Scooter Libby: Guilty As Charged
Tuesday, March 6th, 2007 by RLRFrom The Guardian UK
By Michael Tomasky
In the biggest news story of the year so far out of Washington, I Lewis “Scooter” Libby, a former top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney, has just been convicted by a jury for lying about his role in the public outing of a covert CIA officer whose husband, a former diplomat, had strongly challenged the Bush administration’s case for going to war against Iraq.
Libby was found guilty on four out of five counts of perjury, obstruction of justice, and lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about a conversation with Tim Russert, one of Washington’s most powerful journalists.
So what does this mean? At least three important things. First, the verdict means that it’s now been officially established in a court of law that the administration was engaged in a campaign to discredit an undercover officer and a diplomat, Valerie Plame and Joe Wilson. Libby’s defense - that he learned about Plame’s identity from journalists - paralleled the administration’s public arguments that it made no effort to try to expose Plame and Wilson to criticism. The jury didn’t buy that.
Second, the verdict vindicates the prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald. Mountains of calumny have been heaped on him by the right since he brought the indictment against Libby. Conservatives were waiting for an acquittal to pounce on Fitzgerald, on Wilson, on Plame - and on Democrats and liberals generally for having made a federal case out of nothing. They would have used an acquittal to shut down all the talk about the manipulation of pre-war intelligence, which was Joe Wilson’s initial accusation. And not only conservatives - a lot of the paragons of Washington morality (yes, an oxymoron) were waiting, too. Bob Woodward, who used to be a great investigative reporter, once called Fitzgerald a “junkyard dog prosecutor”. Can’t be said now.
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