincidence, or very bad politics. And either way, it's going
to hurt them. This document -- not abortion rights, not civil rights, the fact
he failed to nail some mobsters back in 1988. And this is at the top of their
list of what they got against this guy. Amazingly bad politics.
DANIELS: I mean, why even go to that route? Why not attack him if
you're a liberal or you're a Senate Democrat, and you don't like his
nomination, why not just openly say, "We fear for abortion rights. We think
that -- "
MATTHEWS: Well, I have to ask that. Why did they put this document
out? I'm telling you, this is going to hurt the Democrats for putting this out.
They shouldn't be going after ethnicity for an Italian-American with an
incredible record like this as a prosecutor, as a judge, as a Yale Law grad. I
don't understand this kind of politics, unless they got some thimble-wit over
there who accidentally put this at the top of 20 or so items, the fact that,
the guy being an Italian-American, he didn't nail a conviction in a mob case in
'88, that's, uh, let's see, 12, 17 years ago? They're going after this case
'cause he didn't get a conviction? Interesting.
DANIELS: Who -- what -- the document that you have in your hand,
Chris, who signed it?
MATTHEWS: It's called, it's just, I was given it by another pro-,
by one of the producers at NBC, it's called, uh, Democrats are circulating this
document. And they're trying not to put a signature on it, but I've just put it
on it: it's from them.
But the document, posted on Chapman's Townhall.com weblog, makes absolutely
no reference to "ethnicity." None. Neither Alito's "ethnicity" nor that of the
"mobsters" in question is mentioned in the document. Nor is the word "Italian"
used anywhere in the document; the Lucchese family is described simply as
living "in the New Jersey suburbs of New York." The only person to bring up
"ethnicity" in discussing Alito's handling of the case was Matthews. The first
person to inject Alito's Italian heritage into a discussion of Alito's handling
of a mob case was Matthews.
Further, Matthews's question about why Democrats would bring up the Lucchese
case in discussing a nominee "with an incredible record like this as a
prosecutor" answers itself: Alito's handling of the Lucchese case could cast
doubt on that "incredible record."
As the Democratic document noted, a contemporaneous Chicago Tribune article
described the case as a "stunning defeat" for the government. The August 27,
1988, Tribune article noted that the case, which was "believed to be the
nation's longest federal criminal trial," concluded with the acquittal of all
20 defendants on 77 separate charges after a jury deliberation of 14 hours. An
August 26, 1988, United Press International article noted that the defense had
rested its case "without producing a single witness." The Tribune quoted
assistant U.S. attorney V. Grady O'Malley concluding that the jury "resented
the length (of the trial) and the breadth of the indictment."
According to the Tribune:
The jury began deliberating ... with a record to consider that
included 40,000 pages of transcripts, testimony from 89 witnesses and 850
exhibits, including 400 tapes. The government's star witness was Joseph Alonzo,
a diagnosed schizophrenic, an admitted alcoholic and drug addict, and a
convicted criminal who had shot one of the defendants -- his cousin -- five
times.
[...]
U.S. Atty. Samuel Alito, who came to office after the indictment
was unsealed, said he had no regrets about the prosecution but in the future
would try to keep cases "as short and simple as possible."
"Despite this loss, the days of the Mafia are numbered," Alito
said.
According to the Administrative Office of the Courts in Washington,
the trial surpassed in length the "Pizza Connection" heroin smuggling case,
which ended after 17 months in March, 1987.
On Hardball, Matthews brought up the document again at the beginning of a
segment featuring Sens. Orrin G. Hatch (R-UT) and Ben Nelson (D-NE). Among
other statements, Matthews described Democrats as "attacking Judge Alito for
not being tough enough on the rackets." But the document said nothing about
whether Alito was "tough enough" on organized crime; it simply said he lost the
case.
Later on Hardball, during an interview with Dean, Matthews's description of
the document evolved further, as he claimed the "first attack [in the document]
is that he was lenient on the mob back in an '88 case. He let the Lucchese
family get off." This is a completely false description of the document.
Nowhere does it suggest that Alito was "lenient on the mob" or that he "let the
Lucchese family get off." The document simply said Alito lost the case;
Matthews claimed the document accused Alito of intentionally losing the
case.
Matthews's questioning about the document concluded with his assertion that
"everybody" sees "a little ethnic aspect to this":
MATTHEWS: So, you don't sense a little ethnic aspect to this? The
fact that he is Italian-American. They nailed the number one issue against this
guy is mob, that he's weak on the mob. You don't see that?
DEAN: No, I don't.
MATTHEWS: I think everybody else does. I see it.
From the October 31 edition of MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews:
MATTHEWS: Let me ask you, Senator Hatch, I know a lot of tactics
are used to defeat these nominations. The Democrats are circulating a hit sheet
headed by the charge that Sam Alito, the president's nominee for associate
justice of the Supreme Court, quote, "embarrassed the government by failing to
obtain a crucial Mafia conviction back in '88. He failed to convict the
Lucchese family in New Jersey." Why do you think they lead their attack on him
with a charge involving the mob?
HATCH: I don't know. But if you look at his career, and you look at
his career as a judge, he's as tough on crime as anybody we've ever seen. I
don't know what happened in that case, but sometimes cases are difficult to
prove.
But let me just say this: That's despicable conduct. That's
something that really hits below the belt. It's something that shouldn't
happen. And frankly, I'm very upset at any Democrat that would try and throw
that kind of stuff around. Alito really is a solid, brilliant jurist who is
tough on crime.
MATTHEWS: This hit sheet ignores the fact that within a year he
brought a major prosecution to conviction against the Genovese family, knocking
down and putting the top guy in the rackets there. And they gave him no credit
for that, but yet they point to this acquittal as supposedly significant, as
the top issue they raise here on this hit sheet they are circulating today, the
Democrats.
HATCH: That shows how hysterical some of the Democrats are. They
are just shook up that the president has nominated a very, very top-flight
conservative, a man of brilliance and capacity who has worked in public service
for over 30 years now and who has been on the federal bench on the 3rd Circuit
Court of Appeals now for 15 years, doing a very good job. One of the most
respected judges in the country. So there's no excuse for that type of
irresponsible behavior on the part of some Democrats. I don't know who they,
but I hope it's nobody in the Senate.
MATTHEWS: OK. Let me go right now to Senator Nelson. What do you
think about this attack by the Democrats, being circulated by the Democrats
today? They put it out within 17 minutes of the nomination this morning,
attacking Judge Alito for not being tough enough on the rackets.
NELSON: Well, I think that kind of attack just will speak for
itself. But we do want to have a process that's both rigorous and fair, because
it's a lifetime appointment. We want to make sure we make no mistakes in
putting people on the Supreme Court bench. There will be those who will be
overeager, those who will do the attacks. There will be cheerleading and attack
dogging, and we've got to expect that. But at the end of the day, as this
unfolds, I think we'll find out more about Judge Alito, and we'll be able to
make an informed decision about whether or not he should sit on the Supreme
Court bench.
[...]
MATTHEWS: Howard Dean is chairman of the Democratic National
Committee. Thank you, sir, for coming in. I know this is unfortunate for you,
but somebody in the Democratic party is putting out an attack sheet on this new
justice nominee for the Supreme Court, Sam Alito. And the first attack is that
he was lenient on the mob back in an '88 case. He let the Lucchese family get
off. It says he was an embarrassment to the government. And here is a guy that
has been tough on crime. Why start off on that issue?
DEAN: Well, first of all, I didn't put it out, but somebody did, so
I'll be responsible for it.
MATTHEWS: Well, it was put out by Democrats, but go
on.
DEAN: The president put out a sheet this morning, Republican
talking points. One of the things he said was that Judge Alito was a
spectacular prosecutor. Well, it turns out he wasn't quite so spectacular, and
he lost some important cases. And one of which those guys, in that particular
case, those guys all got off, 20 of them, without even putting up a defense
witness. So, at least in that particular case that's an example.
MATTHEWS: What about the Genovese case the year later, where he won
the conviction and put three big guys away, including the top guy in New
Jersey?
DEAN: I think it's great. All I'm trying to say is, you know, this
guy is not the best prosecutor since sliced bread. Look --
MATTHEWS: So, you don't sense a little ethnic aspect to this? The
fact that he is Italian-American. They nailed the number one issue against this
guy is mob, that he's weak on the mob. You don't see that?
DEAN: No, I don't.
MATTHEWS: I think everybody else does. I see it.
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