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Attorney General Alberto Gonzales speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Tuesday, March 13, 2007. A portrait of former Attorney General Robert Kennedy is at left.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Tuesday, March 13, 2007. A portrait of former Attorney General Robert Kennedy is at left.
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Washington – Attorney General Alberto Gonzales approved plans to fire several U.S. attorneys in a November meeting, according to documents released Friday that contradict earlier claims he was not closely involved in the dismissals.

The Nov. 27 meeting, in which Gonzales and at least five top Justice Department officials participated, focused on a plan for carrying out the firings of the prosecutors, Justice Department officials said late Friday.

There, Gonzales signed off on the plan, which was crafted by his chief of staff, Kyle Sampson. Sampson resigned this month amid a political firestorm surrounding the firings.

The documents indicated that the hour-long morning discussion, held in the attorney general’s conference room, was the only time Gonzales met with top aides who decided which prosecutors to fire and how to do it.

Justice spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos said it was not clear whether Gonzales gave his final OK to begin the firings at that meeting. Scolinos also said Gonzales was not involved in the process of selecting which prosecutors would be fired.

On March 13, in explaining the firings, Gonzales told reporters he was aware that some of the dismissals were being discussed but was not involved in them.

“I knew my chief of staff was involved in the process of determining who were the weak performers – where were the districts around the country where we could do better for the people in that district, and that’s what I knew,” Gonzales said last week. “But that is in essence what I knew about the process; was not involved in seeing any memos, was not involved in any discussions about what was going on.”

Later, he added: “I accept responsibility for everything that happens here within this department. But when you have 110,000 people working in the department, obviously there are going to be decisions that I’m not aware of in real time.”

The documents were released Friday night, a few hours after Sampson agreed to testify at a Senate inquiry this week into the firings of eight U.S. attorneys last year.

Earlier Friday, a staunch White House ally, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, summoned White House counsel Fred Fielding to Capitol Hill and told him he wanted “no surprises.”

“I told him, ‘Everything you can release, please release. We need to know what the facts are,”‘ Cornyn said.

Sampson will appear Thursday at a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, his attorney said. His appearance will mark the first congressional testimony by a Justice Department aide since the release of documents that show the firings were orchestrated, in part, by the White House.

The Bush administration maintains the dismissals were proper. Democrats, however, question whether the eight were selected because they were not seen, in Sampson’s words, as “loyal Bushies.”

“He was right at the center of things,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who is leading the inquiry into the firings, said of Sampson. “He has said publicly that what others have said is not how it happened. … He contradicts” the Department of Justice.

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