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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Gun for hire': how Jeff Sessions used his prosecuting power to target Democrats
Arthur Outlaw wanted a second term.
It was 1989 and Outlaw, the Republican mayor of Mobile, Alabama, was girding himself for his re-election campaign. Word was that Lambert Mims, a popular local Democrat, would run against him. Some Republicans were growing skittish.
But a close friend of Outlaws had something planned. The friend had been president of the state Young Republicans, chairman of the regional GOP, then a senior official in the Mobile County Republican party. And now he was the top federal prosecutor in southern Alabama.
Jeff says that Mims wont be around by that time, an Outlaw aide said ominously, while discussing the election at a City Hall meeting that February, according to a sworn affidavit from an official who was in the room.
A few months later, Mims confirmed that he would be challenging Outlaw. Then Jeff Sessions made his move.
Sessions, then the US attorney for Alabamas southern district, indicted Mims on criminal corruption charges relating to obscure four-year-old negotiations over a planned recycling plant. Mims was the ninth notable Democrat in the area to be indicted by Sessions since the young Republican was appointed by President Ronald Reagan. He would not be the last.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/gun-for-hire-how-jeff-sessions-used-his-prosecuting-power-to-target-democrats/ar-AAnM7KW?li=BBnbcA1&ocid=edgsp
gademocrat7
(10,658 posts)Gabi Hayes
(28,795 posts)dalton99a
(81,513 posts)Initech
(100,079 posts)And now that party power has become self aware.