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Letter From Congressman Bill Delahunt to AG Holder Regarding Sholom Rubashkin


Congressman Bill Delahunt (D-Mass) – who sits on the Judiciary Committee – this letter last week to Attorney General Eric Holder regarding Sholom Rubashkin. 

Dear Mr. Attorney General:

Like many Americans, not just those of us who serve as Members of Congress on the Judiciary Committee, I am committed to see that justice is served fairly for all who come before our courts.  In the vast majority of cases, defendants are afforded fair process and, if found guilty, are sentenced fairly. But this is not always true. One particular case that has come to my attention illustrates clearly and tragically that injustice happens, and that grossly disparate sentences are sometimes imposed.  I refer to the criminal prosecution of Sholom Rubashkin.

Rubashkin is the former manager of the Agriprocessors kosher meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa that was raided by the government in May 2008. Although initially arrested on immigration-law violations, all such charges were subsequently dismissed by the government; and Rubashkin was tried and found guilty of bank fraud and related white-collar crimes in November 2009. He was sentenced in June 2010 to 27 years in prison; two years beyond what even the government recommended.

This case raises very serious issues of judicial and prosecutorial misconduct, resulting in an unfair and grossly disparate sentence.  I believe these allegations are sufficiently serious to warrant an investigation by you.

Rubashkin’s harsh, 27-year sentence raises a number of troubling concerns.  He is a first-time offender and was found guilty of white-collar violations with no hint of violence or physical harm to anyone. The federal judge — the Honorable Linda Reade of the Northern District of Iowa — gave what amounts to a life sentence for a 51-year-old man.  The sentence has been criticized by many lawyers and legal scholars, including six former U.S. attorneys general who publicly called on the trial judge to impose a fair sentence consistent with other, similar cases.  Instead, the judge imposed a sentence greater than even the prosecutors were seeking.  This 27-year sentence is far greater than many sentences imposed on other defendants convicted of far more serious white-collar crimes. 

The process by which the government and the judge arrived at and justified such a disproportionate sentence is troubling as well. 

For example, after the Agriprocessors firm went into bankruptcy as a result of the May 2008 raid, the government deliberately hampered the ability of the trustee to sell the company’s considerable assets (including the good will of the Rubashkin name) at a fair price in order to minimize any loss to the Iowa bank that had extended the company credit.  Moreover, the government unnecessarily included a forfeiture clause in the initial, immigration-based indictment; this also dramatically reduced the marketability of the plant’s assets.

The government also substantially reduced the value of Agriprocessors after it went into bankruptcy, by preventing potential purchasers from having any association with members of the Rubashkin family, including those not accused of any crime. The government trustee further lowered the value of Agriprocessors by mishandling inventory at the Postville plant. The resulting decrease in the value of Agriprocessors significantly inflated the “loss” for Sentencing Guidelines purposes. 

In short, these deliberate steps by the government had the effect of significantly boosting Rubashkin’s Sentencing Guideline numbers, in order to provide justification for the judge to impose an excessive and disproportionate sentence.

There are other troubling aspects of this case, Mr. Attorney General, such as the fact that the federal judge who presided over the trial of Rubashkin improperly engaged in numerous and detailed, ex parte discussions in the six months preceding the May 2008 raid with the Office of the United States Attorney and immigration officials. None of this was disclosed by either the judge or the prosecutors to the lawyers representing Rubashkin. They discovered it only recently in reviewing a large quantity of documents received post-sentencing as a result of an earlier FOIA inquiry. 

These facts seem to raise some of the same concerns that caused you to take the extraordinary but commendable step of dropping charges last year against former Sen. Ted Stevens as a result of government misconduct.  In my view, withholding information relating to possible recusal of a judge is as serious as withholding exculpatory evidence.

To date, however, the Department of Justice has been unwilling to inquire into the Iowa prosecutors’ handling of the Rubashkin case.  Lanny Breuer, Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, has responded to requests to engage the Department in at least reviewing these serious allegations, by dismissively passing the buck back to the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Northern District of Iowa.

This complete lack of interest in following up serious allegations of systemic improprieties in sentencing and government-judicial contacts is itself distressing.

You have recently and publicly expressed a desire to ensure that all federal prosecutions and sentencing procedures are conducted in a fair and even-handed manner.  This is what all Americans demand, and it is all that I seek.

I therefore request that you expressly and formally inquire into the manner in which Sholom Rubashkin was sentenced, and into what appears to have been a tainted and secret relationship between the trial judge and the government leading to the prosecution of Rubashkin.

I look forward to hearing from on this matter, Mr. Attorney General.  Let me take this opportunity also, to thank you for your outstanding service as our nation’s 82nd Attorney General.

Bill Delahunt

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)



6 Responses

  1. AG Ken Holder is too busy suing Arizona, preventing the state from arresting and deporting illegal aliens, to bother with small potatoes like Shalom Rubashkin.

  2. the government simpletons in iowa are caught in an anti-semitic conspiracy, the depth of the conspiracy is endless. we all have a right to demand this case be thrown out immediately and jews should demand special rights away from these abusive gentiles who cannot handle the responsiblities of governance. the other 99% of the time this occurs nobody ever hears about it.

  3. guys i have no words. I used to think rubashkin is truly guilty but after reading carfully all the letters that lawyers, legal experts and elected officials have written, the outrage and demand of politicians for justice I HAVE CHANGED MY MIND. i have come to the realization that he is innocent and those criticizing rubashkin are just making conclusions without knowing the facts. Its very sad!

  4. After living thru myself the era of communism with its brutal behavior to innocent people, I am seeing a repetition of that wickedness in the great democratic nation of the United States . It is none other than the Justice system and their judges, who have an open hand and power to divert the truth , to serve their own objectives. It is an outmost danger and failure to the nation. The average taxpayer belives that their goverment is here to protect them from danger, but instead they protect their own objectives. So, it is the medias obligation to inform the people of the United States, of their goverment’s miscarriage of justice. So, please, keep on writing and posting your articles in many different sites and continuesly non-stop, maybe it will reach to the voters in time.

  5. Just to add a slightly different take to the mix, I do not believe “the government” is fundamentally motivated by anti-Semitism. I think that this country’s greatness is its predominant willingness to be inclusive and accepting of diversity. I think there are pockets of people in government, just as there are pockets of people everywhere, that conduct themselves under the overarching principle of anti-Semitism. Judge Reade may well be a case-in-point of such an isolated biggot, but Rep. Delahunt is an obvious example of the nobility that characterizes, overwhelmingly, the United States.

    Let’s hope the mainstream, personified here by Bill Delahunt, emerges victorious over the injustice going on behind closed doors in Iowa. That’s the American way.

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