Kroger Picks Up DA Endorsements

Attorney General candidate John Kroger has picked up the endorsements of 16 District Attorneys as well as several other law enforcement officials in his Democratic primary competition with fellow candidate Rep. Greg Macpherson.

From PolitickerOR:

John Kroger today added 19 law enforcement officials—including 16 District Attorneys—to his list of endorsements.

The DAs include Columbia County DA Steve Atchison, Clackamas County DA John Foote, and Clatsop County DA Josh Marquis. Atchison is the current president of the Oregon District Attorneys Association (ODAA) and Foote and Marquis are both past presidents of the ODAA.

Beaverton Police Chief Dave Bishop, Umatilla County Sheriff John Trumbo, and former United States Attorney Charlie Turner joined these DAs in supporting Kroger.

Trumbo said he believes Kroger “is sincere, honest and I think the real deal.”

“John cares about the state of Oregon and he cares about the job of Attorney General,” said Trumbo. “He is determined to address the issues we are concerned about.”

The full list of the DA's from Kroger's website:

Umatilla County Sheriff John Trumbo, Beaverton Police Chief Dave Bishop, Former US Attorney Charlie Turner, Clackamas County DA John Foote, Marion County DA Walter Beglau, Clatsop County DA Josh Marquis, Columbia County DA Steve Atchison, Former Coos County DA Paul Burgett, Gilliam County DA Marion Weatherford, Harney County DA Tim Colahan, Klamath County DA Edwin Caleb, Lake County DA David Schutt, Lincoln County DA Bernice Barnett, Tillamook County DA Bill Porter, Union County DA Tim Thompson, Umatilla County DA Dean Gushwa, Wallowa County DA Mona Williams, Wasco County DA Eric Nisley, Wheeler County DA Thomas Cutsforth

Read the rest. Discuss.

  • mrfearless47 (unverified)
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    Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to see Macpherson go down in flames in the primary. I want an AG with law enforcement experience, not pension experience.

  • DW (unverified)
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    I really don't find these endorsements persuasive. The fact that Kroger is so conservative on issues of crime doesn't sit well with me. The more I hear about his position on Measure 11 and the death penalty, the more I dislike him. Having the DAs coming to his rescue only solidifies my dislike for his candidacy.

  • Jonathan (unverified)
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    I am glad to see that John Kroger is picking up the support of Oregon's law enforcement community, along with the broad support he has already received. Congratulations John!

  • Jonathan (unverified)
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    I understand concerns over John's position on the Death Penalty and Measure 11. However, I found Greg Macpherson's answer to those questions very disturbing. Greg equated the death penalty with assisted suicide as a reason he is not that concerned with Oregon's death penalty law. He then chose to dodge the issue of Measure 11, not answering the question in order not to offend any interest group. I respect Kroger for stating his opinion and standing by his convictions.

    I also admire Kroger's emphasis on drug treatment and dealing with the cause of crime instead of its result. From what I heard, Trumbo admired Kroger's emphasis on drug treatment. I want an attorney general who is listened to and has the respect of law enforcement and can encourage our state to be smart on crime.

  • (Show?)

    I'm glad John went ahead and got permission to publish their names publicly. The last time this topic came up, Mr. Kroger's veracity about having most of the DAs supporting him was challenged on BlueOregon by an anonymous troll who dubbed himself "Speak the Truth". And he hooked LT into an unnecessary admonition against exaggerating endorsements.

    Sure there are people like DW who may not be moved by these, and may not vote for John out of policy disagreements. But don't attack Mr. Kroger's credibility. He has been exceedingly scrupulous.

  • (Show?)

    This is a real coup for Kroger. I realize that some people like DW are on the other side of DA's, but most Oregonians will turn to DA's as the major reference point on who would make the best Attorney General. I assure you that Macpherson would tout these endorsements if he got them and will promote any that he gets.

    As Democrats we should also be sensitive to the need to build a bulwark against an eventual Republican challenger. By locking up DA endorsements now it will make it much harder for a Republican (like Mannix?).

  • A. Rab. (unverified)
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    I am glad Kroger is picking up support from law enforcement. That, plus the earlier support from environmental groups indicates that his message is getting through.

    As for the attacks...

    Macpherson supports Measure 11, he is not a super booster (but nether is Kroger) but he still supports it. Nothing Macpherson has done as Chair of Judiciary and nothing he has said on the trail indicates otherwise.

    Similarly, Macpherson is to Kroger's right on the death penalty. Kroger supported creating a group to study changes to the death penalty (including if we need it or not) but Macpherson has said that he would not support changes (he would only leave it to voters). That, plus Macpherson's truly tasteless joke about death with dignity makes me think that he is not exactly the second coming of Blackmun.

  • Justin St. James (unverified)
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    While I do not put too much stock in endorsements, these are unique, because they come from people supremely qualified to judge the AG candidates. I believe that Kroger has a more comprehensive plan for the Meth epidemic and for the enforcement of environmental laws. We need an A.G. with real experience in enforcement, not a corporate lawyer whose firm defended Enron.

  • (Show?)

    Similarly, Macpherson is to Kroger's right on the death penalty.

    No. Macpherson opposes the death penalty. Kroger supports it.

    Here's the complete text of WW's recent coverage - my bolds:

    Candidate John Kroger, a law professor at Lewis & Clark College, says he supports the death penalty but would form a committee to consider options for reform, including possibly ending capital punishment in Oregon. Candidate Greg Macpherson, a pension benefits lawyer and former state representative, says he’s opposed to capital punishment but would leave any changes up to Oregon voters. Neither candidate seems eager to lead a charge on the issue—their campaign websites don’t even mention it.

    (Macpherson, of course, is a current state rep - they got that wrong.)

    [Full disclosure - My company built Greg Macpherson's website, but I speak only for myself.]

  • ben rivers (unverified)
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    We need an A.G. with real experience in enforcement, not a corporate lawyer whose firm defended Enron.

    Justin, do you have any idea how big Stoel Rives is? Also, it is my understanding that as Enron's lawyers, Stoel Rives kept telling them to stop what they were doing.

    Furthermore, why does Kroger want to fight all the big cases himself? Does he not trust the talent at the DOJ. The DOJ needs a mentor, not a glory hog. Macpherson brings that element, along with a real understanding of what the Oregon AGs job really is, to the table. Kroger just wants his name in lights while Macpherson wants to continue serving the state.

    I'll take a modest results driven motivator over an arrogant "Eliot Spitzer" wannabe any day.

    And! You all call Macpherson a pension lawyer, lest we forget he is a sitting three term legislator in this state. While you peg Kroger a prosecutor, last time I checked he has been teaching law and not so much prosecuting. Let's not confuse the facts here.

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    The reason having these endorsements is important is because it singles buy-in by key players in the law enforcement community to Kroger's vision and shifting the approach of things such drug treatment vs. throw drug users in jail. Because Kroger has buy in, because he has the prosecutorial background that he is not a "soft on crime" advocate, he can do the metaphorical "Nixon to China" on fundamentally move key people in the approach towards the more progressive one.

    By tackling the drug problem through changing the approach to it, that is what moves the ground on other crime issues like property crimes, etc. and cuts the rug out from under the push for things like Mannix is coming down the mountain on to expand Measure 11 to property crimes, etc.

    SHifting that focus is a lynchpin to many other issues that are also part of law enforcement but whose impact goes FAR beyond criminal justice issues and strike at many areas of our society... because drugs (meth) is a major problem in domestic and child neglect abuse, which snowballs into a raft of other problems and issues we face.

    This is the type of vision and agenda (supported by his background and skill-set) which is why I heartily back Kroger. Macpherson is a good man and a very good legislator, but Kroger is the better person for THIS job.

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    Ugh.. signals... not singles

  • A. Rab. (unverified)
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    Kari, The WW article proves my point. Kroger supports the death penalty but is willing to change or end it. Macpherson does not support changing or ending capital punishment; he would leave it to “Oregon voters.” At the debate Macpherson expressed his support for how the system is used in Oregon. Macpherson can draw a distinction between what he believes and what policies he supports or will enact, but for purposes of evaluating him for office, only the later is relevant. As such, Macpherson is pro-capital punishment.

  • rollie (unverified)
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    I am not a politically involved or connected person and I live in the valley. Some here and elsewhere have said that Macpherson will not have an advantage in terms of name recognition or support from democratic party activists. I doubt this. I recognized Macphersons name but, until recently, had heard little about Kroger. And what I hear about Kroger emphasizes law enforcement. Personally, I feel Kroger is somewhat one dimensional right now but understand the reason why this may be occurring. Hopefully, both candidates will get more press and coverage after super tueday. At this point, I am opposed to Macpherson because I believe that he is more of a politician than an attorney. I do not think we need a partisan politician in the AG position.

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    I am unwilling to make a big deal about the exceedingly minor difference of positions of John and Greg over capital punishment. And even as a Kroger partisan, I'm certainly not going to attack Mr. Macphearson for holding down a day job in a law firm, no matter who they defended. If lawyers can defend murderers without censure, then certainly they should be able to defend Enron.

    That said, John is clearly better for this position. As lestatdelc pointed out, credibility with DAs and officers will do more to move the State towards treatment focused law enforcement than even the purest, lockstep, adherence to liberal views on crime and punishment. And John Kroger has that credibility. No one else does.

  • BCM (unverified)
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    Is this even a debate? John Kroger just passed the Bar is September 2007

    Oregon Bar Examination — July 2007

    Congrats, John. I just think Oregon's looking for someone who has, I don't know, been a lawyer for longer than 6 months to be Attorney General.

  • A. Rab. (unverified)
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    BCM, Throw around the “not from Oregon meme” all you want, but this election is about who is best qualified to lead the state forward, and in that regard Kroger is the clear winner. The endorsements from environmental leaders, unions, and law enforcement just reinforce this point.

    However, FYI, Kroger passed the CT. bar back in the 90’s and he has been teaching law in Oregon for most of the decade. The recent bar exam is from Oregon not requiring law professors to be licensed in this state. As anybody who has taken any bar will tell you, you don’t take a bar exam unless there is a good reason, and Kroger only decided to run for office recently.

  • LT (unverified)
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    "I'm certainly not going to attack Mr. Macphearson for holding down a day job in a law firm, no matter who they defended. If lawyers can defend murderers without censure, then certainly they should be able to defend Enron."

    A wise statement. We had a mayoral contest some years ago (in a city-manager form of city government where the mayor also has another occupation--lawyer, dentist, business owner, etc.). The city council member running against an incumbent mayor sent out attack mailers of the "HOW DARE HE!" variety. The basic idea was we should throw out the incumbent in favor of the challenger because the challenger didn't like one of the clients of the incumbent. Not only did the challenger lose the race for mayor, but after the election was no longer in the council majority--people voted for council candidates who agreed with the incumbent mayor.

    That said, I'd like to see the discussion expanded. AG is an office which deals with a number of areas, incl. campaign finance/election law.

  • ben rivers (unverified)
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    The Oregon Department of Justice is responsible for general counsel and supervision of all civil actions and legal proceedings in which the state is a party or has an interest. The Department, through the Attorney General, also has full charge and control of all the state's legal business that requires the services of an attorney or legal counsel. The Department is further responsible for the operation of a number of program areas designated by the legislature, such as child support, district attorney assistance, crime victim compensation, charitable activity enforcement and consumer protection services. The Department has a biennial budget of approximately $280 million and a staffing authorization of approximately 1200 employees, most of whom are located in Salem.

    This is taken word for word from the Attorney General website...note the word prosecution...not mentioned, not once...

    The AG position is quite broad in this state and Macpherson has the knowledge of Oregon's laws and legislative process needed to conduct the DOJ's business. If you want someone who is going to flip the DOJ on its side, fire everyone and turn the DOJ into a prison filling factory, then by all means vote for Kroger. If you want an advocate for the people, your vote is for Macpherson.

  • Jonathan D. (unverified)
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    Ben- As the AG's website states, and you cut and paste, the AG supervises all state legal proceedings in which the state is a party or has an interest. The state is the prosecutor in criminal trials, in case you didn't know. The word, prosecution is not mentioned because it is implicit in what you cut and paste.

    Second, how is promoting drug treatment in any way encouraging filling our prisons with criminals? Kroger is pushing our state to be "smart on crime", which means to deal with root of crime. That means, encouraging drug treatment to deal with the meth crisis. Do you have anything to support your statements? Do you have any positive policy positions to point to that Macpherson has proposed? What legal experience in Oregon does Macpherson have that makes him suited to be the next AG? How much court room experience does Macpherson even have?

    In addition, Kroger has never made any mention of firing anyone at the DOJ. Kroger has advocated focusing its resources in some new areas, especially environmental protection , protecting consumers and collecting unpaid child support.

    Kari- Macpherson clearly compared the death penalty in Oregon to assisted suicide. As someone who opposes the death penalty, that sincerely offends me. Macpherson at the bus project debate did not take a strong position on the death penalty. Instead he took the politically neutral position of deferring the issue to Oregon voters. Macpherson has been in the Oregon house for six years, if he really opposed Measure 11 or the Death Penalty, why did he do nothing to attempt to change Oregon's policies? I admire Kroger for clearly stating his position on the death penalty, even if I disagree with him.

  • (Show?)

    John Kroger, has campaigned in Jackson County 4 times and will return in March. Kroger is what one might call a compassionate Democrat and a law and order guy. At a recent House Party, Mr. Kroger was asked by the senior DA in the room to explain how he will improve the functioning of the DOJ. Mr. Kroger spent some time carefully outlining his management plans, his goals for better state agency communication and support from the DOJ. I was struck by his breadth of understanding of the broad sweep of DOJ responsibilities.

    Mr. Macpherson is a quality AG candidate with legislative experience and good working relationships with his fellow legislators. This race is one to study closely.

    In case anyone missed it, Bradbury and Kroger came out yesterday opposing Liquified Natural Gas pipelines scheduled to criss-cross Oregon. Now there is an issue to get educated about and concerned about for our fair state.

  • BCM (unverified)
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    "Throw around the “not from Oregon meme” all you want, but this election is about who is best qualified to lead the state forward, and in that regard Kroger is the clear winner. The endorsements from environmental leaders, unions, and law enforcement just reinforce this point."

    That's great if you enjoy being told how to vote. Personally, I don't. I see a mysterious traveler whose shown up in Oregon and wants to be AG. I have some reservations about that.

  • Marty Wilde (unverified)
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    A few points -

    Having taken both the Oregon bar exam and an exam from another state, I can tell you that they're 90% identical. Which bar exam you took really has little to do with whether you know much about that particular state's law, since very little of the bar covers current state law.

    We can talk about the death penalty all we want, but it won't make a difference. 65% of the electorate still supports it. Death penalty litigation is a minuscule part of the AG's job. This is, of course, the problem with the death penalty - it distorts the conversation here and resources of the system disproportionately.

    The DA endorsements are important for this reason - the AG has very little influence over the DAs, who are elected by county and do not take orders from him. The AG sets policy for the criminal justice system to a certain degree, and controls the appeals process, but he'll get very little done without the support of the DAs.

    Where's the conversation about management experience? The AG's job is essentially to run a large law firm/public agency. Personal political philosophy matters, of course, but most of the AG's job is related to management of the DOJ. Who cares if either of them is (for instance) a good litigator? It's totally irrelevant to the job.

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    Ben, The passage you quote specifies "district attorney assistance" as one of the A.G.'s jobs. A large numer of D.A.s have weighed in on who they want to assist them in the ways the A.G. can. Presumably that means they have confidence, regardless of the date of Mr. Kroger's Oregon bar exam, that he understands just what the A.G. can do to assist them and how to go about it. I find Mitch's argument interesting and prima facie persuasive.

    BCM, your reservations are fine, but pretending that Kroger only became a lawyer 6 months ago -- which is what you said -- just makes you look silly or dishonest, or maybe it's dishonestly silly.

  • (Show?)

    On the duties and effective management:

    I was interested to hear Kroger say at the Rebooting Democracy Leadership Lunch (a FANTASTIC idea, by the way) that the support of the DA's was crucial--in the election obviously, but more if he's elected and now has to run the department. And he further said that he personally was uncomfortable with parts of Measure 11, but on others he was OK--and in any case, he felt that the DA's considered it so important to their job that he had to back them on it. He also reasoned that if he validated them that way, he could better persuade them to move with him in areas like treatment.

    At the time it really sounded like a rather weak sellout on Measure 11, but in a larger context I think he was right to review the reality, see if it was at all reconcilable with his views, and use it as a lever and a show of good faith for a much broader and lengthier partnership in office. I now think it's a very lucid move, and while you can't necessarily say they're connected, for whatever reason it's obvious that the DAs have responded with their support.

    I think it IS important if they are good litigators. Kroger's point is that the office should be the legal bully pulpit of the state, acting on behalf of their eternal clients The People. And when he assumes control of a case and personally litigates it, sure there are plenty of lawyers on staff who can do it. But he does it well, he likes it--and he wants people to literally see for themselves how seriously he takes that issue, to litigate it personally. Maybe it injects some personality into an office that is, after all, an elected position. The AG of the US is appointed, but ours is on the ballot. We're personalizing it from the start.

  • (Show?)

    BCM:

    You keep acting as if Kroger moved here 7 months ago and then passed the bar for the very first time a month later. Kroger has lived in this state for years. He had passed the bar before, but there was no reason to take it here - he was teaching law to tomorrow's crop of lawyers and it wasn't needed. Now that he needed to pass the bar, he did.

    Being a good litigator means a lot to the AG's office. The AG writes legal opinions. On big cases, especially those where the federal government is going after a state law, I want to see our AG in there fighting the case. And any good prosecutor is going to tell you a good part of their job was management - they had other lawyers, interns, paralegals, etc. that they were in charge of and responsible for.

    The AG is the state's lawyer and the people's lawyer. Is it too much to ask that the person in that position have more than a few court appearances? That they've actually done a good portion of the work that they're now supervising people to do?

  • Marty Wilde (unverified)
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    Folks, the AG needs to understand and manage litigation, not be a litigator. They are completely different skill sets. Sure, the AG should understand the rules of evidence and the challenges of litigation, but he ain't gonna be doing any cross-examination or jury selection himself. Management experience is much more relevant.

    As for how much criminal litigation the AG's Office does, the answer is "not much". They take the lead on certain narrow areas of law, like racketeering, and the DA Assistance Section assists in large, complex cases.

    They do much of the civil litigation for the state, of course.

  • (Show?)

    "As for how much criminal litigation the AG's Office does, the answer is "not much"."

    That's the status quo; Kroger is in fact proposing a much more aggressive criminal section of the department. Which is why a lot of us are excited, because enforcement of environmental laws and election laws and ethics laws and consumer product laws all would finally lead to the intended result of those laws, having expected their enforcement. Think Myers v RIAA as the model of where Kroger wants to take the office.

    Some of it will take budget increases he cannot promise, I believe. But--and this is why his support from the DA's seems so important--much of the emphasis can change simply by leadership of the state prosecution team, giving them the freedom and the backing to go all Elliot Spitzer if they have a case. His story about the Portland company with SIXTY pollutive release violations and fines over the last several years, with not a single criminal injunction or state charge ever filed by the state, is revealing. How long and hard would the AG's office have to publicly push in court for a closure of that facility before the company stopped dumping? Not very long, in my view.

    The AGs office should be in charge of making sure justice is served on behalf of the people of Oregon, whenever and to whatever extent possible. Serious and injurious harm to the state should not be left uncorrected by a well-running state DoJ, regardless of the form. Criminal litigation is the linchpin of their powers to correct it, IMO, and I personally would welcome that broadening of the AG's energies.

  • ben rivers (unverified)
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    Some of it will take budget increases he cannot promise

    Hammer, meet nail head...

    Can someone ask Kroger where he plans to get the money to make all these changes he thinks the DOJ needs?

  • A. Rab. (unverified)
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    You would be surprised at what happens with just changes to priorities and organization. A great example of this was Mike Moore in Mississippi. A lot of what Kroger talks about is using the resources in a new way. Arguably the drug treatment is the exception, but I think we would all be worried if a candidate ran promising to ignore our state's staggeringly underfunded drug treatment programs.

    That said, Macpherson has some odd promises. His plan for fighting meth is getting the entire country to adopt Oregon's laws on cold medication. In all honesty I have no idea how he can deliver on this, or what he would do if it fails to happen.

  • LT (unverified)
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    And herein lies the problem:

    <hr/>

    Some of it will take budget increases he cannot promise

    Hammer, meet nail head...

    Can someone ask Kroger where he plans to get the money to make all these changes he thinks the DOJ needs?

    <hr/>

    Kroger can give a very effective public presentation, has a campaign manager who is willing to engage in dialogue with ordinary voters, and has some good ideas.

    But as the outsider who doesn't know the Oregon legislative process as well as a legislator, he needs to be more Oregon-specific more often. Maybe there are legislators who don't want to come out against a fellow member, but what about Oregonians running for other offices, running for the legislature, that sort of thing?

    And this is why I think Kroger would be smart to start talking about issues unique to Oregon, including Oregon's election laws.

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    LT

    Kroger has been down here in Jackson County 4 times. He's been very specific on Oregon issues each time.

    He's got Oregon stats on nearly every issue he discusses and sites them often. He can reel off the numbers of case loads for foster care workers, numbers on how many don't pay child support, numbers of environmental spills in Oregon, how many fines a company paid, the Liquidified Gas Pipeline impact upon property owners, his areas of concern on Measure 11..there's more so you get the drift. I agree with an earlier post, Kroger's ideas are based on reorganizing the current resouces in new ways. People have remarked that Kroger has an organizational chart in his head that will streamline DOJ services for state agencies and focus on different needs.

    <h2>Greg Macpherson discussed legislative acheivements mostly when he talked with Democrats down here. I'm sure he'll have many specific concerns about the DOJ, just as Kroger does. His first meeting down here was more of a "Hi, this is who I am and why I'm running for AG." I look forward to more visits with the Democrats in Jackson County.</h2>
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