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Prosecute Plame?
FrontPageMagazine ^ | June 8, 2007 | Kenneth R. Timmerman

Posted on 06/08/2007 10:02:41 AM PDT by Ooh-Ah

U.S. District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton wants former vice presidential aide I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby to go directly to jail, without passing go, and without collecting $200 dollars. And so far, the word from the White House is that President Bush has no intention of giving Libby a Get Out of Jail Free card.

“The prospect of a pardon has become so sensitive inside the West Wing that top aides have been kept out of the loop, and even Bush friends have been told not to bring it up with the president,” the Washington Post wrote on Wednesday.
 
If true, that’s a pretty sorry comment on the state of the Bush White House, and the state of this presidency, especially given Bush’s obsession with demanding total loyalty from his staff. Bush’s loyalty is a one-way street.
 
As I have argued in this space before, Scooter deserves a pardon, now, before he serves a single day in jail.
 
While Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald – a Clinton appointee, let’s not forget – did succeed in convincing a Washington, DC jury to convict Libby of lying to a grand jury, it’s also crystal clear that Libby was being questioned about a crime everyone now agrees he did not commit.
 
Even Judge Walton acknowledged this, noting on Tuesday during the sentencing hearing that “the trial did not prove Libby knew that [Valerie] Plame worked in an undercover capacity.”
 
But the trial did prove, beyond any doubt whatsoever, that Libby was not the government official who leaked her name. That honor falls to former deputy secretary of State Richard Armitage, who spilled the beans in an interview with Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward weeks before Libby ever had the conservations Pat Fitzgerald’s taxpayer-funded Bush-hunt investigated for 2 1/2 years.
 
For Walton and Fitzgerald, it made no difference that there was no underlying crime. Libby deserved jail time because he “lied about nearly everything that mattered,” Fitzgerald said in his sentencing memorandum. Even worse: Fitzgerald claimed at the hearing that Libby’s lying “uniquely blocked” him from learning the full truth about what happened.
 
Much hot air has been expelled from various parts about the crime of perjury. Writing in the Washington Times the day after Libby was sentenced, Bush critic Bruce Fein said Libby not only deserved jail time, but “deserves a stiff prison term to deter his erstwhile Bush administration colleagues, for example, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and White House political guru Karl Rove, from equivocating with Congress and the courts.”
 
Fein, who reminds anyone who will listen that he was a deputy attorney general during the Reagan administration, also supported a Congressional motion of censure against President Bush last year. He believes that sending Libby to jail “is imperative also to honor the rule of law, the nation’s crown jewel.”
 
Well, if perjury is so important – and it is, when it concerns an underlying crime – then Attorney General Alberto Gonzales should consider appointing a Special Counsel to investigate Valerie Plame.
 
Why? Because by all appearances, either Val has the memory of a mouse, or she flagrantly perjured herself while testifying under oath before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on March 16, 2007.
 
Under questioning, Plame insisted that she was not the one who recommended that the CIA send her husband, former U.S. Ambassador Joe Wilson, to Niger in February 2002 to investigate claims that Saddam Hussein was seeking to purchase significant quantities of uranium from Africa.
 
“No. I did not recommend him,” she said. “I did not suggest him. There was no nepotism involved. I didn’t have the authority.”
 
Besides the fact that no one has ever suggested, to my knowledge, that Valerie Plame actually made the decision to send her husband, her statement is pretty straight forward. She neither recommended her husband, or suggested his name.
 
Perhaps Ms. Plame never expected that anyone would challenge that statement. Perhaps she just assumed that the truth would remain cloaked in secrecy. Perhaps she trusted her friends in Congress to make sure that no evidence contradicting her assertions would ever be released to the public.
 
When the Senate Select committee on intelligence first investigated the Niger story in a report released in July 2004, it stated flat-out, “The plan to send the former ambassador to Niger was suggested by the former ambassador’s wife, a CIA employee.”
 
That angered Mr. Wilson, who wrote to the committee shortly afterwards, claiming that this assertion was “not true.”
 
Since then, the Senate intelligence committee has gone back to the source, and reviewed yet again many of the intelligence documents that it relied upon for that initial report.
 
One of those documents was the email from Valerie Plame to her boss at CIA in which she recommended her husband for the Niger trip.
 
According to Wilson, that memo was “little more than a recitation of his contacts and bona fides.” But in additional views from intelligence committee vice-chairman Sen. Kit Bond, Sen. Hatch, and Sen. Burr, released on May 25, 2007, they state flat out, “This is not true.”
 
And then they drop the bomb. “The Committee did not release the full text of the document, thinking it was unnecessary in light of the other evidence provided in the [original] report, but considering the controversy surrounding this document, making the full text available now seems prudent.”
 
The Valerie Plame e-mail, now fully declassified, shows without any doubt that she recommended her husband for the mission in Niger.
 
After recounting an earlier fact-finding mission he had carried out in Niger for the Agency, as well as his good contacts "with both the [prime minister] and the former minister of mines," she concluded by saying that her husband "may be in a position to assist. Therefore, request your thoughts on what, if anything to pursue here.”
 
Is there anything ambiguous about that statement? I don’t think so. Valerie Plame was recommending her husband for the Niger trip. [The document can be viewed here]
 
It ought to be sent to Attorney General Albert Gonzales by members of Mr. Waxman’s committee, along with a cover note requesting a Special counsel investigation to determine whether Ms. Plame committed perjury during her March 16, 2007 Congressional testimony.
 
And that’s not the only instance where Valerie Plame appears to have garbled the facts, intentionally or not.
 
Asked by Rep. Westmoreland about the context for sending her husband to Niger, Plame showed that she had been paying very close attention to what was publicly known  about the case:
 
“Congressman, I believe one of the pieces of evidence that was introduced in the Libby trial was an INR memo of that meeting, where it states -- in fact, my husband was not particularly looking forward -- he didn't think it was necessary. There had been, I believe, at least two other reports -- one by a three-star general and one by the ambassador there on the ground -- who said there really wasn't much to this allegation.
 
“And the INR folks that attended the meeting also said: Well, we're not sure that this is really necessary.  But it was ultimately decided that he would go, use his contacts -- which were extensive in the government -- to see if there was anything more to this.  It was a serious question asked by the Office of the Vice President, and it deserved a serious answer.”
 
There’s only one problem with Valerie Plame’s statement. It doesn’t square with what she also should have known from the classified record.
 
The report “by the ambassador there on the ground” has also been partially declassified, and concluded– precisely to the contrary – that initial CIA reporting “provides sufficient details to warrant another hard look at Niger's uranium sales,” according to the latest Senate intelligence committee report.
 
If anyone thought this story ended with Scooter Libby’s sentencing hearing, or even with him going to jail, think again.
 
There is much more to come. Stay tuned.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: plame; scooterlibby; wilson
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1 posted on 06/08/2007 10:02:45 AM PDT by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah

Go throw a nickle down a well and wish upon a star.

Republicans are BALL-LESS DWEEBS and such a scenario will NEVER happen.


2 posted on 06/08/2007 10:06:12 AM PDT by Al Gator (Refusing to "stoop to your enemy's level", gets you cut off at the knees.)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Well written article.


3 posted on 06/08/2007 10:06:18 AM PDT by CPT Clay (Drill ANWR, Personal Accounts NOW.)
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To: Ooh-Ah

If he wouldn’t pardon the two Border Patrol agents that got railroaded into 12 & 13 years of prison... oh, wait. I forgot. He was DRIVING that railroad train.


4 posted on 06/08/2007 10:07:57 AM PDT by samtheman
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To: Ooh-Ah

Prosecute Plame?

ABSOLUTELY...however, we know that will NEVER happen!


5 posted on 06/08/2007 10:11:59 AM PDT by oldteen
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To: Ooh-Ah

Big secret: top managers, generally, have no concept of ‘loyalty’ except as something they can punish their subordinates for not having.


6 posted on 06/08/2007 10:14:17 AM PDT by Grut
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To: Ooh-Ah

As difficult as it has been, I have been trying real hard to stick with Bush. Now however, the immigration thing really made it hard to swallow, but if he lets Libby go to the slammer, I am gone.


7 posted on 06/08/2007 10:16:44 AM PDT by Old Retired Army Guy
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To: Ooh-Ah

WHY is Bush so sensitive about the subject that friends can’t even bring it up?


8 posted on 06/08/2007 10:20:16 AM PDT by Fairview ( Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Several major points:

1. Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald – a Clinton appointee

2. Judge Walton....“the trial did not prove Libby knew that [Valerie] Plame worked in an undercover capacity.”

3. ...trial did prove, beyond any doubt whatsoever,Libby was not the government official who leaked her name

Now what’s wrong with this picture. People are so concerned about sending the wrong man to jail. Where’s the outcry? Sending Libby to jail would tantamount to a travesty of justice.


9 posted on 06/08/2007 10:21:33 AM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: Ooh-Ah
There is much more to come. Stay tuned.

Reason to hope? As suggested elsewhere on FR, a presidential pardon would not remove the stain of this conviction.

Let them exhaust their appeals.

Severity suggests desperation.

10 posted on 06/08/2007 10:22:16 AM PDT by tsomer
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To: Fairview

No wonder Bush is so far out of the loop......WHO is controlling access to the president and keeping him uninformed? Rove? Who? Bush needs to connect with his “base” and see things for himself.


11 posted on 06/08/2007 10:24:24 AM PDT by tioga (Fred Thompson for President.)
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To: Al Gator
Republicans are BALL-LESS DWEEBS...

Hmmmm... may I make a slight modification?

Most Republicans in Congress and the Senate are BALL-LESS DWEEBS...

Please don't paint fine American members of the Republican party with that brush.

12 posted on 06/08/2007 10:26:08 AM PDT by DJ Frisat (SPAM: best in the can and in sammiches -- not for use on computers.)
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To: lilylangtree
President Bush has no problem demanding blanket amnesty for 15 to 20 million illegal aliens.

But he can't bring himself to pardon a loyal subordinate who was railroaded.

Pathetic.

L

13 posted on 06/08/2007 10:27:37 AM PDT by Lurker (Comparing moderate islam to extremist islam is like comparing small pox to plague.)
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To: Ooh-Ah

President Thompson will pardon Scooter. He just needs to drag the appeals process out until the inauguration.


14 posted on 06/08/2007 10:29:28 AM PDT by capydick (What if the Hokey Pokey IS what it's all about?)
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To: Al Gator

Plame has made her own punishment...she has to live with that dickhead Joe Wilson, and she can’t get rid of him by recommending him for any foreign service.

These two are toast in D.C. They’ll have to find a playground elsewhere.


15 posted on 06/08/2007 10:29:39 AM PDT by Palladin (NO Shamnesty!!!)
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To: All
SEE:

SNEAK PREVIEW!

View the SECRET email from Valerie Plame Wilson to her bosses at CIA that she was hoping would remain classified.

It shows beyond any doubt who sent Joe Wilson to Niger in Feburary 2002....

Read my story about the Senate Intelligence committee's rebuke of Joe Wilson at Newsmax

16 posted on 06/08/2007 10:32:17 AM PDT by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah
Scooter might be guilty of lying, if so it is a separate issue from Plame's lies. Didn't the Congress just say again that Joe Wilson was a liar? If so, it is a crime that Valerie Plame sat behind her CIA protection knowing (and OBVIOUSLY approving) that her husband was publicly revealing and lying about a confidential CIA mission which she sent him on.

But even if she didn't send him (she did)it was positively criminal for her to enjoy the show while her husband lied about an agency mission on every tv station.

Her own husband, that's what makes the idea of her "covert" status ridiculous. How the hell could anyone expect their being covert to protect them from their husband going on a public world tour shouting that he went on a secret mission???

17 posted on 06/08/2007 10:33:15 AM PDT by Williams
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To: Ooh-Ah
"Prosecute Plame?"

Innocent! Innocent! Innocent!

I can't help it ... she's too lovely to go behind bars. I would acquit if only she'd have dinner with me at Nathan's in Georgetown. [I know I will be flamed for this.]

Well, somebody had to post pictures ...


18 posted on 06/08/2007 10:34:08 AM PDT by tom h
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To: tom h

You’re just a dirty old man!


19 posted on 06/08/2007 10:36:05 AM PDT by Old Retired Army Guy
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To: Ooh-Ah
If anyone thought this story ended with Scooter Libby’s sentencing hearing, or even with him going to jail, think again.

I doubt it. Mr. "straight arrow" prosecutor will apply the Clinton Rule - Democrats are not prosecuted for perjury.

20 posted on 06/08/2007 10:39:34 AM PDT by colorado tanker
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