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Complete coverage, video and photo galleries of Sarah Palin, from Alaska's governor, to GOP's vice-presidential candidate, and now private citizen.

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Palin ethics probes beset by secrecy and lawsuit

While Gov. Sarah Palin has waived her privacy rights so details about her firing of a state commissioner can be made public, she has not called on others in her administration to do the same. Unless they do, the results of the personnel board investigation may never be revealed.

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The personnel board and the state Legislature are running separate investigations into whether Palin, who is the Republican vice presidential candidate, abused her power by pressuring Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan to fire a state trooper involved in a messy divorce with the governor's sister. Palin fired Monegan in July.

The legislative investigator is due to deliver a report Friday. If it reveals problems with Palin's handling of the case, it could provide campaign fodder in the final weeks of before the election.

Palin refuses to cooperate with that inquiry, which she says has become too political, citing comments made by the Democratic senator overseeing the case. She is only cooperating with the personnel board inquiry, which is much more secretive.

Her staffers also were not cooperating with the legislative probe until last weekend, when state Attorney General Talis Colberg said they will honor subpoenas that a court refused to block last week.

With the stakes so high, both sides were planning a week of court fighting ahead of Friday's deadline.

To head off the report, five Republican state lawmakers asked the Alaska Supreme Court to shut down the legislative investigation. Oral arguments are scheduled for Wednesday.

A legal fight is also brewing over the secrecy of the personnel board investigation. Anchorage attorney Meg Simonian wants the board's independent council Tim Petumenos to conduct his probe in public and says she's planning a lawsuit to force him to do so.

"Gov. Palin has said repeatedly, through her 'Truth Squad,' that she has nothing to hide and wants the personnel board's investigation to be open," Simonian wrote in a letter to Petumenos. "That does not appear to be true of her politically appointed employees."

Asked whether the governor would call for her aides to open the investigation, her attorney, deferred to Petumenos.

"The governor waived her confidentiality and wanted this matter decided openly," attorney Thomas Van Flein said. "Mr. Petumenos is in charge of his investigation and until and unless he says otherwise, we will respect his decision."

Petumenos did not respond to a message seeking comment today but, in a letter to Simonian, he said he was required by law to keep the matter confidential because those under scrutiny have not waived their privacy rights.

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