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ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) _
Sarah Palin's path to the Republican ticket started with her name on a
list — and a team of some 25 people poring through public records
searching for trouble spots without her knowledge. Then came the
70-question survey and a nearly three-hour interview. The review officially ended Thursday, when John McCain asked the Alaska governor to be his running mate. In
the days since, Republicans and Democrats have privately questioned
whether the Arizona senator chose the first-term governor without fully
looking into her background. McCain's campaign has vehemently defended
the review. Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr., the lawyer who
conducted the review, told The Associated Press in an interview Monday
that Palin underwent a "full and complete" examination before McCain
chose her. Asked whether everything that came up as a possible red flag
during the review already has been made public, Culvahouse said: "I
think so. Yeah, I think so. Correct." Stoking the
notion of a rushed examination, a timeline issued by the campaign
indicated that McCain initially met Palin in February, then held one
phone conversation with her last week before inviting her to Arizona,
where he met with her a second time and offered her the job. Raising
additional questions was the campaign's disclosure Monday that Palin's
unmarried 17-year-old daughter was pregnant, and reports that Palin's
husband, Todd, had been arrested in 1986, when he was 22, for driving
under the influence of alcohol. McCain's campaign has dispatched a team of a dozen communications operatives and lawyers to Alaska. Steve
Schmidt, a senior adviser, said the campaign always planned to send a
"jump team" to the eventual running mate's home state to work with the
nominee's staff, help with information requests from local and national
reporters, and answer questions about documents that were part of the
review. Culvahouse said Palin's review, like others,
began with a team of two dozen people culling information from public
sources. The team reviewed speeches, financial records, tax
information, litigation, investigations, ethical charges, marriages and
divorces, for a number of potential running mates. For
Palin specifically, the team studied online archives of the state's
largest newspapers, including the Anchorage Daily News, but didn't
request paper archives for Palin's hometown newspaper for fear the
secret review would become public. Among the findings: Palin had once received a citation for fishing without a license. Reports
on each candidate — 40-some pages and single spaced — then were
reviewed by McCain, Schmidt, campaign manager Rick Davis, and top
advisers Mark Salter and Charlie Black. Palin then was
sent a personal data questionnaire with 70 "very intrusive" questions,
Culvahouse said. She also was asked to submit a number of years of
federal and state tax returns. The campaign also checked her credit. Culvahouse
then conducted a nearly three-hour interview. He said the first thing
Palin volunteered was that her daughter was pregnant, and she also
quickly disclosed her husband's two-decade-old DUI arrest. The
public search also unearthed details of the Legislature's investigation
into the dismissal of Alaska's public safety commissioner, allegedly
because he would not fire Palin's former brother-in-law as a state
trooper. Culvahouse said he asked follow-up questions, and "spent a lot of time with her lawyer" on the matter. "We came out of it knowing all that we could know at the time," he said. Throughout the process, the campaign said, Davis had multiple conversations with Palin. |
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