Rove will NOT be charged, libs!

fossten

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June 13, 2006
Rove Won't Be Charged in C.I.A. Leak Case
By DAVID JOHNSTON

WASHINGTON, June 13 — The prosecutor in the C.I.A. leak case on Monday advised Karl Rove, the senior White House adviser, that he would not be charged with any wrongdoing, effectively ending the nearly three-year criminal investigation that had at times focused intensely on Mr. Rove.

The decision by the prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, announced in a letter to Mr. Rove's lawyer, Robert D. Luskin, lifted a pall that had hung over Mr. Rove who testified on five occasions to a federal grand jury about his involvement in the disclosure of an intelligence officer's identity.

In a statement, Mr. Luskin said, "On June 12, 2006, Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald formally advised us that he does not anticipate seeking charges against Karl Rove."

Mr. Fitzgerald's spokesman, Randall Samborn, said he would not comment on Mr. Rove's status.

For months Mr. Fitzgerald's investigation appeared to threaten Mr. Rove's standing as Mr. Bush's closest political adviser as the prosecutor riveted his focus on whether Mr. Rove tried to intentionally conceal a conversation he had with a Time magazine reporter in the week before the name of intelligence officer, Valerie Plame Wilson, became public.

The decision not to pursue any charges removes a potential political stumbling block for a White House that is heading into a long and difficult election season for Republicans in Congress.

Mr. Fitzgerald's decision should help the White House in what has been an unsuccessful effort to put the leak case behind it. Still ahead, however, is the trial of Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby Jr., on charges for perjury and obstruction of justice, and the prospect that Mr. Cheney could be called to testify in that case.

In his statement Mr. Luskin said he would not address other legal questions surrounding Mr. Fitzgerald's decision. He added, "In deference to the pending case, we will not make any further public statements about the subject matter of the investigation. We believe that the Special Counsel's decision should put an end to the baseless speculation about Mr. Rove's conduct."

But it was evident that Mr. Fitzgerald's decision followed an exhaustive inquiry into Mr. Rove's activities that had brought the political strategist dangerously close to possible charges. In October, when Mr. Libby was indicted, people close to Mr. Rove had suggested that his involvement in the case would soon be over; speculation about Mr. Rove's legal situation flared again in April when he made his fifth appearance before the grand jury.

A series of meetings between Mr. Luskin and Mr. Fitzgerald and his team proved pivotal in dissuading the prosecutor from bringing charges. On one occasion Mr. Luskin himself became a witness in the case, giving sworn testimony that was beneficial to Mr. Rove.

As the case stands now, Mr. Fitzgerald has brought only one indictment against Mr. Libby. The prosecutor accused Mr. Libby of telling the grand jury that he learned of Ms. Wilson from reporters, when in reality, the prosecutor said he was told about her by Mr. Cheney and others in the government. Mr. Libby has pleaded not guilty in the case, which is scheduled to begin trial early next year.

Ms. Wilson is married to Joseph C. Wilson IV, the former ambassador who wrote in an Op-Ed column in the New York Times on July 6, 2003 that White House officials, including Mr. Bush, had exaggerated assertions that Iraq had sought to purchase nuclear fuel from Africa. Mr. Wilson wrote that such claims were "highly dubious."

He said his conclusions were based on a trip he had made in early 2002 to Niger, a fact-finding mission that he said had been "instigated" by Mr. Cheney's office.

It is now known that the column upset Mr. Cheney and that within his office it was viewed as an attack on the Vice President's credibility, according to legal briefs filed in the Libby case by Mr. Fitzgerald. In his filings, Mr. Fitzgerald depicts Mr. Cheney as actively engaged in an effort with Mr. Libby to rebut Mr. Wilson's assertions.

After the Wilson column was published, Mr. Cheney wrote notes on a copy asking whether Ms. Wilson played a role in sending her husband to Africa and whether the trip was a "junket." At the same time, Mr. Fitzgerald has said, the vice president dispatched Mr. Libby to challenge Mr. Wilson in conversations with reporters.

It was during that effort, Mr. Fitzgerald has alleged, that Mr. Libby disclosed Ms. Wilson's employment at the C.I.A. along with the possibility that it was she who sent him to Niger.

In Mr. Rove's case, Mr. Fitzgerald centered his inquiry on why Mr. Rove did not admit early in the investigation that he had a conversation with Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper about Ms. Wilson and whether Mr. Rove was forthcoming about the later discovery of an internal e-mail message that confirmed his conversation with Mr. Cooper, to whom Mr. Rove had mentioned the existence of the C.I.A. officer.

Mr. Rove told the grand jury that he forgot the conversation with Mr. Cooper and volunteered it to Mr. Fitzgerald as soon as he recalled it, when his memory was jogged by the e-mail to Stephen J. Hadley, then deputy national security adviser, in which Mr. Rove referred to his discussion with Mr. Cooper.

At the center of the inquiry involving Mr. Rove are the circumstances surrounding a July 11, 2003, telephone conversation between Mr. Rove and Mr. Cooper, who turned the interview to questions about the trip to Africa by Mr. Wilson.

In his testimony to the grand jury in February 2004, Mr. Rove did not disclose the conversation with Mr. Cooper, saying later that he had forgotten it among the hundreds of calls he received on a daily basis. But there was a record of the call in the form of Mr. Rove's message to Mr. Hadley, the deputy national security adviser, which confirmed the conversation.

One lawyer with a client in the case said Mr. Fitzgerald was skeptical of Mr. Rove's account because the message was not discovered until the fall of 2004 — a year after Mr. Rove first talked to investigators. It was at about the same time that Mr. Fitzgerald had begun to compel reporters to cooperate with his inquiry, among them Mr. Cooper. The prosecutors legal thrust at reporters, in effect, put White House aides like Mr. Rove on notice that any conversations might become known.

Associates of Mr. Rove said the e-mail message was turned over immediately after it was found at the White House. They said Mr. Rove never intended to withhold details of a conversation with a reporter from Mr. Fitzgerald, noting that Mr. Rove had signed a legal waiver to allow reporters to reveal to prosecutors their discussions with confidential sources. In addition, they said, Mr. Rove testified about his conversation with Mr. Cooper — long before Mr. Cooper did — acknowledging that it was possible that the subject of Mr. Wilson's trip had come up.

It is now known that Mr. Fitzgerald and the grand jury have questioned Mr. Rove about two conversations with reporters. The first, which he admitted to investigators from the outset, took place on July 9, 2003, in a telephone call initiated by Robert D. Novak, the syndicated columnist. In a column about Mr. Wilson's trip four days after the call to Mr. Rove, Mr. Novak disclosed the identity of Ms. Wilson, who was said by Mr. Novak to have had a role in arranging her husband's trip. Mr. Novak identified her as Valerie Plame, Ms. Wilson's maiden name.

WHERE ARE YOU, PHIL?
 
I wish i could screen capture but take a look at Joey's pollingpoint.com link ad from google asking if Rove Lied down at the bottom of the page!

Precious. Sorry Dems, Guess not.

Sly as a fox, 'ol Bushy and Rovey are.
 
screencapturelvcrove9bi.jpg
 
So much for Rove being part of the so-called “culture of corruption.” Although, I wouldn’t be surprised if the democrats spin it again by claiming Rove is still part of the culture, except he just happened to get away with wrongdoing. It looks like it’s time to call a special meeting to determine who’s next in line on the democratic party’s hit list.

In the meantime, the virtuous democrats continue to support William Jefferson who looks a hell of a lot more guilty than Rove ever did. While I’m not against giving Jefferson an opportunity to explain why he had 100K in his freezer and why he was apparently videotaped accepting an alleged bribe, I just thought by now he would have given some plausible explanation.
 
Eh, I'm actually glad. Only because there has been enough scandal and BS.
 
MAC1 said:
So much for Rove being part of the so-called “culture of corruption.” Although, I wouldn’t be surprised if the democrats spin it again by claiming Rove is still part of the culture, except he just happened to get away with wrongdoing. It looks like it’s time to call a special meeting to determine who’s next in line on the democratic party’s hit list.

In the meantime, the virtuous democrats continue to support William Jefferson who looks a hell of a lot more guilty than Rove ever did. While I’m not against giving Jefferson an opportunity to explain why he had 100K in his freezer and why he was apparently videotaped accepting an alleged bribe, I just thought by now he would have given some plausible explanation.

You stinking Repug! You don't know anything! You said 100K but everybody knows it was *only* 90K! You better get your story straight before you ever show your lousy Shrub-loving face around this Progressyve forum again!

;)
 
Where are you, Phil?

Reprinted from NewsMax.com

Thursday, June 15, 2006 10:37 a.m. EDT
Reporter in Denial Over Karl Rove Exoneration


The web reporter who had the Washington press corps buzzing after he claimed on May 13 that Karl Rove had been indicted says he's standing by his story - even though Leakgate Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald exonerated the top Bush aide two days ago.

"I have to tell you, I'm shocked by the news" that Rove was cleared, Truthout.org's Jason Leopold told radio host Steve Malzberg, filling in on "Fox News Talk" for John Gibson.

But Leopold said he won't retract his Rove indictment story until Fitzgerald himself issues a denial.

"Karl Rove was under the microscope for three years and it is [Fitzgerald's] obligation to come out there and tell everyone himself that Karl Rove was cleared," he told Malzberg.

"All we have right now is Karl Rove's attorney . . . saying: 'Hey, we got a letter. But I'm not going to share that letter with anybody.' What is that?"

The skeptical reporter suggested that there may be more to the Rove exoneration than meets the eye, wondering aloud: "Did Karl Rove cut a deal? . . . Did he offer up information?"

But when Malzberg pressed, "You mean like on Dick Cheney?" Leopold quickly retreated, insisting: "I don't know. I'm not saying that."

Leopold's initial report was taken seriously by D.C. pundits. "Everybody's buzzing in Washington. Is this guy going to get indicted?" announced MSNBC's Chris Matthews, a day after the Truthout story hit.

Leopold says now that the ball in is the special prosecutor's court.

"If [my report] is wrong, and Patrick Fitzgerald comes out with a statement and says it's wrong, or says that Rove is in the clear - well, I'll be out there to say I was completely wrong," he promised.
 
fossten said:
Where are you, Phil?

He's currently cutting and pasting a scathing post about how George W. Bush hates people with vision problems.
 
A damn shame, they should lock him up for life!

Don't hold your breath waiting for an apology- I won't apologize to a scumbag.
 
97silverlsc said:
A damn shame, they should lock him up for life!
For what?

Don't hold your breath waiting for an apology- I won't apologize to a scumbag.
Who are you calling a scumbag?

Maybe you can post a photochopped picture of Karl Rove in jail too, if it makes you feel better.
 
Sure enough, Howard 'Tokyo Rose' Dean was being interviewed and he said that Rove is still guilty of leaking Valarie Plame’s name even though apparently Mr. Rove didn’t even know who she was at the time her name was allegedly leaked, which is one reason why he was not indicted. So, again, as President Reagan used to say: “Here we go again.”

Also, I wouldn’t be surprised if another reason why Rove wasn't indicted is because, as a matter of law, Valarie Plame was not a covert agent. Therefore, the so-called leak was actually not a leak and thus divulging her name was not a crime. Though the democrats (including Joe Wilson) and liberal media were unwilling to admit, for obvious reasons, Plame’s non-agent status, I’m sure Fitzgerald understood that the law was not on his side. But then again, this begs the question as to why the investigation went on as long as it did? Maybe Fitzgerald was simply trying to do a thorough job and honestly felt the law was indeed on his side. :rolleyes:
 
MAC1 said:
So much for Rove being part of the so-called “culture of corruption.” Although, I wouldn’t be surprised if the democrats spin it again by claiming Rove is still part of the culture, except he just happened to get away with wrongdoing. It looks like it’s time to call a special meeting to determine who’s next in line on the democratic party’s hit list.

You called it. Nice job.

Using language which painted Karl Rove as a guilty party who succeeded at avoiding capture by authorities, not proving his innocence, in his NBC Nightly News story on Wednesday (also carried at the top of MSNBC’s Countdown) about President George W. Bush’s morning Rose Garden press conference, David Gregory asserted: “Mr. Bush dodged several questions about Karl Rove eluding prosecution in the CIA leak case.” Viewers then saw this clip of Bush: “And obviously, along with others in the White House, took a sigh of relief when he made the decision he made and now we’re going to move forward.” The Oxford Concise Dictionary, built into the Corel WordPerfect I’m using to write this, defines “elude” as “evade or escape adroitly from.” Dictionary.com offers: “To evade or escape from, as by daring, cleverness, or skill.” Their illustrative example in a sentence: “The suspect continues to elude the police.”

:bsflag:
 

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