-Caveat Lector-

<http://www.latimes.com/news/state/20010305/t000019544.html>

Monday, March 5, 2001 |  Print this story

Prosecutor Quits Over Boss' Role in Pardon

Scandal: An assistant U.S. attorney in Moscow protests his Los
Angeles supervisor's actions to secure a drug trafficker's
presidential commutation.

By JOHN DANISZEWSKI
Times Staff Writer

     MOSCOW--A Los Angeles-based prosecutor engaged in fighting
organized crime that originates in the former Soviet Union said
Sunday that he was resigning to protest the role that his boss,
U.S. Atty. Alejandro N. Mayorkas, played in winning the prison
release of a convicted cocaine trafficker.

     Assistant U.S. Atty. Duncan DeVille said that Mayorkas'
action--making a phone call to aides of former President Bill
Clinton on behalf of cocaine trafficker Carlos Vignali--made it
impossible for him to keep working in the narcotics unit of the
U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles.

     In a resignation letter to Mayorkas, he said: "I frequently
place in danger both my life and, more importantly the lives of
law enforcement agents, in the pursuit of drug dealers.
Accordingly I cannot support your recent actions in assisting in
the pardon" of Vignali.

     Mayorkas revealed last month that he had phoned the White
House counsel's office about Vignali's case at the urging of
Vignali's father, Horacio Vignali, a wealthy donor to political
candidates. "I think in hindsight I should not have made that
call to the White House," Mayorkas said.

     Clinton's brother-in-law Hugh Rodham took a $200,000 fee
from Horacio Vignali for pushing for the release but returned it
at Clinton's insistence after the controversy broke out.

     The younger Vignali, of Los Angeles, was convicted of
conspiracy to move more than 800 pounds of cocaine within the
United States. He was sentenced in 1994 to 15 years in prison but
was released after the former president's decision to commute his
sentence Jan. 20, the last day of the Clinton administration.

     The decision was one of 176 acts of clemency that Clinton
granted on his last day in office and was widely criticized by
law enforcement officials, including members of the U.S.
attorney's office in Minnesota, which had won the original
conviction.

     DeVille, a 37-year-old career prosecutor, said in an
interview in Moscow that he felt compelled to resign in part
because of his dealings with prosecutors in Russia and Armenia,
where questions about corruption and the rule of law are highly
pertinent.

     DeVille was in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, launching a
Justice Department program in which federal prosecutors in Los
Angeles work with their Armenian counterparts to fight corruption
when news of the Vignali pardon reached him.

     "I'd been a proponent of the rule of law and preaching the
gospel of the rule of law in Eastern Europe for the past few
years," he said. "Now suddenly I started getting asked by
prosecutors about this pardon. . . . I kept being called a
hypocrite."

     DeVille, a specialist in criminal groups from Russia and
Armenia that operate in Southern California, said his faxed
resignation to Mayorkas will take effect in 60 days. He was in
Moscow to take depositions from a Russian witness in a federal
extortion case.

     Before joining the U.S. attorney's office two years ago,
DeVille said, he had been in Russia in connection with an
American Bar Assn. project on judicial reform in Eastern Europe.
Before that, he was an assistant attorney general for the state
of Colorado and an assistant district attorney in Denver.

     Other Southern California public figures besides Mayorkas
who wrote or called the White House on the Vignali matter in the
waning days of the Clinton presidency were Los Angeles County
Sheriff Lee Baca, Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Los Angeles), Cardinal
Roger M. Mahony, Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina,
former Rep. Esteban Torres, state Sen. Richard Polanco and former
state Assembly Speaker Antonio Villaraigosa.

     Since the revelations, Mahony and Villaraigosa have said
they erred in getting involved in the case. Baca has admitted
making calls regarding Vignali, but denied that he supported a
commutation.

=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

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                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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