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11.09.2008 1:28 am

McCulloch, Callahan generate U.S. attorney talk

Special to the Post-Dispatch
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Last Tuesday’s election of Democrat Barack Obama as the nation’s next president is setting off the usual jockeying for jobs and key appointments in a new administration.

In Missouri, most of the speculation deals with regional posts. And two of the most sought-after are the U.S. attorney slots for Missouri’s eastern and western districts.

The eastern district U.S. attorney is Catherine Hanaway of west St. Louis County. She’s the former state House speaker who made an unsuccessful bid for secretary of state in 2004. She also is a longtime protege of Sen. Christopher “Kit” Bond, R-Mo.

The western district U. S. attorney is John F. Wood. He’s also close to Bond, who was cited in a recent report as having been a key figure in forcing out then-U.S. Attorney Todd Graves from the job in 2005; Graves is the brother of U.S. Rep. Sam Graves, R-Tarkio, whose office often has been at odds with Bond’s. Bond has denied taking any inappropriate action.

A little background:

U.S. attorneys are to enforce the law in a nonpartisan manner. However, their appointments have a political aspect. Most have key connections. All serve at the pleasure of the president, and generally are replaced when there is a new one. As a rule, they serve four-year terms.

(The flap over the ‘05-’07 replacement or firing of various U.S. attorneys, including Graves and his successor, Bradley J. Schlozman, dealt with the fact that they were being removed in mid-term, and some of them were alleging it was for political reasons, not performance.)

U.S. attorneys often are close to key political figures in their party. (When both of Missouri’s U.S. senators were Republicans, it was U.S. Rep. Dick Gephardt, D-St. Louis County, who played a major role in their selection during fellow Democrat Bill Clinton’s administration.)

That said, Obama’s election means that Bond no longer will wield as much power in the U.S. attorney selection in Missouri. That clout shifts to U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., a close Obama ally.

Rumors are circulating that the contenders could include St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch, who stuck his neck out for McCaskill in ‘04, when he endorsed her bid to oust a fellow Democrat, then-Gov. Bob Holden.

Also being named: Cole County Judge Richard Callahan, also seen as close to various Democrats.

By the way, Hanaway has gotten good marks from the local law-enforcement and judicial community, so it may be interesting to see how she is treated during all this maneuvering. A political person herself, Hanaway no doubt recognizes what Obama’s election likely means, as far as her future tenure in her current job.

14 comments

Comments are closed.

This is bogus speculation about McCulloch. He is never going to leave the job he has now because he loves being St. Louis County Prosecutor. Why on earth would he want to trade that for a federal DA position? It makes no sense.

Second, Callahan is a Republican. As such, he’s not going to get an appointment from Obama.

— oyboy
11:48 pm November 9th, 2008

Callahan is a Democrat, not a Republican. Here is his biography from the Official Manual of Missouri. Note the last word.

Circuit 19—Division 2
RICHARD G. CALLAHAN
Office address: Cole County Courthouse, 301 E. High, PO Box
1870, Jefferson City 65102; phone (573) 634-9190.
Home address: Jefferson City 65109.
County: Cole.
Biography: Born April 22, 1947, in St. Louis. Educated at Georgetown
University, A.B., 1968; Georgetown University Law School,
J.D., 1972. Served as assistant circuit attorney, St. Louis, 1972–1978;
assistant prosecuting attorney, Cole County, 1979–1986; prosecuting
attorney, Cole County, 1987–2002. Missouri Prosecutor’s Association,
past president; National District Attorney Association, past
vice president; American Bar Association: Council member of Criminal
Justice Section, 1996–2002; House of Delegates, 2000–2002;
Criminal Justice Standards Comm., 2003–present; Supreme Court
Comm., Procedure on Criminal Cases, 1983–present. Elected circuit
judge: 2002. Term expires December 31, 2008. Democrat.

— sallyD
12:35 am November 10th, 2008

This is some false advertising!!! When I clicked on the link to this entry, the headline at stltoday.com said CARNAHAN was being mentioned for U.S. attorney. Come to find out it’s some guy named CALLAHAN.

— bond
9:21 am November 10th, 2008

sallyD,

You’d never make it as a profiler. Ed’s ego wouldn’t let him post anonymously or by using an alias.

Does the end justify the means? Is your partisanship clouding your judgment?

We have a judge that suggested usurpation of executive authority. An AG that went along with the judge. And resulting appointments the baptized the court with Republican and Democrat versions of the law.

Judge Callahan has unconstitutionally usurped Executive authority, and introduced partisanship into the court.

This isn’t law, and it’s not justice as the citizens of Missouri know it.

“In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed, and next oblige it to control itself.” —James Madison

“But let there be no change by usurpation; for though this, in one instance, may be the instrument of good, it is the customary weapon by which free governments are destroyed.” -George Washington; Farewell Address

— hyper-vigilant
9:26 am November 10th, 2008

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