Ronnie Earle Missing Evidence
The first grand jury didn't find cause for an indictment.
The second one indicted DeLay for doing something in 2002 that was against a law passed in 2003, something that violates the Constitution's ex post facto laws.
The third grand jury has now been presented evidence by Earle that may not have ever actually existed. Earle says it existed, but now he can't find it.
Newsmax - The most compelling piece of evidence cited by Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle to implicate House Majority Leader Tom DeLay in a money laundering and conspiracy case can't be located, Earle's prosecution team admitted on Friday.
Indictments against DeLay and fundraisers Jim Ellis and John Colyandro allege that Ellis gave "a document that contained the names of several candidates for the Texas House" to a Republican National Committee official in 2002, reports the Houston Chronicle.
The document was touted as proof that DeLay was part of a scheme to swap $190,000 in restricted corporate money for the same amount of money from individuals that could be legally used by Texas candidates.
But Earle's prosecution team told the court on Friday that they had only a "similar" list and not the one allegedly given to the RNC. Late in the day, they released a list of 17 Republican candidates in Texas, but fewer than half are alleged to have received money as part of the alleged DeLay plot.
A similar list?
Sorry, but that doesn't quite cut the mustard. As Bullwinkle points out over at Random Numbers, this may well mean that Earle managed to perjure himself while presenting his case to grand jury number three.
Seriously, if this case turns into any more of a circus Barnum & Bailey's should sign Earle to a contract and take him on the road. They could put him on between the lion tamers and the clowns.













