
More cross-examination by Wells of Tim Russert …
NOTES: (1) This is not an official transcript — just a very loose paraphrase, at best — so don't treat it as one. Even exchanges that look like verbatim dialogue are just the gist of each question and each answer, with any key phrases or pauses included as best I can. (2) My own notes will be in parentheses and/or italics. (3) I'll tell you the time at the end of each update; expect about 15-20 minutes before the next one. The hamsters that run the servers will appreciate it if you don't refresh excessively in the meantime. (4) I didn't write the book on the Valerie Plame outing — but you should buy it, if you haven't already. If you're wondering who this "Swopa" character is, my previous writings on Plamemania can be found here.
Wells walks Russert through the NBC statement on his deposition for the grand jury. I denies that Russert (1) received a leak about Valerie Wilson, (2) knew her name or that she was a CIA operative, and (3) that he gave the information in (2) to Libby.
[Before Fitzgerald's indictment, the statement was much discussed in the blogosphere as a non-denial denial (see last third of linked post). It left room that Russert knew "Joe Wilson's wife" worked for the CIA, and that he told this Libby.]
(Wells tries to get Russert to admit that he didn't deny knowing Joe Wilson's wife worked for the CIA. Russert insists that denial of name and CIA operative status DID deny this. Several go-rounds on this with same result, followed by a break.)
W: You wrote a letter to Buffalo News in June 2004 expressing regret for not recalling a telephone call to a reporter
T: I'd like to see the letter, because it involved a larger
W: Are you telling the jury you don't recall the letter?
T: That was a piece of it, but I don't remember the whole exchange
W: (refusing to let Russert see letter yet) Do you recall the letter?
T: Do you recall the letter but not the specifics
W: Do you write letters to newspapers apologizing for a faulty memory often?
T: No.
W: But you did write such a letter to the Buffalo News?
T: That was part of the letter.
W: But it was in the letter?
T: Could I see the letter?
W: I'm not going to let you see the letter yet. Do you remember the letter (describes it again, emphasizing faulty recollection)?
T: I do, but not the specifics.
(More back-and-forth like this.)
It's 3:45.
(Wells displays the letter Russert wrote, acknowledging a forgotten phone call.)
W: In a later interview with Howard Kurtz, you said you had just plain forgotten this phone call.
T: Yes.
W: I want to go through some of the background facts. Kurtz had asked about the newspaper's negative review of your conduct as moderator of a debate, right? And he asked if you had placed a call to the author to complain about the review, and you denied the phone call. (gets Russert to say yes at various steps along the way) The newspaper later challenged this denial in an article titled, "Tim, Don't You Remember?"
T: Yes.
W: When you denied making the phone call, do you feel you were giving your opinion in good faith?
T: Yes.
W: You weren't trying to lie, you were
T: Right.
W: You were confident in your recollection?
T: I'd like to know what I said. I did recall sending a letter to Mr. Sommers, and you saw the result of it.
W: You checked documentation to correct your recollection of the phone call… you do not have any documention of your conversation with Mr. Libby, do you?
T: No.
W: Libby's call was about not your conduct, but someone else's, right?
T: Yes.
W: The call you forgot was about your conduct, a direct criticism of you.
T: But it was four years ago.
W: (starts citing newspaper article) Do you recall those words?
T: No.
W: You don't recall such a personal attack?
T: It was a very difficult debate, and people chose up sides. I get criticisim
W: But the Buffalo News is your hometown paper.
T: Yes.
W: You're a Buffalo icon?
T: Yes.
W: And this paper criticized you?
T: But they've written so much positive about my family, I take it as it comes.
It's 4:00.
(Wells asks questions about newspaper's criticism of Russert — how did he feel about writer, etc. Russert tries to emphasize that he was just disagreeing over facts.)
W: But in talking to Howard Kurtz, you just completely misrecollected the events, didn't you?
T: The main thing was a disagreement over facts, which I recalled accurately.
W: It's fair to say the faulty recollection was well-publicized… anyone could find out about it in 2007 in an Internet search?
T: I suppose. I don't know the state of Lexis-Nexis, etc.
A conference at Chez Walton. Wells enters the "Tim, Don't You Remember" article into evidence, and a separate Buffalo News article on the controversy.
W: I'm going to move to a different area. I want to ask you about your FBI interview in Nov 2003 You were at home? Person who called you was Jack Eckenrode?
T: Yes.
W: He said it was a national security investigation, and he wanted your help?
T: Don't recall those words.
W: Did he say it was a criminal
T: Don't recall those exact words.
W: You said Plame leak was "a big deal", do you recall that?
T: Yes.
W: So when FBI agent said he was investigating that, you don't that?
T: He said that later.
W: Tell me what he said.
T: He introduced himself, said we at met on Meet the Press (describes him bringing his family, etc.), then said he was calling
W: Do you recall
W: Do you recall saying timeframe was July 6 to July 12, when you were on vacation in Nantucket?
T: I came back July 8, would have to be after that
W Recall saying that call was about biased reporting on Hardball
T: Don't recall use of word bias, but remember upset about show
W: I'm asking if you recall your words in the interview
T: I recall saying it was a complaint
W: Do you recall saying there was not much you could do
T: Recall saying it was not my mgmt responsibility, and told him various people (lists names) of who to call
W: You did not refuse to answer questions of FBI agent about conv with Libby
T: I did talk to him, yes
W: You did not state that there was an understanding that the call would be in confidence
T: Right, because he was relaying things to me that Libby had said about the call
W: You talked about both sides of conversation
T: Repeated what he had said to give context to what I said
W: Similar to your GJ testimony in 2004, right?
T: Yes
W: And you did not claim any privilege of confidentiality?
T: I had treated the conversation in confidence, I did not report on the call. (He's not understanding Wells' point)
W: Did you know that Eckinrode was portraying Libby's side of the conversation accurately?
T: I didn't doubt him.
(Wells points out that Russert later did claim the confidentiality of Libby's call as a reason not to testify. Now there's a brief chat at the bench.)
It's 4:24.
Wells displays letters from Fitzgerard to NBC attorneys explaining why they want Russert's testimony, and possible limits to protect journalistic privileges.
W: Do you remember NBC claiming they were fighting the subpoena due to chilling effect on their news gathering?
T: Yes, generally speaking
Wells displays NBC statement.
W: This statement does not discuss your Nov 2003 FBI interview, when you discussed the Libby conversation freely?
T: Right
W: Was NBC president Neal Shapiro know this?
T: Don't know
W: Did there come a time when Shapiro?
T: Don't know, can't speak for him
W: Did you ever have a conversation with him?
T: Can't recall.
W: (like he's addressing a child) Do you think it might have happened? Based on your pattern and practice?
T: I don't know if I talked to him directly, I talked to counsel in NY, they may have talked to him
W: You're good friends with Shapiro?
T: Yes
W: This was a matter of great importance, right?
T: Any time a reporter is subpoenaed, yes.
W: Did you discuss this important matter with the president of NBC and your good friend, Mr. Shapiro?
T: Just remember talking to attorney
W: Do you recall telling Andrea Mitchell?
T: No.
W: David Gregory?
T: No.
It's 4:40.
Wells submits as evidence, and displays, a declaration by Russert filed with court. Paragraph 5 emphasizes that an essential part of his job is keeping conversations with government officials confidential, that he will not discuss identities or information publicly.
W: You are swearing that you will not release confidential information freely, right?
T: It depends on the nature of the conversation
Wells continues reading from the document. Quotes Paragraph 6, which specifically says Russert cannot testify about Libby conversation without violating confidentiality.
W: That's what you're saying to Judge Hogan under oath?
T: That it would have a chilling effect, yes.
W: You're saying under oath that you can't even confirm that
T: As a journalist, I didn't want to do it, correct.
W: Not just didn't want to, you can't do it, correct?
T: Correct.
W: You don't say that you had already talked to this to Agent Eckenrode in Nov 2003.
T: There is no mention of it.
W: You had already disclosed the substance of the conversation
T: There's a difference
W: But this does not say you had confirmed the existence of the conversation, and the content of it as well.
T: Correct.
W: In June 2004, your position that you could not do this.
T: Correct.
W: In Nov 2003, you violated this, didn't you?
T: No, because they asked about my side of the conversation, and conversation was a viewer complaint.
W: Are statements to Judge Hogan true or false?
T: So you violated these statements when you talked to Eckenrode.
T The focus was on my words at that time, and Libby's viewer complaint was not in any way confidential. As is my policy, I did not report on them.
W: So why say you can't talk about the same conversation?
T: We did not want to get involved in an open-ended fishing expedition.
W: (Accuses Russert of making a false statement to federal judge)
T: I just talked to Eckenrode about my side of the conversation
W: You talked to him about both sides of the conversation
T: I listened to him describe Libby's side.
Walton calls a truce recess for the evening. He also makes a statement that the prosecution does NOT contend that Libby did anything wrong in talking about the National Intelligence Estimate on July 8, 2003 or thereafter, "after it had been declassified by the president." So now you know.
Prosecution is expected to end its case tomorrow morning… and defense wants to start with Jill Abramson, but Fitzgerald has an objection to that. So that objection will be addressed first. The defense says they'll be happy to start Monday, given various motions they have to submit first, and they don't want to waste jury's time. Fitz says they can start with other witnesses — "Pincus, [Evan] Thomas, Kessler, Sanger…" I don't think this will be resolved until tomorrow morning.
And with that, school is out. Goodnight!
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Yes!
Swopa!
thx Swopa!
fitz.
FITZ!
What is this apology letter that Wells is talking about?
So close! SWOPA! FDL! What a day!
Go Bills! How ’bout them Sabres?
Fitz!
What is this apology letter that Wells is talking about?
Sounds like the defense dug up some years old letter in which Russert apologized for faulty memory on something.
Go FDL and Godspeed.
Here’s an invitation. When the server load gets high, as it DEFINITELY is now that Timmeh’s on the stand — you may wanna join some of us at a live-chat on another server, over at
http://gabbly.com/firedoglake.com
It’s a fun kinda chat-app. We’ve had as many as 35 folx in there at one point earlier today. It’s a good place to discuss off-Libby stuff… Rayne introduced it a few days back and imho it’s cool. Sometimes we get harrassed by hackers, in which case we retreat to a private redoubt. Others of us know how to get its URL to you without publishing it here.
If you wanna join us, C U over in chat-land. Remember, because Gabbly runs on a completely other server somewhere on the ‘net, using it’ll take some of the heavy load off the FDL servers while Timmeh is walking over hot FitzCoals later…
litigatormom @ 6
i think it’s one of those shiny objects LHP is always talking about.
Give Wells credit, he’s trying hard…trying to lay groundwork for memory issues in a larger vein…but he’s fighting an uphill battle and he can’t change facts.
litigatormom @ 6
Yes, I don’t recall this letter at all. Anyone care to clue me in as to what it is about and why it is important?
Wells!What’s with The Purloined Letter?
does anyone have the complete hardball transcripts for july 8 and 9, 2003? i’ve only found partials. thanks!
spinoza @
10
Yes, something in the Buffalo News. Wells is trying hard but he just can’t connect, so he’s going back to Matthews.
Russert is just not giving him anything to work with.
Wow, this not-a-transcipt play-by-play makes it sound like Wells is being kinda dickish. I can’t imagine the “I’m not gonna let you see the letter till I feel like giving it to you” attitude is going to go over well with some jurors (particularly the lady EW described as seeming to be very interested in any of the media types, always perking up big time whenever names of TV news guys like David Gregory are mentioned).
This line of questioning must be to try to establish that lil’ Russ might have memory lapses, and therefore Scooter might have caught that disease from Russert simultaneously as Russert forgot he blabbed to everyone about the identity of Plame.
Lame. (pun intended)
W – How often do you eat at Chef Geoff’s?
T – Often, it is owned by Norah O’Donnell MSNBC’s chief Washington correspondent and her husband and is in my neighborhood.
W – How is the food?
T – I don’t remember…
W – Exactly my point! You seem to forget something as simple as their food being lousy and yet you keep going back!
Just a reminder: preventing excessive load on the servers from off-topic comments and one-liners would be much appreciated. On-topic comments, as brief as possible, please. The servers are getting a workout with the liveblogging, so please think before you write some extraneous comment. Thanks.
27,087 — With over 27,000 new visitors in the last hour, we are thrilled. But all of the off-topic comments make it very difficult for everyone to get on to read. Please, help us prevent a server crash. Thanks.
Geeze, if I were a juror I’d be less than thrilled over the fact that Wells is refusing to show the letter after T asking several times.
My first thought would be, why is Wells being such a jerk about it?
If Wells’ cross is an example of what we can expect to see in Scooter’s case-in-chief, Scooter should start picking out his orange jumpsuit. If neither Cheney nor Scooter testify, who are they going to put on? Sanger? That’s the big defense? Cupcake
sorry if i’ve missed this, but,
will this trial transcript and/or audio tapes be released?
LandOfTheFree @
18
Yeah, that was my reaction too. If the jurors get to talk to us after the trial ends, it’ll be interesting to see how much they say Wells pissed them off with stuff like this.
http://www.dailyhowler.com/dh062504.shtml has a rundown on something to do with Hillary.
re: the Buffalo letter… read this for background….
http://www.dailyhowler.com/dh062504.shtml
(and learn to google stuff rather than being the sixth person to ask the same question)
Question: Does Fitz know about this letter that T wrote, even if we don’t?
Russert had said he never called News reporter Mark Sommer to complain about a negative review of his performance in moderating a Hillary Clinton-Rick Lazio Senate debate in 2000. But Sommer says in an interview that Russert called him twice about the piece and “was furious…I was struck how a guy who basks in the reputation of being a tough reporter can’t handle criticism when it applies to himself.”
“I just plain didn’t remember it,” Russert told Kurtz. But he didn’t deny what Sommer had said—that he actually called Sommer two times.
http://216.109.125.130/search/cache?p=Buffalo News russert apology&fr=yfp-t-501&toggle=1&ei=UTF-8&u=www.dailyhowler.com/dh062504.shtml&w=buffalo news russert apology&d=Hr-v3OxsONCx&icp=1&.intl=us
What would be cool would be for an acting troupe to dynamically re-enact this trial in real time. They could use this blog as their script. This would be reality television for political junkies. Plus it would really show the talent of an acting troupe to be able to dynamically interpret and play the characters.
Seems to me the line of questioning is intended to establish faulty memory meme without Libby testifying. Stylish, but weak.
This is from WP article http://www.washingtonpost.com/…..Jun20.html
p.lukasiak @ 26
Sqooze me, Mr. P. Perhaps maybe it has something to do with six people all asking the same question at the same time, and not knowing that someone might answer it before yours gets posted? I guess, this being my second comment in two entire days, I will be quiet now, even though my question was entirely on topic.
Terre @
21
He is being “dickish” to show what a poor memory Tim Russert has, implying he may have forgotten that he told Libby about Plame.
If you’re getting annoyed reading these exchanges, imagine how it feels to type them. :)
4:08 PM What’s going on now is also sort of absurd. Wells is bringing up an example of Russert forgetting an unrelated event, then later correcting himself. I suppose the points are that Russert’s memory is not infallible and that maybe Libby forgets just like Russert. It’s a sort of courtroom pseudoscience. You forgot something, ergo your memory is impeached. You forgot something, ergo Libby forgot and isn’t a liar. Yawn…
aravir @ 30
Not only that. Wells may be inferring it’s possible Russert forgot telling Libby about Plame.
This is Scooter’s entire defense (in a nutshell):
Cross-examine everyone with this question: Have you ever forgotten anything in your whole life? Oh, really? Then can we really be sure that you are remembering things correctly NOW?
Unfortunately for the defense, EVERYONE seems to remember it differently than Scooter.
Is Wells really the best that money could buy? Or does he just have such a crappy hand to play?
I wonder if Timmeh will start to be harder on his guests after being shown how to grill them today? Or is TV different than real life?
It’s amazing that Timmy is not supporting our troops. He is a really bad friend isn’t he? He mislead the American public with his warped Republican spiel at every opportunity on his newscast, but yet when it comes time for him to take the fall for the Republicans he just can’t seem to do it. Really Tim, what kind of man are you? You know you owe Dick Cheney and Scooter Libby the loyalty to take the fall for the Bush Administration.
In response to Russert’s insistence that the revelation of Plame’s identity was “significant,” Wells should recall testimony from other witnesses who said that this information was NOT particularly significant at the time. That is why witnesses have had so much trouble remembering when, and from whom, they heard it. It only became significant after Wilson, Corn, Cooper et al began spinning the outing/retaliation theory.
If one took a snapshot of who is lurking in this comment section it would probably reveal a crossection/microcosm of America.
Will the sleeper cell terrorists, the GOP pedophiles, GOP closet gays, unfaithful GOP husbands and GOP chickenhawks please identify themselves?
Scratch sleeper cell…
Mickey @ 35
It’s about as weak an analogy as they get. Russert’s memory lapse wasn’t about something he said to federal investigators and to a grand jury regarding the hottest national interest topic of the day.
_
Wells’ examination has reinforced the unusual (from Russert’s point of view) nature of Libby’s call rendering more not less memorable. It has also shown how incongruous the introduction of Plame’s by Russert would have been. Pressing the “everyone has a poor memory” button now, I do not think can undo the damage Wells has just inflicted on his case.
Just checked the site of the Special Prosecutor – when will the Grand Jury tapes be released? Sometime today?
I can understand Wells purrfectly. I never forget. Now, where’s my damn glasses?
Mickey @ 35
To me, that just demonstrates the huge difference between Russert and Libby, in this respect. Libby didn’t correct himself.
This defense will probably vindicate anyone over 50, and essentially eliminate any elderly witnesses from the Justice System. You (over 50) know those “Senior Moments” — you go to the kitchen and suddenly forget what you went to get!!! Aah yes, that is a coffee mug in hand, and my purpose was more coffee.
Democrat 4 Ever @ 44
CNN said they would b playing excerpts later this evening.
i wish wells would get tim to give his opinion of tweety
and,
JudeanPeople’sFront @ 23
Hey, I just got here through rawstory.com. Does that help or hinder the servers?
I seem to have had some dropouts there:
Wells’ examination has reinforced the unusual (from Russert’s point of view) nature of Libby’s call rendering it more not less memorable. It has also shown how incongruous the introduction of Plame’s name by Russert would have been. Pressing the “everyone has a poor memory” button now, I do not think can undo the damage Wells has just inflicted on his case.
FITZ?
Democrat 4 Ever @ 44
Randall Samborn issued a press release giving all the details.
Hugh at 51: I could not agree more! If there is a strategy at work, I confess I can’t see it. Wells just established that a) the call was very unusual; b) that for Russert to mention Plame’s name would have been a non-sequitur.
OT: J-LIE on SitRoom shilling for Bushco
I-CT now stands for Irrelevant.
Fitzmas @ 41
Maureen Orth is surely lurking.
From last thread:
Is it really true that Russert almost never, as he says, gets complaining phone calls from very important people?
Why did Matalin tell Scooter to call Russert in the first place? She must have known the produers of Hardball would be the ones who could “correct” tweety, and not Russert.
None of my friends have ever called me “Rip”. And I have never slept in a cell
But now that I’m awake, have I missed anything?
My duty is to stay awake. Easy to do reading this blog.
Kudos to EVERYBODY.
F: Did he say off the record?
T: My personal policy is always off the record when talking to government officials unless specified.
What a joke this man is. As per #82 in last thread, can’t put a finer point on the MSM dereliction of duty.
The difference between the Buffalo letter incident and the Libby conversation is this:
1. In the Buffalo incident, Timmeh didn’t recall the conversations, but later did. He remembered the conversations after he was confronted with others opinions about it happening, and then he corrected the record.
2. In the Libby conversation, there is absolutely no proof anywhere, other than Libby’s GJ testimony (in which he later says HE was mistaken because he admitted Russert was not his first source) that Russert forgot this part of the converstaion. It’s also rather unlikely that Russert would forget that he didn’t know about Plame’s identity, since it would have been part of a huge story and he would most likely remember discussing it with Scooter that day. There is no evidence that Timmeh could have learned this info from anyone before this conversation, either.
Scooter has motive to lie. Timmeh doesn’t.
Several people have stepped up with evidence that questions Scooter’s testimony and honesty.
If I were in the courtroom and an impartial juror, I’d be very curious about this Buffalo incident, but I’d come to the conclusions above. I can’t see that this puts any question marks above Timmeh’s testimony. Therefore, I’d conclude Scooter’s full of it.
P.S. terrific job with the liveblogging, Swopa, and the additional info from Jane and all of the legal minds here!
If I were Scooter’s lawyer, I’d be thinking about the Robert Goulet defence about now.
So Russert was miffed about a negative review, called and complained about it, and then he got over it and forgot about it. I can believe that. It wasn’t significant in his life, why would he remember it four years later?
However, discussing a covert CIA agent’s identity with someone from the OVP, with everything related that was going on at the time – yeah, I’d say that would be significant enough to remember.
Wells is grasping at straws, and I think he knows it.
JPF@49 — trial transcripts are a court function. They must be ordered and paid for, typically by the attorneys involved in preparation for an appeal to a higher court.
KestrelBrighteyes @ 62
Yep. My essential point at 42.
merciless @ 57
Well if it’s true that the administration considers Russert a reliable conduit for getting their message out, then it probably was pretty unusual for them to call to complain.
But I suspect the point was more that the very idea of Libby calling with a “viewer complaint” is ludicrous. Anyone who can get a call put through to Russert isn’t just a viewer calling to complain.
I thought Walton had said no transcripts until after the verdict, to avoid having things choice quotes blasted across the media where the jurors couldn’t help but see them?
Cranky
“Unfortunately for the defense, EVERYONE seems to remember it differently than Scooter.”That’s because only Libby’s testimony is being compared to everyone else’s testimony. But several of the prosecutor’s witnesses have contradicted one another, and if their testimony were compared over and over again to the testimony of others, I would expect to see discrepancies come up as frequently as they are with Libby.Several witnesses have testified that Wilson’s wife was mentioned “offhandedly,” with no particular emphasis. Fleischer testified that reporters seemed uninterested in the information about Plame, not thinking it particularly significant. This is why so many people have trouble remembering it – it wasn’t particularly damning, and in and of itself did nothing to discredit the essence of Wilson’s claims. (Other facts, however, DID discredit Wilson.)
http://www.thebuffaloicon.com/
This obviously needs “more reporting and investigation”.
-
Merciless at 57-
Could be that the GOP was going to teh highest person at NBC that they thought might be sympathetic…And even if Tweety doesn’t work for Timmy, if Timmy gets a complaint call from Scooter, and passes it along, the message gets sent, no?
IOW- Scooter compalining directly to CM or his boss might not work, it’s automatically a confrontational situation…But if CM’s boss gets a call from Timmy saying “You know, I’me getting calls from SL, he thinks you guys are being unfair, yadda yadda” maybe they make NBC pull a punch somewhere down the line, trying to be ‘fair’…
It’s all about working the refs…
thanks ouiski,
so they defintely will release them after the trial?
audio?ouiski @ 63
Is everybody else finding this cross-examination excruciating? Fingernails on a chalkboard excruciating?
I wonder what Solomon would do?
MP3′JudeanPeople’sFront @ 70
MP3s of GJ testimony are being distributed to press via OSC.
So, it’s perfectly normal for a man like Scooter Libby to forget things from time to time.
But all others, Tim Russert included, should have photographic memories and never, ever forget even a single detail.
It’s the most hypocritical defense of anyone I’ve ever heard.
someone asked: Why would Scooter call Timmeh to whine about Matthews?
My guess would be that there are several interrelated reasons.
First, remember that the OVP (via Martin) said that MTP was their “best venue”.
Scooter probably didn’t have any leverage at MSNBC.
They know Timmeh is maleable to them. They also realize that Timmeh might be a little deferential to the OVP because of that little Joe Wilson interview while Timmeh was on vacation. OVP needs to throw it’s weight around a little.
They also know that Timmeh will want inside info, and they can pass him what they want to. So, it’s a good strategy from OVP’s standpoint to start with your biggest “ally” who might have some influence and who might make sure to follow up the next week’s MTP with something more flattering to the VP.
‘Cuz, you know, everybody’s a liar, not just my client. Another smart move by Wells.
Mickey @ 35
Wells did the same thing with Judy, essentially establishing that Judy needed her notes to refresh her memory…just like Libby. Ultimately I suspect Wells will try to put the jury on the horns a of a dilemma – if you accept Judy’s (or Russert’s) testimony as accurate, then you have to accept Libby’s as well because you have to apply the same standards.
zeppo @ 14
More sand being thrown in the jurors eyes, “more spaghetti being thrown on the walls”,”spraying the jury with a paintgun” David Corn
fitzmas, thats cool, but i’m wondering about this trial
will there have to be a specific request for release of the audio from scooter’s trial?
Anyone figure out how Valerie Plame sent an e-mail recommending her husband go to Niger on the 12th, when Cheney wasn’t even briefed until the 13th??
Did Plame someone have ESP and just know that Cheney was going to ask the question the next day?
Stephen Triesch @
40
Nuts. That’s like saying the bank robbers didn’t realize what they’d done was significant until after somebody noticed there was a big hoe in the floor of the vault and a whole bunch of money was missing.
Unless you are hypothesizing that they were abusing the public trust to such an extent that no particular instance stood out from the rest until it dawned on them that this might be the one they’d be nailed for (which I suppose might be true, but makes an awful defense) Wells isn’t going to be able to stretch the faulty memory defense to the point where “Wilson, Corn, Cooper et al” can be blamed for it.
–MarkusQ
LandOfTheFree @ 74
It was because Mary Matalin told him to call Russert…and they know her slime fu is strong.
Libby is clearly guilty, but Wells appears to be doing a good job with Russert on one point at least. If Russert talked with FBI about full contents of the call with Libby, and the call was only a complaint to management, then why did he later fight the obligation to testify? Perhaps because Russert DID say something substantive about Wilson/Plame. Of course, the real answer is probably that Russert just didn’t want to testify and be embarrassed, but he won’t want to admit that now. This won’t look good to the jury.
Stephen @40
Perhaps I misunderstand your statement. I’m in complete agreement w/Timmeh on this one..
It was SIGNIFICANT to out a COVERT agent as par of a RETALIATION schema on a openly known critic of the administration [op-ed].
the very notion of a) covert outing; b)damage done to agent and e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.n.g and everyone she has had any dealings with over her entire career is phenomenal.
The significance was not just in the outing it was in the methodology and by whom and for what reasons they chose to do it.
It seems like the Libby defense is focusing on getting the witnesses to admit that they don’t remember details…so they can then boot-strap Libby’s “lack” of memory…”See, everyone forgets details. Large and small.”
FDLNiter (79) — what year and month are you talking about, and can you cite a source from which you base your question?
Audio of GJ only, transcripts of this trial – it is a federal court thang.
OT – but really on topic – C.R.E.W. has a new list!
Criminals and Scoundrels:
The 25 Most Corrupt Officials
of the Bush Administration
Fitzmas @ 41
Bush crime family trial junky who is lurking and trying not to cause trouble AND only refreshing once an hour. And it is reallllllly hard to do.
Mayan @84
perhaps — but that is a weak strategy Wells has chosen, at best
what Fitz and team are doing is showing a concerted effort during the week of July 6th by Libby to do the ‘deed’ and then disclaiming any knowledge thereof…
slime it off on Tim, hey why not? Matalin more than likely had other key statements not captured about ‘why call Tim’ versus Tweety
Libby Trial Order
FYI here is the link to Judge Walton’s Order regarding conduct of the trial. No mention of transcripts.
FDLNiter @ 79
please buy and read Anatomy of Deciet by EW it even has footnotes to learn the TRUTH and a little chronology
Ed @ 82
Russert agreed that Libby was complaining, but he isn’t the one who claimed that it was “only a complaint to management”; that was Team Libby.
i’ll bet wells has some lurkers looking for ideas
There hasn’t been much from any of the witness to this point to make anybody proud. The administration and journalists(?) have been pitiful. Makes you think it doesn’t take much to do any of their jobs. Just be a gossip. Blitzer has a critique of Edward’s bloggers. Funny how they want to lump them all together.
Ed @ 82
I think it’s simpler than that. Russert asserted confidentiality on the principle of not divulging sources unless forced to by the courts, not confidentiality on the basis of fear of bad press. Apples and oranges.
It didn’t strike some reporters as meaningful, but seems to have taken on significance within the administration — e.g., Cheney’s notes on his copy of the article about Wilson’s wife and whether the trip was a “boondoggle”, Libby’s description of the information as “hush hush” when talking to Fleisher, the fact that Libby, Rove, and Fleisher all mentioned it to reporters, Rove telling Libby about the Novak article and the fact that it was going to come out, and ultimately Novak’s inclusion of it in the article.
Also, this is unclear to me, but wasn’t there also some stuff about Rove passing it around after the initial Novak leak? Chris Mathews saying that Rove told him the wife was “fair game”? Can someone clarify what we know about that?
truth or dare @ 76
Good point made. However, I think that one could easily establish that a person may be more likely to remember information that is very important/valuable to them (if they understand the value) than information that seems unimportant at the time.
It was very important to Scooter to discredit Wilson’s story. He admitted to having many meetings & conversations – every day for weeks – regarding how to deal with the Wilson problem. They have clearly established that the OVP wanted to get to the bottom of who sent Wilson and how to discredit his story. Therefore, it’s likely he’ll remember the details about Plame when they happened, and he shouldn’t need notes to remind him.
It would be important for Russert to have remembered this first conversation and the identity of Plame if he knew it and discussed it in the phone convo with Scooter. He’s trying to get his foot in on a major, major story – that false info was used to justify a war. I find it very difficult to imagine Russert could have forgotten that he was aware of Plame’s identity and discussed it. Plus, there are no notes to contradict that Russert knew who Plame was, nor that they discussed her identity in the conversation.
When you balance this with motive to “forget”, Scooter does not come out as vindicated, IMO.
Hammering away at the same question over and over tends to eventually elicit a less certain response as fatigue sets in. It’s like a friend asking over and over if a dress looks nice – after the first emphatic expression of truth, what you are responding to begins to have less to do with the question than it does a response to the questioner.
When your ass is on the line for indictment, I think this effect is less, but for a witness trying to testify in good faith, it wears thin more quickly and could decrease the ‘umph’ of the substance in the eyes of the jury. Wells gets this, you think?
Stephen Triesch #67,
As Jane was just saying yesterday, fact free and no links.
It’s a take off of the idea that if anyone forgets anything ever, their memory and reliability are forever and absolutely impugned. The problem here is that Scooter is the common denominator. We can’t compare Cathie Martin and Ari Fleischer on any of this because there is no indication they ever discussed any of this together. What happened between Scooter and each of them can be compared, and this is precisely where the discrepancies arise, and they all occur the same way. If you have substantive discrepancies between the various witnesses, you should list them. It proves nothing to assert their existence without evidence and then generalize from them to conclude that Scooter trustworthiness is equal to all of theirs combined.
The final canard against Wilson is just that. There was no deal for uranium, just as there were no WMD in Iraq. It continues to amaze me that there are still those out there who think Joe Wilson was discredited for getting it right.
Desperation trolls are out in force. Always a bad sign for Libby
This is the only shot wells has and if it weren’t a valiant try we’d all be wondering about whether or not he should be charged with negligence. The bottom line is that classified information is not “forgettable”. People with clearances are trained and reminded that this stuff is important to protect and that there are consequences if it is not kept. That puts the info in a whole other class of information than “just any old phone call”. If something is confidential and lets say you work in a docs office, where their are Hippa regs…you get trained to pay extra attention where certain information is present. This argument is lame, but necessary.
Libby knew the significance of the information as we have testimony supporting that. It’s bogus and the jury will easily see that…he needs to bring in some doubt but you’d have to “want” to protect Libby not to be able to see the lies.
FOLKS…here’s the deal…until Russert is done, please keep your comments specific to the issues immediately at hand.
There will be plenty of time later to chat about transcript availability, links to Buffalo newspapers, and what JoeLie said on CNN.
Enough said?
LandOfTheFree @
74
One point to add to this: Andrea Mitchell subbed for Russert on July 6. So if he STARTED by complaining about Mitchell, he was basically complaining about the gal that Russert had in his place, giving Joe Wilson a mouthpiece.
Libby is clearly guilty, but Wells appears to be doing a good job with Russert on one point at least. If Russert talked with FBI about full contents of the call with Libby, and the call was only a complaint to management, then why did he later fight the obligation to testify?
1) eckenrode interviewed Russert in November 2003, and may (probably) approached Russert from a “national security breach” standpoint — a grand jury supoena means a “criminal” investigation, and Russert made a distinction
2)Russert doubtless remembers how porous Ken Starr’s office was with grand jury testimony….
Rayne @ 85
Don’t feed the ________. The source for this “information” is this morning’s National Review. It supposedly is based on the dates on some defense exhibits that have “come out” in the trial. I have no idea whether the defense has entered these exhibits, but if they exist, it seems like either the dates are wrong or doctored. Awfully coincidental that the “day before” Cheney’s inquiry, some one at the CIA out of the blue says oh, let’s look into Niger. A likely story.
6 Miles from Ovalus Corruptous @ 88
The “deed” was Libby trying to correct false reports that were circulating in the press. Most significantly, at the time this story broke, Cheney never even saw Wilson’s report to the CIA, nor had he been briefed on it. But the moronic Fitz isn’t even interested in the specifics of why Libby was angry. Fitz has no interest whatsoever in the facts. He is incompetent.
While we’re waiting, try clicking on that nice Donate button, and show some appreciation for the best coverage of the Libby trial anywhere! FDL is the best.
Interested Observer @ 37
I think it mostly the latter. As someone posted on another thread, I’m sure there was much much headshaking among Libby’s team as they read the GJ trenascripts.
I have to say that I’m happy to see so many people (however unrepresentative and however inclined against Libby to begin with) having a nice common-sense reaction to the defense’s floggin of the “see, other people forget” theme. That said, wells is being a good lawyer by relentlessly plugging this theme, establishing it in the midst of the prosecution’s case. And he’s doing it right under the nose fo a judge who has ruled that he can’t actually argue the memory defense unless his client testifies (which strikes me as a legally unsound ruling, by the way). That is in fact good lawyering, however ridiculous the defense is (Wells et al. didn’t think it up after all — at least as far as we know — as it appears that Libby did his GJ shenanigans without the aid of counsel, or at least before hired the dream team, arrogant schmuck that he is).
“It’s the most hypocritical defense of anyone I’ve ever heard…”
I agree, but it seems to be ALL he’s got. I just hope the jurors are as unimpressed as we are.
RBG, jeez i thought the transcripts were pretty on topic
was tim the go to person to apply some pressure on mathews or his producers because he had indicated to someone in the admin that he “can’t stand” tweet?
I think Wells is doing a good job with this. It would help to watch its effect on the jurors, but as I read it (thanks to FDL) it seems Russert’s nose is out of joint that Wells would have the timerity to challenge him about his recollections.
FDLNiter @
79
Easy. Cheney was briefed in October of 2001. Plame sent her e-mail in November of the same year. I don’t know where you got the specific day-numbers, but even if you’re righ the fact that we reuse the same thirty odd integers month after month allows such things to happen without paradox.
–MarkusQ
aravir @ 94
Also, remember that according to Russert, Libby was telling him other stuff about why Wilson was wrong. Although he wasn’t reporting on it, he may have thought that he’d be questioned on other matters that Libby had discussed.
p.lukasiak @ 103
It is also worth speculating that Russert thought that since there was no mention of Plame during the conversation, that what he was telling the FBI was not a big deal. It would be hard to imagine that he would’ve been able to even remotely foresee that Libby would’ve tried to pin the whole thing on him. If Fitz can flesh this out, then I don’t see what good Wells is doing, unless he is going for one really obtuse member of the jury who is going to glom onto this for dear life (if such a person is sitting there).
aravir @ 94
No, he talked to the FBI and told them the full story and only after that fought subpoena. Now perhaps the sub was broader, but why tell the FBI the whole story of the call and then fight telling them under oath? There was nothing left that was confidential at that point, right? Unless maybe Russert had not told the FULL story to the FBI and did not want to be compelled. That is Wells’ angle I think.
For all of Wells’ questioning, I think Fitz will have little trouble refocusing the jury on the four corners of the indictment when he gets to re-direct.
F: Mr. Russert, how many complaint calls have you taken at home in the last five years?
R: A handful, including this one from Mr. Libby.
F: That makes them kind of memorable, doesn’t it?
R: Sure.
F: So let’s review this memorable call. Did Mr. Libby talk about Joe Wilson’s wife, Valerie Plame?
R: No.
F: Did you tell Mr. Libby that lots of reporters, including yourself, knew that Mr. Wilson’s wife worked for the CIA in the Counterproliferation Division?
R: No.
F: Did you mention Mr. Wilson’s wife at all in that phone conversation?
R: No.
F: No further questions.
One more thing. . . . On second thought, I better not. (Oh, go ahead . . .)
Nope. (But smacking it down would be so much fun . . .)
Wouldn’t be prudent. (You know you want to . . .)
Must. Not. Feed. The. Trolls.
katie jensen @ 100
I would say that’s true of government professionals. I would assert that it’s less true of the political class in Washington–after all, these guys were quite willing to leak portions of the NIE that were helpful in covering their asses.
People in this WH have a very selective notion of what constitutes security, and have been very willing to distort that for political ends. That’s been a continuing trend, rather than just isolated instances (see, for example, the recent rupture of the British liquid explosives investigation because Bush needed a new “booga-booga” moment before the election–doesn’t matter that the investigation was going nowhere–what matters is that Bush was willing to compromise it for his own purposes).
lolo @ 90 “please buy and read Anatomy of Deciet by EW it even has footnotes to learn the TRUTH and a little chronology “
My copy of Anatomy of Deceit: How the Bush Administration Used the Media to Sell the War and Smear a Critic arrived today.
IT is EXCELLENT. Buy it!
litigatormom @ 112
But Russert claims he already told the FBI everything that Libby told him so there were no “other matters that Libby had discussed” — ‘or were there?’ says Wells in his closing argument but Russert fought the sub so he wouldn’t have to say and admit he had lied during the FBI interview by not saying all (only to decide to keep his lie consistent before the GJ) to cover his rear end.
Stephen Triesch @ 105
Got to give Stevie his props – he regurgitates Libby’s defense like a pro. Think he is a paid troll? I do.
The defense case seems to be a grand bore in general. Maybe that’s the object, to lull us all into a stupor.
I have no doubt that Scooter Libby was being too weird and “agitated” for Timmy not to remember.
Melvin @ 110
Couldn’t disagree more.
Ed @ 114
Hmm.. could be, could be. But Mr. Potatohead didn’t know, when i’vd by da feds that he would be contradicting Libby in any way shape or form. Later, when he knows that Libby is at heart of scandal, and him being such a shill for BushCo (and he knew it, subconsciously at least) figured he’d try to claim journalist privilege. At that time, he knew or at least suspected that his testimony could injure the Scoots.
Do you believe they will be done with Timmeh today?
Stephen Triesch @ 105. “Fitz has no interest whatsoever in the facts. He is incompetent.”
Your ignorance is showing. Please refrain from posting your piffle until the liveblogging is done for the day.
i think judy m agreed to testify with limits to avoid discussion of sex w/ scooter under the aspens, but what other info might have been discussed with reporters that they are trying to conceal that does not directly relate to libby, but perhaps a greater conspiracy
what benefit would this be to scooter if there were other topics that would invoke exec priv. if introduced?
Hugh @ 98
Go back and read the transcripts yourself, or the news stories. I’m not going to do your work for you. And this trial is not about whether there were WMD’s in Iraq or of Iraq sought uranium in Niger. Wilson, Corn, and Cooper – among others – were circulating the following story: (1) Cheney dispatched Wilson to Niger; (2) Wilson found conclusive evidence that Iraq had made no inquiries regarding uranium; (3) Wilson reported this to Cheney; (4) Cheney disregarded Wilson, and Bush knowingly used false information in his SOTU address; (5) Wilson went public and told the truth about what had happened; and (6) to punish Wilson for telling the truth, the WH retaliated by “outing” Plame. All of these things are false.
Yes – it seems Libby’s legal team has joined us here on FDL to make sure all who read the threads get the spin that Wells is doing a brilliant job of cross examining Russert.
I’m sure the jury isn’t buying any of it – I’m sure not – but Wells is certainly giving it the old “college try”
Neil @ 124. Instead of feeding your pet irritations, you should click on the Donate button. I makes you feel a lot better.
Ed @ 118:
The initial interview might just have been “Did you discuss Valerie Plame or Valerie Wilson or Joe Wilson’s wife with Scooter Libby when he called you to complain about Chris Matthews.” Answer: No.
The grand jury subpoena was doubtless broader than that. And the decision to fight the subpoena might have been made at a corporate level, not by Timmeh personally.
Notta Flatlander @ 122
Clarification
Ed @ 114 That could indeed be Well’s approach – oyu may be right about that. I was speaking not to Wells’ tactics but to the underlying issue.
I don’t think Fitz has objected once during the whole of the Russert/Wells Q&A.
Bill S @
95
What strikes me about this is not that “some reporters didn’t think it was significant” but that they shopped this line so *hard* until somebody finally *did* report it.
No way that was an offhand “oh by the way” remark, not when they kept baiting and re-baiting the hook until somebody bit.
PLovering @ 131
right! let him keep digging.
It is also worth speculating that Russert thought that since there was no mention of Plame during the conversation, that what he was telling the FBI was not a big deal.
good point. There is a big difference between talking to the FBI under the assumption that you know nothing of significance, and then finding out that what you know proves that someone is guilty of perjury and obstruction of justice.
montag @ 116
Yes, but even that was clearly a significant event to them. Libby conferred with Addington about whether Cheney could declassify, etc. They very clearly did treat it differently than other information they fed to the press. They didn’t handle it the way professionals would, but they didn’t leak it casually enough for it to be “forgettable.”
dab from CT @ 127
Clarice Feldman is lurking “live blogging live blogging” for JustOneMinute. I picture her laying in bed with her laptop resting on her chest – wdrinking kool-aid and Stoli – cackling with glee thinking Wells is making a pancake out of the prosecution’s case.
new thread
Mr Triesch (67, 126) asserts without links that none of the issues of this lawsuit are true, prima facie evidence of trolling. Let’s move on.
Prosecution is expected to end its case tomorrow morning… and defense wants to start with Jill Abramson, but Fitzgerald has an objection to that. So that objection will be addressed first. The defense says they’ll be happy to start Monday, given various motions they have to submit first, and they don’t want to waste jury’s time. Fitz says they can start with other witnesses — “Pincus, [Evan] Thomas, Kessler, Sanger…” I don’t think this will be resolved until tomorrow morning.
Good news for the prosecution. Start the defense case right away – Thursday afternoon. It takes the mystery out of it and may leave the jury feeling like, oh god, how many days of this?
I am not a lawyer, but I was really surprised that Fitz’s direct was so brief. But obviously given all the legal wrangling about Russert’s testimony agreement with the gov, he had a pretty good ideal where Wells would go.
So is he sitting back allowing Wells to open it wide open before he goes back and clarifies with Russert that the fact that Russert telling the FBi that he had not discussed Plame with Libby is a far cry from being subpoenaed before a GJ because his account was being contradicted by Libby. For Russert it must have been a serious WTF moment.
This morning Tom Maguire was convinced that Russert was going to say he talked about Wilson’s wife Libby.
Now they have moved on to the fact that Tim Russert once forgot a phone call and that Russert talked to the FBI before he knew what a big deal Libby’s phone call was. Bright shiny objects distract them well.
Sorry ‘Wilson’s wife with Libby’
Stephen Triesch @
126
Primarily what’s false is your description of what the case is about. You are regurgitating right wing spin. OVP interest motivated Wilson’s fact-finding mission – that is a fact. Wilson did in fact find evidence — we could quibble about the word “conclusive” — that the yellowcake sale could not have taken place. He briefed CIA about his findings. It isn’t essential to anyone’s case (except maybe a reporter’s?) that Wilson did not tell Cheney directly. The SOTU information was bogus and believed to be bogus by many at the time. It still made it into the speech (wonder why?). And your (5) and (6) are true, sorry.
JudeanPeople’sFront @
92
I wonder. If Wells had lurkers reading here, surely he would have stopped saying “the wife” by now. That tactic has irritated a lot of people.
Swopa: thanks so much. I’m riveted. I can hardly get any work done.
Hmm, interesting that Walton broke off the testimony right there, after Wells thunders: so you lied in your affidavit, didn’t you?
So let’s look at this. Timmeh is saying all he did was listen to FBI guy tell Libby’s side of the story, and tell FBI what he said in response. His own responses to Scooter were not confidential. But then Timmeh says the viewer complaint stuff wasn’t confidential. So if what Timmeh said wasn’t confidential, and what Scooter said about Tweety wasn’t confidential, what was confidential?
I guess the only thing could be confidential that in the course of complaining about Tweety, Scooter also said alot of stuff about Wilson, yellowcake, aluminum tubes, the NIE, etc. Doing his schpiel about why it was reasonable to rely on the NIE, and why Tweety was off base. And THAT’S what Timmeh thought was confidential, even though Scooter was saying it in the context of complaining that Tweety was getting the story wrong.
Also, I do think that the final decision about whether to fight the subpoena was made on a corporate level, not by Timmeh himself.
Now that Wells has explicitly accused Timmeh of being a liar (and not just a forgetter), what is Wells’ theory about why Timmeh would lie about poor old Scooter? Because Timmeh is really in the pocket of the librul defeatocrats after all? Because Timmeh was pissed off that Scooter was beating on poor Tweety (whom he hates)?
What do you all think?
Triesch at 126
Wilson, Corn, and Cooper – among others – were circulating the following story: (1) Cheney dispatched Wilson to Niger; (2) Wilson found conclusive evidence that Iraq had made no inquiries regarding uranium; (3) Wilson reported this to Cheney; (4) Cheney disregarded Wilson, and Bush knowingly used false information in his SOTU address; … All of these things are false.
Try not to kill too many strawmen while making your arguments.
None of these points were argued by Wilson, et al. They are phony fluff circulated by dishonest righties, who can then pretend how “Wilson lied.”
What is true is that the press buzz in July, 2003 mistakenly recited that “Cheney sent Wilson,” which was an erroneous summarization of the story by the press. Wilson himself made it clear that he was sent by the CIA to follow up on a request for info that Cheney made to the CIA (only in an indirect sense did “Cheney send Wilson,” which Wilson always made clear), and that Wlison then reported to the CIA, which report Wilson indicated he believed in the ordinary course would have been transmitted (or the contents transmitted as opposed to the report itself) back to the VP office. Wilson never claimed that Cheney knew who he was or that Cheney selected Wilson for the trip, or for that matter that Cheney decided to send anybody to Niger.
Such crap from the righties on this.
Agree 100% with pluk at 134.
You’re expected to cooperate with the FBI, if they ask you questions. At the time, Russert didn’t know his answers might incriminate Libby. And, Agent Eckenrode also probably had a waiver from Libby too, so what’s the harm?
The hypocrisy of all this is that I’m sure Libby gave nary a thought to the investigation in the early stages cause they all thought it would be quashed by Ashcroft. Little did they know that the FBI actually was doing their job, and when Fitz took over, it was TEAM LIBBY putting the screws to NBC to shut Russert up that forced Russert to fight the GJ subpoena.
So basically Wells and co are criticizing Russert for behavior that I’m sure their client instigated.
ReJudeanPeople’sFront @ 133
Redirect will go something like this:
F: Mr. Libby contends he had a telephone conversation on or around July 8, 2003. Is this correct?
T: Yes.
F: Mr. Libby has testified, under oath, that during this phone call you told him the identity of Valerie Plame and her status as a CIA employee. Is this correct?
T: No.
F: Thank you. The Government rests its case.
Why would he even need to go further than that? Libby is accused of lying, and this is the core lie. Expose it for all its black-and-whiteness in as few words as possible.
“in no way was it an offhand “by the way”
“No way that was an offhand “oh by the way” remark, not when they kept baiting and re-baiting the hook until somebody bit.”
But Novak and Judith Miller and Cooper all SAID that it was offhand, without emphasis. Also, Novak’s source was Armitage, a CRITIC of the war. And Rove was just replying to a comment from Cooper indicating that Cooper already knew about Plame. And the two CIA guys’ memories were so vague that they could scarcely be held up as solid witnesses for anything. And has anyone asked Wilson if he DID carry on personal business while in Niger, or whether his brief stay there was sufficient time to do a proper investigation, or whether there is any way to tell if his contacts were telling the truth? And has Fitz read the Senate Intel report where several of Wilson’s key claims are shown to be false? It was a legitimate question as to how Wilson was chosen for the Niger trip – he was not CIA, he was not a trained investigator, he was not a WMD expert, and he hadn’t been to Niger for a number of years. Plus – as subsequent events have shown – he was a blabbermouth and a publicity hound, a horrible choice for a sensitive CIA mission.
Stephen Triesch is a TROLL.
Don’t feed it.
(Ooops, I guess this post is.)
Stephen Triesch @ 126
You’re so right Steverino — it’s all false. And black is white. War is Peace. And Oceana has always been at war with Eurasia…
Blue Dido @ 144
it’s like “the democrat congress” harmless phrase,
hoping to reach the fox brainwashing in the juror’s subconscious
This morning Tom Maguire was convinced that Russert was going to say he talked about Wilson’s wife Libby.
Jiminy. This morning I was convinced that the defense would try to make that connection. How did that work out?
My official prediction, made weeks ago, was that Russert had a story and would stick to it.
Hope facts don’t interfere with your fun.
dws3665 @ 143
I stopped here yesterday to read the trial coverage and got labelled a troll for my comments. I’m really in the middle – a pox on both their houses, if you will. I agree with some of Stephen Triesch’s points in that I think Libby et al. were trying to correct what they believed were Wilson’s false statements – not trying to punish him by outing his wife – and they totally screwed up.
I can’t fathom why Libby would make up a crazy story about Russert that could be so easily refuted. And his letter to Miller re the aspens was nutty. I don’t see how he survives this.
Some folks here pointed me to eRiposte’s exhaustive investigative work, and I read some of it last evening. I’m way behind in knowing the details, so it’s all too convoluted for me to follow. But it did remind me of Wilson’s claim in his book that Baghdad Bob was the Iraqi who met with the Nigerian minister in 1999. The minister supposedly told Wilson this after the Iraq invasion when he saw Bob on TV.
I had also read about another Iraqi who actually did visit Niger in 1999. He was, at that time, Ambassador to the Vatican but was previously “… the Iraqi representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency—Iraq’s senior public envoy for nuclear matters.”
Quote is from Christopher Hitchen’s article last April in Slate. I’d really like to hear thoughts on Hitchens’ theories. One is that the forgeries were a red herring thrown in to cover a real attempted deal. If it’s been discussed before, please direct me. Thanks
Russert stated under oath in his affidavit in support of his motion to quash that he cannot testify, because he cannot give testify about conversations with a source. This is a statement under oath.
He testified at trial that Libby was not a source. This is a statement under oath. It contradicts his affidavit.
He testified that he did this to “avoid a fishing expedition.” That is not a valid reason to lie. It may be valid grounds to quash a subpoena, or limit testimony.
His statement that he never discussed this with his friend and NBC exec Shapiro is not credible.
Fitz did object, for example on the issue of the $5 mill salary.
The jury will be instructed that if a witness lies about one topic, they may disbelieve him on another.
Yeah — Triesch 149 repeats large amounts of more made up crap. Pure disinformation — rank and dishonest.
JudeanPeople’sFront@154:
you’re probably right. But it’s risky with so many women on the jury.
If Wells has lurkers here, I should probably stop with this complaint!
Russert/NBC may have fought the subpoena on the principle of the thing. Talking with an FBI agent is one thing; testifying to a grand jury is another. Agreed, both are “under oath” in that one can be prosecuted for lying to either, but grand jury testimony is on a higher symbolic level and sets a precedent. Completely understandable in my book, if not purely consistent.
And there’s no reason whatsoever to believe he discussed this with Shapiro.
p.lukasiak @ 134
I’m not so sure this is such a sound distinction analytically — although I have no quarrel with the proposition that at the time that he did the FBI interview, Timmeh hought it was no big whoop and later shat himself when he realized that he’s a key witness in a federal criminal prosecution of a high administration official. And to add to that I’ve no doubt that the NBC execs. started paying attention only when the subpoena was dropped, thus creating the fluffed up confidentiality claim.
To return to the first point, as an analytic matter — in terms of a journalist’s claim of confidentiality — the crux is that either the communication was a confidential one between source and journalist, thus requiring (in the journalist’s view) protection or it is not such a communication. It doesn’t matter for those purposes what the stakes actually are in terms of legal consequences for the source. (That’s only a concern if what you are really protecting is the relationship with the source, as opposed to true confidential source-reporter communications.) If it was — as Russert insists — nothing more than a complaint call, then it simply was not the type of communication to which the (notional) reporter’s privilege would apply.
What I think wells has exposed here is that — as many of us suspected — the NBC confidentiality pitch really was exceedingly trumped up. I suppose what they might have been trying to say is that any communication between a journalist and someone who has been a source in the past and/or may be a source in the future should be confidential because any time a reporter testifies as to communicaitons with potential sources, it has a chilling effect on the profession. That’s a load of bullshit. And I dont’ think NBC really believed it. I think that once it became clear that the stakes were high, the reporters and their employers ran for the hills and hid behind the First Amendment while doing so — probably in large measure because they wanted to preserve relations with the administration. It’s despicable behavior by the press, although the full story — if I’m right — really doesn’t help the defense. But I do thinkt hat Wells scored a technical point here by showing that Timmeh proffered a pretty frigging bogus theory to Judge Hogan, and that does reflect on his credibility.
So Pincus will be a witness after all?
Mickey @ 35
I would say that would work if you were talking about what you ate from McDonald’s last month. We are talking about sworn testimony before a GJ. You can’t just say what you want, then if you are caught say “you forgot,” unless you don’t take the legal process seriously. Libby lied because he thought it was either the lesser of the evils he was confronted with, and because he thought he could get away with it.
I think so too, but he has a way to go to make the case that corporate hypocrisy is the same thing as lying under oath in a criminal matter, which is what it seems that Wells is trying to imply; at least that is what it looks like to this unlegal eye.
What will come of Wolfowitz’s leaking? Will he now become head of the World Bank and the Federal Reserve?
Well this “unlegal eye” is unable to get into the mind if a person and determine whether a misstatement is intentional or a mear brain fart…..which is exactly what Wells is trying to convey to the jury. And TR’s spanking today went along way toward that end.
Stephen Triesch @ 67
Do you have any examples at all?
Yes, and they recalled that information. Libby was told innumerable times and repeatedly “forgot”…even though he passed on that information that he apparently “forgot”. And even though he recalled details about the reactions of the VP when they discussed the information he “forgot”.
Besides there is no “contradiction” here about the same event from any witnesses. The only one that contradicts all their testimony is Libby!
Fleisher only noted two reporters that may have heard his comments. But it’s absurd to make this relate to Libby forgetting information since it was Libby who TOLD FLEISCHER…and that this was one month after Libby admits that he learned the information from the Vice President.
So Libby must have remembered that information for one month to tell Fleisher, and several others!
Then suddenly he “forgets”…not when the information is “trivial” (he remembered it THEN)…but ONLY when the issue of Plame being a CIA operative and the possibility of that information being classified is released?????
Libby had no problem “remembering” this information for the month between (at least) his June 12th conversation with Cheney and his repeated discussions with Miller, Cooper, Fleisher, Rove (he admits he discussed her with ROVE!), Addington, etc. He says he forgot all that though. And only “remembers” a different (erroneous) source on the eve of the Novak article (yeah, unimportant…right).
Not his “claims”…but his CREDIBILITY! The WH had been hammering away at Wilson on the “facts” (as they claimed they existed) for well over a month and getting no traction. That was the point FOR undertaking the personal attack.
(Other facts, however, DID discredit Wilson.)
Irrelevant to the charges on the indictment. AND even irrelevant to the illegal revelation of classified information that lead to the original investigation.
And if the other “facts” discredited Wilson then why did the WH state that the “16 words” should never have made it into the SOTU?
You wingnuts just don’t GET IT do you!
Tom Maguire @ 153
Oh come on Tom. Anyone can go read your post and see the theory that you were promoting. I do find it deliciously ironic that yesterday you sniffed about some ‘absurd theories’ that liberal bloggers had about this case and then BAM! the schadenfruede hits ya today.
somethingsrotten @ 128
I’m sure your comment was meant to be a friendly suggestion to a fellow FDL blogger… or was it? I’m not on board with your characterization of my post, nor with you prescribing for me an alternative course of action: donate don’t post. I applaud your efforts to fundraise for FDL: please don’t focus your efforts around my posts or around my my donations. Thanks.
Mommy, Mommy, can I please feed the trolls.
No, place your name here, if you feed the trolls, they’ll just keep coming back and eat up all your threads. You don’t want that do you.
But Mommy, it makes me feel so good telling the trolls how stupid I think they are.
place your name here, and middle name if you have one what part of DO NOT FEED THE TROLLS do you not understand?
Sebastian Dangerfield @ 159
Comparing apples to oranges. Forgetting about a phone call which had to do with complaints about a debate… remembering (not forgetting) the conversation with a Washington official leaking the dentity of a NOC whose job it had been to follow the path of WMD’s are worlds apart.
Joel @ 148
“Why would he even need to go further than that? Libby is accused of lying, and this is the core lie. Expose it for all its black-and-whiteness in as few words as possible”
Simple black and white is very effective.
I completely agree – it really stays in your mind. Most good advertising is clean and to the point (not to equate the magnificent Fitz with ads- but graphics is my line of work. If you can’t figure out what someone’s selling, how can you remember to buy it?
Hope I’m not EPU’d!
Way.
But thats ok.
We feed the trolls (those who do) because we secretly want to see them choke to death.
JWoods at 161: We know, however, that no one would expect someone to remember the sources she spent 85 days in jail to protect. No way.
Sorry for the snark. But, you’re still assuming that the focus of Libby’s “push back” or whatever you’d like to call it was based primarily on Wilson’s wife. The witnesses were equivocal on this point to say the least.
kathleen @
163
I know I can google this but wondering if Wolfie also got a medal?
Feed em pretzels, almost worked before.
Stephen Triesch @ 126
Go back and read the transcripts yourself, or the news stories. I’m not going to do your work for you. And this trial is not about whether there were WMD’s in Iraq or of Iraq sought uranium in Niger. Wilson, Corn, and Cooper – among others – were circulating the following story: (1) Cheney dispatched Wilson to Niger; (2) Wilson found conclusive evidence that Iraq had made no inquiries regarding uranium; (3) Wilson reported this to Cheney; (4) Cheney disregarded Wilson, and Bush knowingly used false information in his SOTU address; (5) Wilson went public and told the truth about what had happened; and (6) to punish Wilson for telling the truth, the WH retaliated by “outing” Plame. All of these things are false.
The case against Libby is about Perjury and Obstruction of Justice. In other words, Lying and Lying to stop someone from finding out the truth. Forget all the other stuff. You’ll enjoy reading the transcripts much more once you realize the only thing that needs to be proven is that Libby lied and he did it to hide something.
somethingsrotten @ 168. Who’s you daddy?
litigatormom @ 145
I think you nailed it.
BTW I have faithfully read every bit of live blogging (even from Craig Johnson campaign HQ yesterday–we won by the way) and have watch all the outside the courthouse stand up reports, but have excerised as much discipline as I can and stayed off he threads –mostly.
I cannot believe how great it is that FDL has so many new readers and don’t want to contribute to a server overload.
So, just cause you don’t see me, don’t think I dont see you.
Hi evrybody!!! waving
somethingsrotten @ 168
Troll or A-hole?
Jeffrey Brown of the NewsHour said Novak will be called to testify in the Lewis Libby Trial. Is this news? Is this accurate?
Boyd @ 179
A-hole Troll?
Claudia @ 176
The case against Libby is about Perjury and Obstruction of Justice. In other words, Lying and Lying to stop someone from finding out the truth. Forget all the other stuff. You’ll enjoy reading the transcripts much more once you realize the only thing that needs to be proven is that Libby lied and he did it to hide something.
What was he tryng to hide? What’s the motive? You have to prove he intentionally lied and had a reason to lie.
JudeanPeople’sFront @ 92
here’s an idea
cut your losses now homeboy
Yo, scooter, you could still plead out if you turn State’s Evidence, and you might get off with a few years at a Minimum Security Facility
if this Jury gets it’s hands on you, you’re lookin at some real time pal
I know people who have been there, and you defense ain’t lookin too good
the preceeding is a true story. Some of the names have been changed to protect the guilty
JudeanPeople’sFront @ 92 i’ll bet wells has some lurkers looking for ideas
Make a deal with Fitz. No jail time if Libby sings like a singbird, and a fat cat job at the Cato Institute so he can feed his family and pay college tuition for his kids. Sing Scooter Sing. The trouble with kool-aid drinkers is that they can’t hold a tune.
Ed @ 82
I suspect that Russert only did so because others in the media suddenly made non-cooperation regarding sources a First Amendment issue. When he first was interviewed by Eckenrode he didn’t even think about this issue.
I get the real impression that Russert is more of a “follower” and hardly even sees the deeper issues that might be involved in journalistic privileges.
Besides, Eckenrode was a “friendly acquaintance” ~ and technically Libby wasn’t a “source” for any information. If Libby HAD provided a “statement” he might have been…but he was just calling up and bitching about coverage that he sauid was picking on him. Whaaaaahh!
So Russert wasn’t really discussing a “source”. He could have actually said “I’ll only talk about my state of knowledge on July 12th (i.e. I didn’t know anything about “Wilson’s wife” until the Novak article and knew of no other reporters that knew that either” and still have evaded issues about source-journalist privilege.
aravir @ 94
And, as Team Libby made clear…Russert wasn’t approached in his role as a “journalist” and Libby wasn’t a “source”. Russert was wearing the “hat” of Manager and Libby was a disgruntled individual who didn’t like what was being said about him. It wasn’t a “reporter-source” interaction.
Stymie @ 164
ROTFLMAO. That was a good one.
Yes – Libby’s behavior all boils down to a brain fart. And I’m unaware of the “spanking” that TR got today. Well’s cross was pathetic and boring. I’m sure the jury saw right through it.
Ed @ 114
Ed @ 118
Except that when he had Russert on the stand Wells never even asked ONE QUESTION about anything else that Libby may have said. So if there were “other matters” that related to source-journalist protection, then why didn’t Wells ask about those issues? Libby would have presumably recalled them (after all he recalled material that Russert denies ever being discussed)! Are you asserting that Russert is protecting material that he forgot…and that his “source” has clearly waived his testimony upon?
FAR FETCHED!
“W: You’re a Buffalo icon?
T: Yes.”
GUILTY!
ctm @ 154
Oh really. What part of the following the following don’t you understand?
Troll
This whole case is getting quite convoluted. Lots of ins, lots of outs. Lots of strands in ol’ Duder’s head. Fortuneately for me, I’m adhearing to a fairly strict drug regimen to keep my mind, well…. you know… uh, limber!
Seriously, though, I think Wells is actually doing a good job. He made the prosecution’s star witness look like a effing baffoon on the witness stand. If you are an avg. Joe or Jane sitting on that jury, and the one guy who is supposedly so sure that HE’s got HIS story straight and Libby must have it wrong and therefore be lying…. well, when THAT guy (Russert) gets embarrassed on the stand with a situation where he himself obviously LIED and/or ‘conveniently forgot’–then later ‘remembered’…… to a reasonably fair human being, you might wonder if Russert could be wrong/lying about the conversation and Libby telling truth and/or honestly and innocently forgot what was exactly said.
This was a horrible afternoon for the prosecution’s case. Fitz needs to make a very good final argument, that cuts out all of the bs and all the confusion of a long trial with lots of witnesses and he-said-she-said moments, and just make it very plain and clear what Libby did wrong, and why the jury should have no doubt.
I think Libby is guilty as sin, but from the trial so far, even I might give the bastard the benefit of the doubt. I’d have a hard time sending him to pound-me-in-the-azz federal prison based on the memory of Tim Russert. Tim is a putz, and he ruined the whole case against Libby, IMHO.
It appears that this “case” has collapsed with Russert. Fitz will have to rehabiliate this witness.
Stephen Triesch @ 126
Utter lie! Read Wilson’s article “What I didn’t find in Africa”!. He never said that Cheney “dispatched” HIM. He said Cheney made “inquiries” to the CIA…and that the CIA sent him. Libby’s own note of Cheney’s statements to him on June 12, 2003 says “Took place at our behest”. The SSIC report states that the CIA acted because of inquiries from the OVP.
Again a misstatement of what Wilson claimed. Wilson said that his investigation showed that there was no evidence that the reports that Iraq had contracted for or obtained Uranium from Niger were valid. His comment in his report that the Niger FM had “inferred” that Iraq wanted yellowcake because of an approach from an Algerian/Nigerian businessman was not an INQUIRY about Uranium from Iraq. There was no face-to-face discussion, and certainly no mention of Uranium from anyone. Yet the SOTU asserts that Iraq was “vigorously seeking” yellowcake?
Wilson stated that he assumed that his report would be passed on to Cheney’s office. After all, Cheney had made the inquiry! Despite the claims by Cheney that the OVP never received the report Defense Exhibit 421 on the Craig Schmall’s CIA’s investigation of this issue states : Cheney said that “he read 12 June Pinkus (sic) article, which (he stated) claimed the Ambassador’s trip was done at the request of the Vice-President. Cheney (said) that he did not recall this at all. He also (said) that he couldn’t recall if he requested a memo on this issue. Research revealed that Cheney did ask and received a memo in early 2002.The agents (also) had copies of some faxes I had sent (in June) to Scooter Libby’s then Chief of Staff, Eric Edelman, containing an early 2002 and and early 2003 memo on the Iraq/Niger/Uranium issue done for Cheney and Rumsfeld.” So Cheney’s office received several messages regarding Wilson’s trip, starting in early 2002.
Again you are making false assertions about what Wilson claimed. He stated that his report did not support the “16 words” and insisted that the WH provide the actual evidence if the basis of these reports were not the forged reports of Uranium deals in 1999 that Wilson (and others) debunked and that the IAEA easily demonstrated were forgeries.
Sure DID!
Nope! The latter is clearly true, as this trail has demonstrated. Both Cheney and Libby were upset that their spin (much of what you repeated above) was gaining no traction, and they needed to attack Wilson’s credibility…not just his “facts”. Thus we have Libby and Rove and Armitage repeatedly telling reporters and the WH Press Secretary that “the Ambassador’s wife (or Plame) works in the CIA on WMD (or in some cases CP or WINPAC).
Matthews appeared very worried today on Hardball. The NBC house of cards will collapse from within.
Stephen Triesch @ 149 Says:
“But Novak and Judith Miller and Cooper all SAID that it was offhand, without emphasis. Also, Novak’s source was Armitage, a CRITIC of the war.” Novak has gone back and forth on this. It seems to depend on his mood and whether it reduces his chance for liability. Remember that Armitage, who WAS an Neo-Conservative advocate of attacking Iraq (he was a signee of the 1999 PNAC letter to Clinton demanding US action to overthrow Saddam), not only told Novak “accidently” but also Woodward. When he fessed up to Grossman about Novak, he said it was accidental… but he never mentioned his earlier release of the same information to Woodward. And he concealed it from the Special Prosecutor!
This is the opposoite of what Cooper testified to under oath! Cooper said that Rove raised told Cooper about “Wilson’s wife works on WMD in the CIA” and told him don’t get out too far in front on Wilson. Something will be declassified soon that will show that he’s not what you think.”
Their memories were backed up by documentation…and one also had the testimony and notes of Cathy Martin to support his statements.
I would imagine that the OVP made extensive efforts to find out the first instance…and struck out! Keep looking wingnuts! Second, the reports of NATO General Carlton Fulford (who also was there brief periods…investigating the COGEMA security issues) and that of US Ambassador to Niger Barbro Owens-Kilpatrick also showed that there was no evidence of any transactions. The “reports” being investigated of 500 tons of Uranium that derived from a foreign source were so implausible as to be ridiculous.
As to the “veracity” of his sources…the CIA actually did not think that their statements could be relied upon 100%. They felt that the sources might EXAGERRATE the possibilities (e.g. mind-reading that the Iraqis “might” be interested in Uranium) to curry favor with the Bush Administration and get the US to buy up “yellowcake” and increase its commercial value. But one source, Mai Manga, did bring up two additional “foreign contacts” from Iran and Pakistan in the discussion with Wilson. Thus Wilson did discover from his source, and report to the briefer, that IRAN and PAKISTAN were both attempting to buy Uranium in 1998-99!
These are assertions made only in the postscript by Senator Roberts, Bond and Lott. The majority of the Committee did not agree with their conclusions ~ in fact, not even the majority of Republicans signed onto those statements.
He had successfully discovered attempted yellowcake purchases by Iraq on a prior CIA mission to Niger, he had contacts in the prior gov’t at the time of the reputed transactions, there were no CIA agents stationed in Niger, the Ambassador to Niger checked off his visit…and, in regards to being a “blabbermouth” he disclosed that the President used flawed intelligence, based on forged documents, that he, and others, had brought into question a year earlier.
And “subsequent events” have shown that the CIA TOLD the NSC (boit Hadley and Rice) not to include information from the British White Paper about African yellowcake in speeches about WMD in Iraq. Tenet said in Oct. 2002 that it was based upon flawed intelligence, and the State Department had that same month already analysed and passed on a report to the WH situation room, CIA and Pentagon about the Niger-Iraq forgeries!
[mod note- in future please make sure you close all tags. If you don’t, it messes up further comments, and leads to extra work for mods]
David scherrey @ 182
Actually one doesn’t HAVE TO demonstrate the motive…if one can show that there was repeated lying. Repetition of a lie is probative of intent.
Motive can also be helpful in convincing a jury…but it is often the most slippery of the elements.
But I think Fitz has shown that Libby may have lied to suggest that his source was not an “official” source…and thus that he would not have had “reasonable knowledge” that the information was classified, or that he should have shown “due caution” that revealing a CIA employees identity might place at risk agents or operations. Remember, Libby was briefed on secrecy in order to obtain his Security Clearance. He stamped items with information that contained Wilson’s and “Wilson’s wife” on it with “Top Secret/SCI” markings.
Thus he may have feared, after reading articles about th potential risks involved in what he had done, criminal prosecution. Creating a tale about a reporter telling him would have “explained” some of the subsequent statements he made to reporters and given him an alibi, particularly if those reporters were determined by the courts to be protected by reporter-source privelege.
The problem with the defense question is that not only would Russert have had to forget that he talked to Libby about Valerie Plame, he would have had to forgetten that he knew about Valerie Plame in the first place.
That’s what they’ve missed so far, maybe they’ll get more into it tomorrow. They’re focusing on the fact that Russert forgot about a call before, but by definition, if Russert didn’t know who Valerie Plame was, and where she worked, it’s impossible for him to have told Libby.
The problem with the defense question is that not only would Russert have had to forget that he talked to Libby about Valerie Plame, he would have had to have forgetten that he knew about Valerie Plame in the first place.
That’s what they’ve missed so far, maybe they’ll get more into it tomorrow. They’re focusing on the fact that Russert forgot about a call before, but by definition, if Russert didn’t know who Valerie Plame was, and where she worked, it’s impossible for him to have told Libby.
Tina @ 192
Lord, these folks are running scared, aren’t they?
Won’t work, guys. Russert’s version of his conversation with Libby is consistent with everyone else who has testified.
Seriously – the number of trolls on this thread praising Wells and claiming Russert has damaged the prosecution’s case is very telling. I guess the troll attack represents Libby’s defense dollars at work.
Russert testified he has no notes from his conversation with Libby on July 10, 2003. His recollection is based solely on his memory–which his testimony showed needs prompting.
If Russert and Fitzgerald were feeling a bit crestfallen by the exposure of Russert’s faulty memory, their moods went south quickly when Wells introduced into evidence the sworn affidavit that Russert submitted in an attempt by him and NBC News to squash the grand jury subpoena for Russert in 2004.
The affidavit began with Russert explaining what a big wheel he is in the media, lists his awards, and then explains how he has sources all throughout the government that he protects with promises of confidentiality. The affidavit then says that because of Russert’s promises of confidentiality, he cannot even confirm to the government whether the conversation with Libby took place, let alone tell what was said.
Wells revisited the interview with the FBI agent, named Eckenrode(sp?), which took place in November 2003–many months before the affidavit.
Wells pointed out that Russert spoke about the conversation with Libby with the FBI agent without even verifying that the man on the phone was indeed an FBI agent or whether Libby had indeed waived confidentiality on the conversation.
Russert tried to weasel out of it by saying he considered Libby’s phone call a “viewer complaint” about Hardball’s coverage of the Joe Wilson story and that he had only told the agent his side of the conversation because the agent told him Libby was saying Russert told him about Plame.
Wells hammered home that Russert had not included this conversation with a government agent in his affidavit–raising the possibility that Russert filed a false affidavit with the court.
By this point Fitzgerald was slouched in his chair, intently staring at the jury to gauge their reaction to his star witness getting methodically taken apart.
Stephen Triesch @
149
unless there was another linked motivation — to out his wife, to end her Brewster-Jennings investigation of nukes in the Middle-East … Maybe!
Considering that Scooter had heard from Cheney about Plame and supposing that the word had gotten out about her and Potatohead Russert actually did ask Scooter about it. What does that tell us?
First, it doesn’t tell us whether Scooter knew who in the administration had been part of the outing of Plame of, or if in fact, he was one of those people.
Second, it doesn’t tell us whether Scooter was curious whereof Russert had received his information. He might’ve just been handling Russert’s comment as any admin. official should.
Third, it doesn’t tell us why he didn’t go to the veep and ask why Russert knew about Plame and who might’ve leaked it (admin., CIA or other). Someone should ask him (if he takes the stand) if he told anyone of this revelation or if he investigated whether someone in the admin. had leaked it.
Cheney telling him, ‘I know you didn’t leak the NIE (out Plame).’ was fascinating. It indicates that Cheney knew who the leaker was, not just that he trusted Libby wouldn’t leak.
This whole case is somewhat of a muddled mess. Even if Libby obstructed by claiming Timmeh first told him after he said earlier that the veep had told him, it’s not clear who ordered it (probably Bush, who else could?), who did the leaking (probably half a dozen people, to be sure it got out), which reporters were told (some may not have come forward) and why (I speculate it’s about Plame and nukes, but could easily be wrong. Would they really out a CIA NOC over the Wilson op-ed?)
How would Armitage have known the Niger docs were a fraud? What was his position at the time? Would this particular administration allow any war critic to stay in the gov’t.? I can’t imagine that happening.
Libby’s side keeps insisting the Niger docs are valid even now. It’s amazing. I suppose they figure there’s no way to walk away from them even though their very creation/forgeriness has been investigated and linked nearly back to the White House.
Ignoring the craziness of it all, just considering what happened and the lies of it all (there were no nukes), they’re all guilty as sin and should probably hang.
The defense’s case appears to be scattered and foundering based on what’s left from the opening statements. It’s going to take quite a bit of work for Wells to resurrect either his Rove-scapegoat or his busy-Libby-forgot justifications for why Scooter lied to both the FBI and the GJ.
Its not just my opinion, its also the opinion of several Newsweek Journalists – that the defense scored big with Russert.
Whether Russert isn’t telling the truth or not is irrelevant. What is relevant is the effect that all the badgering of witnesses, especially journalists, has on the country as a whole. The continued bleating at, about, and around potential witnesses in this investigation is a sign that some people believe that strong-arming and viciousness are the best way to conduct a society. How is the truth served by this disservice to our country?
> Its not just my opinion, its also the
> opinion of several Newsweek Journalists
> – that the defense scored big with Russert.
If Russert were on trial, particularly for the crime of being a useful idiot, I would agree. But he isn’t, and I haven’t heard anything that would make me think that he was wrong about remembering his conversation with Libby. Just the opposite in fact – if I were on the jury I would be thinking “why is that obnoxious lawyer spinning so hard”.
But the fundamental problem is that if nothing else this trial has revealed that citizens cannot trust the traditional media to report what is really going on in Washington DC. So the opinion of Newsweek reporters is not really trustworthy.
Cranky