

With the retirement of the legendary Trent Lott, Mississippi Democrats have been clamoring for Mike Moore to throw his hat into the ring to replace him. There is just one problem, his partner in crime, Dickie Scruggs has been indicted. Dickie Scruggs, you’ll recall, is Trent Lott’s brother-in-law, a Democrat, and Mike Moore’s political patron who jointly developed the multi-billion dollar tobacco litigation that allowed states to recoup their medicaid costs from cigarette companies.
Lott, Scruggs and Moore are all part of what I call the Pascagoula Mafia that has had an outsized influence in the closed good-ole boy network that is Mississippi Politics. For the past decade it has seemed that whatever is good for Scruggs, Millette, Bozeman, and Dent, is also good for Misssissippi.
Scruggs has said “It is not often in life that you have a chance to make a mark on humanity. And we all got caught up in the opportunity that this presented to us. Not only to make a lot of money for our class action and perhaps for ourselves, but to really make a difference in the world. It was an inspiration. And I think most of the lawyers, at least those who were in the vanguard of this litigation, got caught up in that feeling. That they were really doing a service to humanity.”
Republicans and their lobbyist fixers, Gov. Barbour being among the most prominent, have been downright skeptical about the aforementioned motivation behind the litigation and did their level best to scuttle the tobacco settlement in the halls of congress. The effort was ultimately unsuccessful.
The Tobacco settlement being the singular achievement that brought Moore nationwide notoriety, it will be hard to distance himself from the ethical cloud engulfing Scruggs as he battles charges of passing bribes to judge Henry Lackey during the course of a $26 million dollar lawsuit involving Hurricane Katrina insurance claims.
Despite this development, I have no doubt about the chicanery and thievery of State Farm and other Katrina insurers. Attorney General Jim Hood has had ample justification for suing insurance companies on behalf of the beleagured people of Mississippi and will ultimately be vindicated.
The GOP is surely to seize on Scruggs political largesse. He has spread his money around widely and given more than $120,200 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee over the years and contributed $28,500 in March.
Omitted from any slanted story Republicans are likely to tell is the $46,550 Scruggs has given to the Republican party and its candidates in the past nine years. Among those he’s contributed to are Republican presidential candidates John McCain and Fred Thompson and GOP heavyweights Trent Lott, Arlen Specter and Susan Collins, not to mention the $25,000 he gave the Mississippi Republican Party in 2002.
The bottom line is that Dickie Scruggs got greedy and is not the evil trial lawyer stereotype the GOP likes to fill folks heads up with and Moore, if he’s serious about running, will need to come up with the mother of all spin to combat the inevitable brickbats that the Republicans will throw at him regarding his friend and law school chum. Only time will tell if he has both the stomach for the fight and the tools with which to wage it.