Posted on 09/19/2006 3:50:41 PM PDT by Laverne
Clarice Feldman has mailed today (9/19/06) the following letter to the Department of Justice, Office of Professional Responsibility regarding the conduct of Patrick Fitzgerald, in the matter of the prosecution Lewis Scooter Libby. With her permission, we reproduce it in its entirety.
H. Marshall Jarrett, Counsel
Office of Professional Responsibility
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 3266
Washington, D.C. 20530
Re: Patrick Fitzgeralds handling of the Plame Case
Dear Mr. Jarrett:
I am writing to suggest that if one is not underway yet, it is long past due to undertake an investigation into the circumstances of the appointment of Patrick Fitzgerald and the way in which he has conducted this matter.
As a general overview of the inappropriate way in which he handled this matter, I reference this article in the Weekly Standard.
As to more specific references to inappropriate conduct not outlined there, I draw your attention to his statements in the press conference announcing the indictment and particularly ask that you read those statements in light of recent developments: It is now apparent that Mr. Fitzgerald knew from the outset of his appointment that the source of the leak to Robert Novak was Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage. In spite of this, Mr. Fitzgerald appears to have never fully explored with Armitage whether Armitage had spoken to other reporters in addition to Novakalthough it is now known that Armitage spoke about Plame to at least one other reporter, Bob Woodward, and quite possibly other reporters who have testified before the Grand Jury. That conversation happened a full month before the Novak article was published.
Mr. Woodward has volunteered that he himself told other people during the month in question, but it seems that Mr. Fitzgerald was uninterested in whether this provided an alternate path for information to spread through the Washington press corps, including quite possibly other reporters who have testified before the Grand Jury. Nor did Mr. Fitzgerald seek waivers of confidentiality for any reporters with whom Armitage spoke with regard to Plame (with the possible exception of Novak himself). The good leakers bad leakers and whistleblower distinctions made by the prosecution are a frank prescription for criminalizing politics and were unprofessional. And the suggestion in those statements that the defendant had deliberately disclosed the identity of an undercover agent and harmed national security in so doing, prejudiced the defendant, slandered him in the public eye, and far exceeded the evidence in the prosecutions possession and the indictment itself.
Further, the affidavit he filed in the Miller appeal was a model of misdirection and disingenuousness clearly designed to mislead the Court. Taken as a whole, the affidavit conflates the Armitage leak to Novak with Libbys quite apparently innocent conversations with other reporters, presenting a materially false impression of the facts the prosecution already had determined. Whether Libbys recollections of those conversations were accurate, or his conversational partners recollections were more accurate, both sides to each conversation recall something entirely benign.
I ask you to focus attention in particular on paragraphs 9-17 and 81 of that affidavit and read them in light of recently revealed facts: that Armitage told Novak and Woodward earlier and in far greater detail about Plames role and identity than did Lewis Libby or Karl Rove who were pilloried for three years for innocent, passing comments to reporters who asked THEM about information, reporters who already seem to have known about Plames identity due to the indiscretions of Plame and Wilson. From these facts alone it is readily apparent that these reporters already knew about Plames employment and her relationship to Wilson. These obvious facts should have lead an unbiased investigator or prosecutor to examine the source of that knowledgewhether it was due to the well documented indiscretions of Plame and Wilson themselves or whether, like the leak to Novak, their knowledge derived from conversations with Richard Armitage. Significantly, Mr. Fitzgeralds reference to a Newsday article suggesting that Plame fell within the IIPA failed to note that the source(s) for those claims were Wilson allies in the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, a group which ironically was urging intelligence officers to leak classified information. Even more ironically some of them reportedly are connected through interlinked organizational ties with Mr. Agee, whose own deliberate revelations of undercover CIA agents was the very impetus for the Statute. At no time in the unredacted portions of the affidavit did Fitzgerald directly say that Plame met the test of the IIPA - which she clearly does not -but in various ways he deliberately left the Court with that impression in order to effect the rare contempt order and jailing of a reporter. Further, while portions of the affidavit remain redacted, it doesnt appear that the Prosecution was adequately forthcoming to the Court in revealing that the disclosure to Novak was by someone who did not get that information from Libby or Judith Miller. Indeed, Miller herself may have received it from Armitage as well. Her notes reflect other sources, prior to the June 23 meeting with Libby and she had in the recent past written interviews with Armitage. Fitzgeralds grand jury interrogation of her respecting those sources, moreover, seems to conflict with the agreement hed reached with her not to ask about sources other than Libby.
Footnote 15, p. 28 of this filing was markedly misleading.
If Libby knowingly disclosed information about Plames status with the CIA, Libby would appear to have violated Title 18, USC Sec. 793 if the information is considered information respecting the national defense. In order to establish a violation of Title 50, USCSec.421, it would be necessary to establish that Libby knew or believed that Plame was a person whose identity the CIA was making specific efforts to conceal and who had carried out covert work overseas within the last 5 years. To date we have no direct evidence that Libby knew or believed Wilsons wife was engaged in covert work.
That it is so is clear from this portion of Judge Tatels opinion in that case.
Addressing deficiencies of proof regarding the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, the special counsel refers to Plame as person whose identity the CIA was making specific efforts to conceal and who had carried out covert work overseas within the last 5 years -representations I trust the special counsel would not make without support. [Emphasis added].
There is no indication on the record that the Prosecutor informed the Court that this was a misreading of the affidavit he submitted.
Finally, I think it important to investigate the circumstances surrounding the extra-statutory appointment of Fitzgerald as Special Prosecutor by Deputy Attorney General James B. Comey. In view of the now well-known fact that the appointment of Mr. Fitzgerald took place 2-3 months after the true source of the leak was known, I believe it is of great importance to determine
1) whether the appointment was made by arrangement with any members of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
2) whether any members of that Committee were informed by anyone in the Department of Justice or the Special Prosecutors office of Armitages admission that he had been Novaks source and,
3) if so, when such disclosure was made and by whom.
I recognize that the special prosecutor is acting in a unique capacity. On the other hand, since the appointment of a Department of Justice employee as Special Prosecutor created a special circumstance that was not contemplated by the Statute, it seems logical that Mr. Fitzgerald should be covered by the operations of your office. In support of that position, I draw your attention to the fact that both Mr. Comey and Mr. Fitzgerald provided affidavits to the Court in support of their own contention that the operations of the Special Prosecutor are under Department of Justice supervision. If you feel that this is not the case, I would appreciate your disclosing that to me even though I appreciate that non-jurisdictional issues are and should remain non-public during any investigation. Because I am convinced that the above described conduct imperatively demands investigation, I will seek it in another forum if this matter is beyond your jurisdiction.
Sincerely yours,
Clarice Feldman
Wow...thanks Laverne!
You go Clarice!
Scooter Ping. I presume that if/when Ms. Feldman gets a response it will be posted as well. Free Scooter
PING
PING
WOW.
bttt
Clarice Feldman is not going to let this go...and good for her. Her last sentence is very telling:
Because I am convinced that the above described conduct imperatively demands investigation, I will seek it in another forum if this matter is beyond your jurisdiction.
You might be interestd in this.
Great post. Thank you for sharing it. Let's hope this gets the ball rolling, if it already is not.
I think Ann Coulter said that "valerie Plame's secret undercove name she used when working for the CIA was Valeria Plame". LOL!
Sounds like the old, "I'll use my real name ploy".
bump
If this travesty of a case was worth pursuing for three years by a self-important, ideological twisted prosecutor, then it is now worth a little time and effort to investigate WHY Fitzgerald did these things, and whether in doing them he broke the law he was sworn to uphold.
I notice this letter does not even mention another telling disclosure: that Richard Armitage told news sources that he did not disclose that he was the one who first leaked the information, either to the public or to the President of the United States, because Fitzgerald ordered him in his official capacity to keep silence.
What do we make of THAT? It was not, strictly speaking, Richard Armitage's fault for remaining silent for three years while lies and innuendos were spread by the press, reporters were jailed, innocent persons were smeared, and someone only peripherally connected to the whole business was indicted. That was, if what Armitage says is true, entirely Fitzgerald's fault.
CYA would be a more appropriate acronym
Think : Janet Reno
.
Indict Chuckie Now!
The Office of Professional Responsibility is run by a hack from the Clinton years. He has no plans to do anything that would bring discredit on the insider hangovers at the Department of Justice. You are just wasting 39 cents to write to him. You will never have a response, so forget about him doing anything They are just waiting until Jane Reno drives her red truck bAck up to Washington. Cheers. Frank Samples
http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/iln/osc/index.html
Seems SP Fitz hasn't had much to do since May 2006. His whereabouts seem to be unknown (at least to me). If we knew where he was, we could FREEP him to explain his press conference vs. the public info of late that he was scamming the process.
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