Originally published June 22, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified July 3, 2007 at 12:32 PM
Corrected version
Embattled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to speak here
Next week, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will make his first visit to Seattle since U.S. Attorney John McKay was forced out in a purge...
The Associated Press
Wednesday appearance
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U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will speak about the Department of Justice's efforts to protect intellectual property and combat cyber crime
Date: Wednesday
Time: 8:30 a.m.- 9:15 a.m.
Location: The Seattle Westin Hotel Grand Ballroom 1
RSVP: John Drescher at jdrescher@technet.org
Source: TechNet Northwest
Next week, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will make his first visit to Seattle since U.S. Attorney John McKay was forced out in a purge that prompted a continuing congressional investigation.
Gonzales is scheduled to deliver a 45-minute speech Wednesday at the Westin Hotel's Grand Ballroom on the Justice Department's efforts to protect intellectual property and combat cyber crime. Justice Department spokesman Evan Peterson declined to confirm details of Gonzales' schedule, but he is also expected to visit the U.S. Attorney's Office in Seattle.
Wednesday appearance
![]()
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will speak about the Department of Justice's efforts to protect intellectual property and combat cyber crime
Date: Wednesday
Time: 8:30 a.m.- 9:15 a.m.
Location: The Seattle Westin Hotel Grand Ballroom 1
RSVP: John Drescher at jdrescher@technet.org
Source: TechNet Northwest
The speech is being sponsored by TechNet Northwest, a political coalition of technology executives, and promoted by the Discovery Institute, a think tank best known for its support of "intelligent design" as an alternative to the theory of evolution.
Gonzales has not been to Seattle since he became attorney general.
McKay, the Justice Department's top lawyer in Washington since 2001, was ordered to resign last year along with eight other U.S. attorneys. Questions were raised about whether some of them were fired because they refused to pursue claims of vote fraud — a favorite topic of White House strategist Karl Rove — or because of their handling of public-corruption investigations.
Gonzales testified before Congress in April that McKay was fired because of concerns about his "judgment," specifically in the way he pushed for better information-sharing among law-enforcement agencies.
Last month, however, the House Judiciary Committee released a document showing that McKay was targeted for firing in March 2005 — more than a year before any concerns about McKay's judgment had been raised, and during the height of the controversy over the gubernatorial election in Washington state.
The Republican in the race, Dino Rossi, lost to Democrat Christine Gregoire after two recounts, and many in the state GOP had called on McKay to investigate whether fraud was involved.
McKay had assembled a team to investigate any evidence that surfaced but has said there was none.
Due to a wire service error, the original version of this story stated Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' appearance in Seattle is free and open to the public. The event is not open to the public.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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