Is O'Donnell back on his meds?
This guys mouth is always two days ahead of his brain.
Excuse me. O'Donnell didn't break any news. What O'Donnell did was tell a lie.
Rove just needs to adopt the Berger defense: "accidentally" stuff all memos, etc. into your pants...
Lying Larry is in protege tuam pugam mode.
Of course he broke no laws. He did not blow her cover. If he had, though, he would have broken a law.
Lookie here. Seems Lassie O'Donnell led them to the wrong well. Again. One day he's gonna come barking with real trouble and no one is going to listen. He needs to be slapped with the newspaper and his nose rubbed in the crap he's created.
The "creepy liar" accused Rove of leaking Plame's identity to the press and has utterly zero evidence to back up his assertion. Now he acknowledges that no crime was committed, which means the memos will remain sealed grand jury evidence and his lies can't be exposed. Disgusting.
Quite an admission from a Democrat.
Could someone connect the dots here. Since Novak broke the story and revealed that Plame was a CIA "operative" what difference does it matter if Rove talked to Cooper before that. I'm missing the link. What is it?
The entire trumped up investigation of "who outed Valerie Plame" (a left-wing activist in CIA desk jockey's clothing) made her name far more famous than any Novak column did and served only to divert attention from the real question of the serial anti-Americanism of Valeria Plame and her equally despicable and equally leftist husband Joseph Wilson.
What a waste of the considerable talents of US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald (Northern District-Illinois) who needs all the time at his disposal to investigate the Chicago Demonratic Machine and the corrupt RINO operations of the likes of our despicable former governor Lyin' George Ryan who may cheat prison by dying of old age before he can be tried.
Another NewsMax mishmash.
Too bad there isn't a reliable conservative media outlet that can assemble facts in a coherent manner.
At any rate, Rove was not behind revealing that Plame recommended her husband for the trip.
I'm also sure there was no crime in revealing her role, whoever did so. There may well be other wrongdoing that Fitzgerald is looking at related to this Wilson-created scam.
O'Donnell is always bordering on hysteria, and in some ways it is completely understandable.
After all, being born with a coat-hanger sticking out of your head probably doesn't do much for your self esteem.
And in Larry's case, it took him 6 years to remove it, and 6 more to figure out why it was there in the first place.
Well, America thanks you anyway Mrs. O'Donnell. It was a good try.
Why is this sneering lunatic still on TV? (Larry, not Chuck Schumer, that is...)
All of a sudden the same peolple who thought nothing of perjury by a President a very concerned about enforcing an obscure law which may not have even been violated.
Desperate.
March, 2004
Plugging Leaks
More details emerge on the Plame investigation, as Karl Rove's testimony is revealed for the first time.
By Murray S. Waas
Web Exclusive: 3.8.04
Print Friendly | Email Article
President Bush's chief political adviser, Karl Rove, told the FBI in an interview last October that he circulated and discussed damaging information regarding CIA operative Valerie Plame with others in the White House, outside political consultants, and journalists, according to a government official and an attorney familiar with the ongoing special counsel's investigation of the matter.
But Rove also adamantly insisted to the FBI that he was not the administration official who leaked the information that Plame was a covert CIA operative to conservative columnist Robert Novak last July. Rather, Rove insisted, he had only circulated information about Plame after it had appeared in Novak's column. He also told the FBI, the same sources said, that circulating the information was a legitimate means to counter what he claimed was politically motivated criticism of the Bush administration by Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson.
Rove and other White House officials described to the FBI what sources characterized as an aggressive campaign to discredit Wilson through the leaking and disseminating of derogatory information regarding him and his wife to the press, utilizing proxies such as conservative interest groups and the Republican National Committee to achieve those ends, and distributing talking points to allies of the administration on Capitol Hill and elsewhere. Rove is said to have named at least six other administration officials who were involved in the effort to discredit Wilson