Posted on 08/05/2015 11:34:00 AM PDT by Starman417
David Petraeus saw his career come to an end for mishandling classified information.
Sandy Berger was punished for mishandling classified information.
Scooter Libby got it worst of all. And he did virtually nothing.
Remember Scooter Libby?
Libby was the Bush aide who went to prison for having a bad memory. He was hunted down and persecuted by Peter Fitzgerald who was looking for the scalp of the person who allegedly leaked the name of Valerie Plame.
Libby went to prison and he wasn't even the leaker. Richard Armitrage was. Jennifer Rubin:
Right Turn readers know my view that former vice president Dick Cheneys chief of staff Scooter Libby was dealt a severe injustice by prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald who knew early on that another official, Richard Armitage, had leaked Valerie Plames name. Fitzgerald asserted that Libby had lied to prosecutors rather than mistakenly recalled a phone call with now-deceased reporter Tim Russert. The case should never have gone forward (or, if it had, a memory expert should have been permitted to testify), and President George W. Bush should have granted Libby a full pardon before leaving office. (As an aside, Libbys memory was notoriously bad as now-Fact Checker and then-State Department reporter Glenn Kesslers testimony in the case confirmed. As Glenn has summarized it, Libby told the FBI that he told Kessler about Plame; Kessler testified he did not. So Libby was convicted for telling the FBI he didnt tell Russert about Plame and falsely admitted to telling Kessler about Plamewhen he did not. If this was a cover up, it was the oddest in history, but it does seem in retrospect that Libbys memory was awful.) Getting back to the conviction, it cannot be forgotten that Armitage and his boss Colin Powell deserve our scorn for not coming forward early on to exonerate Libby.It is argued that Fitzgerald engaged in prosecutorial abuse:
Mr. Fitzgerald, who had the classified file of Ms. Plames service, withheld her State Department cover from Ms. Millerand from Mr. Libbys lawyers, who had requested Ms. Plames employment history. Despite his constitutional and ethical obligation to provide exculpatory evidence, Mr. Fitzgerald encouraged Ms. Miller to misinterpret her ambiguous notes as showing that Mr. Libby brought up Ms. Plame.He already knew Libby was not the source of the leak. Libby ends up in prison for having a bad memory. Criticism of Fitzgerald came from several quarters:
On August 28, 2006, Christopher Hitchens asserted that Richard Armitage was the primary source of the Valerie Plame leak and that Fitzgerald knew this at the beginning of his investigation.[132] This was supported a month later by Armitage himself, who stated that Fitzgerald had instructed him not to go public with this information.[133]Investor's Business Daily questioned Fitzgerald's truthfulness in an editorial, stating "From top to bottom, this has been one of the most disgraceful abuses of prosecutorial power in this country's history...The Plame case proves [Fitzgerald] can bend the truth with the proficiency of the slickest of pols."[134]Libby did essentially nothing and went to prison. Hillary Clinton mishandled classified information. The Inspector General for the intelligence community sampled 40 Clinton emails and concluded that 10% of them contained classified information. Moreover, it was determined that the emails "were classified when they were sent and are classified now."In a September 2008 Wall Street Journal editorial, attorney Alan Dershowitz cited the "questionable investigation[s]" of Scooter Libby as evidence of the problems brought to the criminal justice process by "politically appointed and partisan attorney[s] general".[135] In April 2015, also writing in The Wall Street Journal, Hoover Institution fellow Peter Berkowitz argued that statements by Judith Miller, in her recently published memoir, raised anew contentions that her testimony was inaccurate and that Fitzgerald's conduct as prosecutor was inappropriate.[136]
That's unfortunate for Hillary, who continues to assert something different:
(Excerpt) Read more at floppingaces.net...
Not only less, A LOT less.
Ok? So the liberals protect the crime families of Kennedy, Clinton, and Obama. Ours is a govt of hypocrites. What’s the news?
Libby did utterly nothing wrong. His imprisonment is a full on embarrassment, and Bush not pardoning him was shameful.
You could mention even names like John Dean or G Gordon Liddy who went to jail because of the Watergate scandal. Even Richard Nixon himself was forced out of the White House and he was basically a choir boy compared to FDR, LBJ, and HRC.
Valerie Plame was the biggest farce of a scandal.
It compromised her security so badly, she’s still a public figure.
There are different rules for Democrats. Or rather, there are no rules.
It’s a shame that Libby was crucified. I knew him years ago when he was a trial attorney. A very nice guy who didn’t deserve to have his life ruined. I can only hope that those who did this to him will one day be dealt with by the Almighty.
Hillary is protected by the Obama administration’s Justice Department who exist solely to protect liberal criminals.
Why isn’t this reported on the CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN Evening News? Because they are all democrat party supporters.
And Libby didn’t even do what he went to prison for — and they all knew that.
Bush lost any support from me when this went down...
Bush could have easily put an end to the whole mess...
If the POTUS can't stand up for an obvious railroad job of his own personnel, I can't support him...
Did Obama turn the FBI loose or were they shamed into finally acting?
Does anyone know WHY Bush wouldn’t pardon him?
I don’t. Guess he thought it would look bad. When 0bama leaves office the pardons will come in reams.
So she should get the death penalty!
At best, anyone in the private sector doing this would be fired. BUT, when you add in that these docs involved national security, then we have a criminal offense.
Good question. I would ask the same about those BP guys that got railroaded over some minor infraction.
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