Posted on 09/21/2004 9:21:43 PM PDT by neverdem
OP-ED COLUMNIST
Whoever, having devised any scheme or artifice to defraud transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both. " U.S. Criminal Code, Chapter 63, Section 1343.
WASHINGTON At the root of what is today treated as an embarrassing blunder by duped CBS journalists may turn out to be a felony by its faithless sources.
Some person or persons conceived a scheme to create a series of false Texas Air National Guard documents and append a photocopied signature to one of them. The perpetrator then helped cause the fraudulent file to be transmitted by means of television communication to millions of voters for the purpose of influencing a federal election.
That was no mere "dirty trick"; it could be a violation of the U.S. criminal code. If the artifice had not been revealed by sharp-eyed bloggers, a national election could have been swung by a blatant falsehood.
Who was the forger? Did others conspire with him or her to present a seeming government document - with knowledge of its falsity and with intent to defraud, which is a felony in Texas? Who was to benefit and how?
CBS News belatedly apologized and agreed to appoint independent examiners. That's a start.
The government and the courts have no business forcing journalists to reveal sources. But no ethic requires a journalist to protect a source who lied. Accordingly, Dan Rather went to the Texas ranch of his source and telecast Bill Burkett's admission of having falsely "thrown out the name" of someone who gave him the false evidence. Burkett now claims his real source was some hard-to-find mystery woman.
What benefit did the Bush-hating Burkett gain from CBS in return for his fake documents? One plausible answer: he got coveted access to someone high up in the Kerry campaign.
We learned last week that Burkett had reached Kerry's convention introducer, former Senator Max Cleland, to plead for access to higher-ups so as to launch a "counterattack." Cleland confirms getting the call and says he told him to try the D.N.C., (where Terry McAuliffe, as former prosecutor Joseph DiGenova noted on MSNBC, carefully denied a role only in the preparation of the documents).
When his call to headquarters was not returned, Burkett then asked Mary Mapes, the CBS producer, to help him gain the top-level Kerry access he so highly valued.
Only days before the telecast, Mapes or some other "60 Minutes" staff member delivered the goods: their "unimpeachable" source was paid off with a call from Joe Lockhart, the Clinton press aide newly hired to strip nuance out of Kerry's message. With the number supplied by CBS, Lockhart called Burkett. We don't know what was said, but the call from on high was payoff in itself.
What should CBS do now? First, release Rather's interview with Burkett in its entirety; viewers are entitled to the outtakes now. Next, let Mary Mapes, at the center of all this, speak to reporters. Third, expend some Viacom resources to track down the possible original sources, including the man whose name Burkett says he "threw out" to mislead CBS.
Appointing independent reviewers should not be a device to duck all others' questions; that's Kofi Annan's trick to stonewall his oil-for-food scandal. But lacking the power of a grand jury's subpoena or testimony under oath, victimized CBS cannot put real heat on the perpetrator or conspirators. We have hard evidence of crimes by low-level operatives here - from wire fraud to forgery - as well as the potential of high-level political involvement. Is no prosecutor prepared to enforce the law?
Conservatives should stop slavering over Dan Rather's scalp, and liberals should stop pretending that noble ends justify fake-evidence means. Both should focus on the lesson of the early 70's: from third-rate burglaries to fourth-rate forgeries, nobody gets away with trying to corrupt American elections.
Yuk!! Who would want her job?
But, on the following, the New York Times is right:
Conservatives should stop slavering over Dan Rather's scalp, and liberals should stop pretending that noble ends justify fake-evidence means. Both should focus on the lesson of the early 70's: from third-rate burglaries to fourth-rate forgeries, nobody gets away with trying to corrupt American elections.
What a cast of characters is right!! We'll probably never find out the truth till after the election!
BOL!
Make that a Kerry Kerrorist Hit Man.
.-:*'``'*:-.,bouncey,.-:*'``'*:-.,bouncey,.-:*'``'*:-.,thud
Thats Safire falling off the turnip truck..
And he's a 1st rate jounalist ?...
It's done all the time.. in North Dakota, New Jersy, Louisiana, Missouri, to mention a few..
What you smokin Bill ?
Unfortunately, election fraud (which this episode arguably is) is one of the most-committed yet least-prosecuted crimes in the U.S.
Somebody is going to get thrown to the wolves by CBS and the DNC over this if it gets to criminal prosecution. I recommend getting to a lawyer and coming clean before you are left holding the bag.
It appears that Mapes and those others often mentioned are well insulated by information they have and probably safe from retribution.
IF she promised Burkett she could hook him up with the top level people of the DNC (like Cleland)... that maybe he'd fax her back some "memos" she'd have delivered to him at a livestock show?
The Houston Livestock Show took place before Mapes got the Abu Ghraib photos.
If there ever was a Lucy Ramirez, which is doubtful, it wasn't Mary Mapes. Mapes has her own problems, though.
You must still have a measure of respect for the MSM, I don't. I think Rather has knowingly taken part in lies & half truths for the liberal cause for so long that he just considered this as business as usual. I hope it puts him & all concerned behind bars.
I fear the fix is in -- that if this is a "close" election, dems will steal it. Have you noticed how the MSM is avoiding the subject? It means dem operatives aren't feeding them information on how easy it is to rig optical scanners. I fear for our freedoms.
Unfortunately, election fraud (which this episode arguably is) is one of the most-committed yet least-prosecuted crimes in the U.S.
There are still some 46,000 people currently registered to vote in BOTH NY and Florida -- what party affiliation do you suppose the majority of them have?
I also fear for the continued existence of the Republic as we know it.
With optical scanners, no paper trails, and a press that works as a private PR firm for Democrats, I fear for this election. I fear for a free country. If Bush can pull a win, the more moral parts of the democrat party might stage a coup -- and the danger will be averted.
I have witnessed some voting "irregularities" first-hand, and as bad as that is, I am even more troubled by the utter lack of concern on the part of the state/county election officials to whom I have reported them. Letters sent to any number of legislative/executive branch officeholders are met with deafening silence.
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