
Cheney
overlooked in Klamath inquiry
By
Matthew Daly
ASSOCIATED PRESS
August
1, 2007
WASHINGTON
-- The Interior Department's inspector general did not find
political interference by Vice President Dick Cheney on a key
environmental policy in part because investigators were not looking for
it, an Interior official said Tuesday.
A 2004 report by the
inspector general found no basis for a claim by then-Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry that White House political advisers
interfered in developing water policy in the
Klamath
River basin
in
California
and
Oregon
.
But investigators did not
ask about Cheney -- and no Interior employee volunteered information
about him, said Mary Kendall, deputy Interior inspector general.
Sue Ellen Wooldridge, a
former high-ranking Interior official, told the Washington Post that
Cheney contacted her on a regular basis in 2001 and 2002, when the Bush
administration was reworking water policy for the drought-plagued basin.
Wooldridge, who oversaw
Klamath policy, never told investigators about her contacts with Cheney,
Kendall
said.
And because investigators
were focusing on White House political adviser Karl Rove -- who was
singled out in the Democratic complaint -- they did not ask about
Cheney,
Kendall
said.
"In the end, we
don't know what we don't know," she told members of the House
Natural Resources Committee at a hearing exploring Cheney's role in the
Klamath.
Democrats contend that
Cheney, by intervening on the side of farmers who needed water for
irrigation, contributed to a 2002 die-off
of
about 70,000 salmon, the largest adult salmon kill in the history of the
West.
Republicans counter that
there is no evidence that Cheney did anything improper, nor that his
actions were to blame for the fish kill.
Cheney declined to appear
at Tuesday's hearing, and a spokeswoman had no comment.
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore.,
told
Kendall
that he was "perplexed
by the notion that maybe Dick Cheney did something in the background
that you didn't spot."
Rep. John Doolittle,
R-Granite
Bay
, said he took the 2004
report to mean that Interior employees "didn't feel pressure from
Karl Rove, Vice President Cheney, the president, the pope or anyone
else."
But Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va.,
the panel's chairman, said Cheney has a history of acting in secret, and
that Wooldridge's comments to the Post conflicted with her statements to
Interior Department investigators.
Wooldridge, who has since
left government, could not be reached Tuesday.
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Source:
http://www.contracostatimes.com/environment/ci_6515296
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