WASHINGTON (AP) — The conservative-dominated U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has published a report criticizing the Justice Department for its handling of voting rights accusations against the New Black Panther Party.
The report has been published on the commission's
website. It says the department has failed to cooperate with the investigation
and left open the question of whether political interference played a role in
limiting action against the New Black Panther Party.
Two lawyers who formerly worked in the department's
Voting Rights section have described hostility from senior officials and career
attorneys to pursuing Voting Rights Act accusations against minorities who
harass white voters.
The department has repeatedly denied that race
played any role in its handling of the 2008 incident in Philadelphia.
The department investigated complaints that New
Black Panther Party leaders King Samir Shabazz and Jerry Jackson intimidated
white voters at a Philadelphia polling place. A criminal investigation into the
episode was dropped by the Bush administration, but the Justice Department
under Obama obtained a narrower civil court order against the conduct than Bush
officials sought.
Evidence obtained by the commission puts the
department's "version of events into serious doubt," says the report.
It relies heavily on the testimony of former Voting Rights lawyers Christopher
Coates and J. Christian Adams.
The commission adopted the report by a 5-2 vote
when it met on November 19, but did not immediately make it public. The
Republican and independent appointees voted to adopt the report, while the two Democratic
appointees voted against it.
Abigail Thernstrom, a Republican appointee who has
been critical of the commission's inquiry, was absent.
Thernstrom has said accusations against the
department are overblown, especially considering that there is no evidence that
the presence of the New Black Panther leaders scared anyone away from voting.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.






