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  1. #1

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    Atty. Gen. Mukasey collapses

    WASHINGTON – Attorney General Michael Mukasey, the no-nonsense ally in President Bush's war on terror, was hospitalized Thursday after he collapsed during a late-night speech and lost consciousness.

    "Oh, no, no!" people in the audience cried out as Mukasey slumped at the lectern. "Oh, my God!"

    The 67-year-old Mukasey, wearing a black tie and tuxedo, was 15 to 20 minutes into an address about terrorism when he began shaking slightly and slurring his words. As he read from his prepared text, he seemed to get stuck on a word, paused, then his head bowed slightly and he swayed. Three or four men in suits rushed on stage and caught him at the podium.



    "The attorney general is conscious, conversant and alert," Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said after doctors admitted Mukasey to George Washington University Hospital for the night.

    Mukasey remained on the stage for 10 minutes being attended to by his FBI security detail and medical personnel present at the conservative Federalist Society dinner, said eyewitness Abigail Thernstrom, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Though he lost consciousness initially, Mukasey appeared to be awake when he was taken from the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in northwest Washington, she said.

    "It was hard to watch such a thing," Thernstrom said. "It was horrible."

    Justice Department officials appeared anxious and alarmed at George Washington Hospital but spokesman Carr said Mukasey did not transfer his power to Deputy Attorney General Mark Filip.

    Justice spokeswoman Gina Talamona declined to say whether Mukasey had suffered a stroke. She had no information about his medical history.

    A Republican staffer on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Jack Daly, who was also at the dinner, said in an e-mail to colleagues sent at 10:20 p.m. EST: "AG Mukasey collapsed in the middle of his keynote address at tonight's fed-soc dinner. He is still on stage after ten minutes and his security detail has called 911. The paramedics just arrived."

    Eighteen minutes later, Daly added in another e-mail: "Mukasey did regain consciousness before he was taken away."

    In the prepared remarks of his address to the annual meeting of the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group, Mukasey planned to defend the Bush administration's "fundamental reorganization" of the government since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and policies put in place to detain terror suspects. He also was planning to talk about the continuing threat of al-Qaida.

    President George W. Bush was informed about Mukasey's collapse, press secretary Dana Perino said.

    "The president has him in his thoughts and will be kept apprised and hopes that he will be back up and at 'em again soon," she said.

    Bush, a fierce loyalist, ventured outside his circle of friends and Texas associates to tap Mukasey 14 months ago to replace Alberto Gonzales, who had resigned in disgrace. Gonzales, the president's longtime friend and fellow Texan, quit after months of senators' demands for his resignation and investigations that called his credibility into doubt.

    In a sun-drenched morning announcement on the White House lawn, Bush introduced Mukasey as "a tough but fair judge" and asked the Senate to confirm him quickly.

    "Judge Mukasey is clear-eyed about the threat our nation faces," Bush said, praising his reputation as a smart and strong manager.

    Mukasey, the former chief U.S. District Court judge in the Manhattan courthouse just blocks from ground zero, earned a reputation as a tough-on-terrorism jurist with an independent streak.

    As a judge, Mukasey ordered the detention of young Muslim men as so-called material witnesses in terrorism cases following the Sept. 11 terror attacks. While those decisions drew sharp criticism from immigration lawyers, Mukasey won praise from Bush administration lawyers.

    Mukasey endorsed much of the USA Patriot Act, which Bush pushed through Congress following the terror attacks to secure broad new law-enforcement power.

    And yet he once criticized the Bush administration from the bench for overstepping in a terrorism case. As a jurist, he was known for his brusqueness and impatience with people who waste his time.

    Before joining the administration, the former judge was a partner at New York-based law firm Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler.

    SOURCE

  2. #2
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Sounds like a stroke.

    Dixie
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  3. #3

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    Say it wasn't, not even in relation to a stroke...strange. Related it to a fainting spell.

    Clean bill of health, CT scans and more, all clear.

  4. #4
    Senior Member Hylander_1314's Avatar
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    Too much snakebite medicine?

  5. #5
    Senior Member redpony353's Avatar
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    YOU CAN FAINT FROM AN ANXIETY ATTACK. IF YOU ARE UNDER A LOT OF STRESS AND YOU KEEP HOLDING THAT STRESS IN....IT CAN COME OUT ALL OF THE SUDDEN.
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