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August 20, 2004

Uh, what's that, Pete?

By Byron LaMasters

I'm certainly not an expert in the lie-detector department, but I do recall that the repeated use of the word "uh" is certainly one indicator of uncertainty and lying. On that note, here's exhibit A - the transcript of Pete Sessions answering questions this week on a local radio show regarding his stealing of yard signs during the 2002 election ("uh" emphasis mine):

Rep. Pete Sessions (R) gave an interview to KLIF radio's Gary Knapp.

GK: "The Martin Frost (D) campaign has come out with this miscellaneous incident report that says that a police officer stopped you in 2002, where you were taking signs up from along the road of Skillman and Northwest Highway, uh ('02 Dem nominee) Pauline Dixon's signs, and that you had put them in your truck bed. Is that true?"
PS: "Absolutely correct."
GK: "OK, and they're saying that means you stole signs. Is that true?"
PS: "No, that is not true."
GK. "Ok, explain that."
PS: "Greg what happened is is that uh, a couple years ago, uh when I was coming back from a uh a meeting, uh to my house, uh, I was on a state highway that is called Northwest Highway, and every single sign, political sign, in the state of Texas says you're not allowed to put those in in uh, the uh in the right of way."
GK: "It's illegal to put political signs in the right of way."
PS: "On a state highway. Uh, and I was driving by the signs which we had uh put out earlier, several weeks before on a piece of property that was private property that was directly there, and as I was driving home, someone had come and in front of and behind every one of my signs, they put these Pauline Dixon signs. In front of mine and behind mine. Just a political game, that's ok."
GK: "So you're saying your signs were on legal?"
PS: "Absolutely."
GK: "Because your signs were on private yards?"
PS: "No there's uh, it's it's an apartment complex that is there, uh that has allowed us to put ours exclusively there, on, directly on Northwest highway..."
GK: "OK now wait one second, because I'm still kind of confused... There's an area in front of what is an apartment complex, that is owned by the apartment complex that you were allowed to put your signs on because they told you you could."
PS: "Absolutely."
GK: "Ok and then next to that is the right of way that goes to the road where nobody's allowed to put their signs there, whether permission is given from the apartment complex or not because it's not their property. Is that true?" PS: "Well, the highway, theoretically would be down the middle part, or where where, the right of way is a middle part that really nobody owns except the state. It's no-mans land."
GK: "Right. But your signs were on the part..."
PS: "They were on private property."
GK: "Ok, so if yours were on private property and theirs were directly in front of yours, wouldn't they still be on private property too."
PS: "They would have been."
GK. "Oh, so you're saying that because they didn't get permission from the apartment complex to put them there they were illegal."
PS: "Yeah."
GK: "Now I'm with you. See why I was confused."
PS: "They were also on a state highway, a right of way state highway and all I'm suggesting to you is that I went down, saw it, I we had, we put the signs in, we checked them on a regular basis, driving the way home, and I just went down, put my flashers on, the police officer at, uh about two minutes later saw us."
GK: "The only thing that I'm still confused about with you taking these signs down, Congressman Sessions, is did you check with the apartment complex and say did Pauline Dixon, did she ask you permission to put these up, or did you just assume she didn't have the right to put those up?"
PS: "She did not, and no I did not. It was they were they were put up that night at some point and they were uh dropped on the they were dropped on the uh ground."
GK: "Can you see why some people would say, 'Well wait a second, why didn't you just leave those signs there. Isn't it wrong to pull other people's signs down?"
PS: "No no, I don't think so at all. I think if I went by the CWA uh, or any other Union place that Martin Frost had his signs up and he knew they were up, and some of our supporters or somebody came and put them there, I think it's perfectly professional to pick them up and drop them" (Excerpted from Frost release, 8/19).


I counted fifteen. Anyone want to check that? Regardless of the legitimacy of what Pete Sessions' did that night, he certainly does not project confidence of the legality of his actions in this interview. I was speaking with some friends about this last night, and I'm glad that Frost is making an issue of this. I think it's easy to take this incident and tie it into Pete Sessions' other shady activities such as employing a communications director who was convicted of a felony for his work as a Republican Party operative. We'll see if it comes up...

Posted by Byron LaMasters at August 20, 2004 09:37 AM | TrackBack

Comments

if an opponent's campaign is doing the sort of thing sessions contends they were doing isn't the best course of action to leave the evidence where it is and report it to the proper authorities?

or do we support vigilante politics?

Posted by: Mike Switzer at August 20, 2004 11:00 AM

Sessions sounds just like every other low-down dirty politician I have ever know. Surely he has more important things to do, when running for Congress, than taking down signs belonging to the opponent, whether they are correctly placed or not. And I am surprised that a candidate for Congress doesn't understand what a public road right-of-way is...every lowly village councilmember knows that stuff inside and out - but he calls it "no mans land".

Posted by: Dennis at August 20, 2004 03:47 PM

Ok, as the son of a city planner I have to jump into this one. If i am correct about the sign laws up in Dallas, then you cannot put anything in the right of way. Sessions is right when he says that placing signs in the right of way is illegal... and moreover he does, technically, have the right to take them down. Though I hate agreeing with Pete Sessions, the right of way is kind of a no man's land.

That being said, Sessions should have enough savvy to send some of his people to take the signs down.

Posted by: z-dub at August 20, 2004 07:57 PM

At first (as reported by DMN), Sessions claimed he was doing his civic duty and just pulling up the signs and laying them down - he was lying because the police report said they were in his truck bed. Now he switches his version yet again.

This is a guy who hires an aide who pulled such skulduggery in the past that he was convicted for Federal Felony Campagin Fraud.

Sessions also is notorious for sending spies to opponent's offices to pose as volunteers (Not only did I learn this from volunteering at Dem. opponents campaigns, but a friend of mine that used to volunteer for Sessions and worked as a Republican staffer on the Hill, told me that Sessions sends spies.)

Sessions is a paranoid scumbag thief that cavorts with felons. (Not to mention a Class A dumbass - if you are the type of scumbag to steal your opponent's signs, then send a surrogate - DO NOT GO YOURSELF!!)

Posted by: WhoMe? at August 20, 2004 08:41 PM

Who's winning that horse race out there in Dallas? Has there been any polling done recently? Inquiring minds out in California want to know :)

Posted by: Allan Bartlett at August 21, 2004 10:22 PM
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