LEAKING AND PLOTTING br> As another Department of Justice paper dump related to the botched firings of eight U.S. Attorneys takes place on
Capitol Hill today, it is becoming increasingly clear that Department of Justice insiders have been using the controversy to perpetrate what
some Bush Administration loyalists are calling a "coup." Those activities appear to be occurring in the offices of the Deputy Attorney
General and the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys. /p>
According to Senate Judiciary sources, committee chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy has asked his Democratic attorneys to examine whether Deputy
Attorney General Paul McNulty's chief of staff, Michael J. Elston -- by calling one of the outgoing U.S. Attorneys and discouraging him from
speaking too negatively about the events -- might have attempted to obstruct the House and Senate's investigations of the U.S. Attorney
firings. Elston has disputed that the calls were threatening.
The Republican staff on the Senate Judiciary Committee, meanwhile, is looking into improper sharing of Department of Justice personnel
records by career DOJ employees with members of the legal community.
"We've seen evidence that some state and federal judges with ties to the Democrat Party were given personnel and performance review materials
about certain U.S. Attorneys across the country," says a Judiciary Committee staffer. "Some of the review materials were never seen by the
Attorney General and his staff, but were reviewed within the Deputy Attorney General's office, as well as by professional staff at the
Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys. [The leaks were] clearly part of a campaign to embarrass the U.S. Attorneys."
Meanwhile, The American Spectator has learned that members of McNulty's staff are supporting the possible nomination to one of the vacant
U.S. Attorney slots of a former government lawyer who had an affair with a colleague and now resides with not one, but two women in what some
in the DAG's office have termed a "tri-sexual" relationship.
"That residential situation would be adjusted if the name was put forward," says someone familiar with the thinking in McNulty's office.
The White House continues to struggle with the ongoing controversy over the Department of Justice's decision to push out eight U.S. Attorneys
last December, in part because of leaks that continue over at the Department of Justice.
"Judge [Alberto] Gonzales is not being well served by people in senior positions over there, who perhaps see an opportunity to push him out
the door to create opportunities for others," says a White House source.
When asked to be specific, the source declined, but others inside the White House and the DOJ suspect that the staff of Deputy Attorney
General McNulty has been the most active, anti-Gonzales leakers in the past week.