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Former House leader Tom DeLay Monday sharply criticized the same Travis County political operation that indicted him and more recently fellow Texas Republican Gov. Rick Perry, calling it a “vendetta” and another example of the “criminalization of politics.”


In an interview with FoxNews.com, DeLay attacked nearly every aspect of the prosecution’s case against Perry -- suggesting it was political retribution for the governor's attempt to remove a county district attorney with a criminal record and a “conspiracy” likely traceable to Washington Democrats.


“There is no doubt [the case] is politically motivated,” the former House majority leader said. “Once again, the district attorney of Travis County presented a case, not unlike mine, that was very weak, if it was a case at all. … It’s a conspiracy to use the legal system to politicize politics.”


DeLay was indicted in 2005 by a Travis County grand jury for allegedly conspiring to break election laws several years earlier in a case that involved charges of money laundering.


He was convicted in January 2011 and sentenced to three years in prison. But he was allowed free on bail while appealing his conviction. The Texas Court of Appeals ruled in Sept. 2013 that the evidence in the case was “legally insufficient” to sustain the convictions and DeLay was formally acquitted.


Perry was indicted Friday by a grand jury in Travis County, a Democratic-leaning district that includes the city of Austin, for allegedly abusing his official powers.


The governor had vowed to withhold $7.5 million from an ethics watchdog agency that was run by county District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg until she resigned as a result of her April 2013 drunken-driving charge.


Lehmberg was caught with a bottle of vodka in her car, and her blood-alcohol level was three times over the legal limit.


Perry defunded the agency after Lehmberg, a Democrat, refused to resign.


Perry has been indicted on two felony counts in connection with alleged abuse of power.


Perry, a 2012 GOP presidential candidate with potential 2016 White House ambitions, is calling the case a “farce” and standing by his decision to attempt to remove Lehmberg, saying he and fellow Texans had lost confidence in her.


A mix of liberals and conservatives has come to Perry's defense and questioned the merits of the case, including Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz, a self-proclaimed liberal Democrat, who compared it to a Soviet Union show trial.


"The idea of indicting him because he threatened to veto spending unless a district attorney who was caught drinking and driving resigned, that's not anything for a criminal indictment,” Dershowitz told Newmax’s “American Forum.” “That's a political issue."


Perry has also gotten support from fellow Republicans including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.


The ethics watchdog agency led the case against DeLay under Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle.


However, the Perry investigation was led by Antonio-based special prosecutor Michael McCrum because Lehmberg was at the center of the controversy.


DeLay told Fox News on Monday that he wanted Perry to do more to dismantle the agency and that for years he has openly questioned its constitutionality, arguing in part that the district attorney in charge is locally elected but has statewide jurisdiction.


DeLay said Monday he cannot prove that Washington Democrats are trying to knock Perry out of the 2016 race but added the situation reminded him of when House Democrats Nancy Pelosi of California, and Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island, were trying to drum him out of Congress in the mid-1990s.


“Democrats love what’s going on,” he said. “They used the legal system to take me out. It is a conspiracy to use the legal system to criminalize politics.”


DeLay also offered words of advice to Perry.


“You better take this seriously,” he said. “All of the judges are Democrats. And we polled 300 jurors, and the best I got was a Green Peace activist.”


Perry was indicted by an Austin grand jury on felony counts of abuse of official capacity and coercion of a public servant. The maximum punishment on the first charge is five to 99 years in prison, and two to 10 years on the second.


The indictment comes toward the end of Perry’s final term in office.


Lehmberg served about half of her 45-day jail sentence. A video of Lehmberg’s erratic behavior while being charged and jailed led to an investigation by a separate grand jury, which decided she should not be removed for official misconduct.


The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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