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Analysis: Libby decision shows worst in politics (MSM continues to cry)
MSNBC ^ | July 4, 2007 | RON FOURNIER/ap

Posted on 07/04/2007 4:25:41 PM PDT by tobyhill

WASHINGTON - The hypocrisy is unpardonable. President Bush's decision to commute the sentence of a convicted liar brought out the worst in both parties and politics.

In keeping I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby out of jail, Bush defied his promise to hold wrongdoers accountable and undercut his 2000 campaign pledge to "restore honor and dignity" to the White House. And it might be a cynical first step toward issuing a full pardon at the conclusion of his term.

Democrats responded as if they don't live in glass houses, decrying corruption, favoritism and a lack of justice.

(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: libby; liberalcrybabies
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1 posted on 07/04/2007 4:25:46 PM PDT by tobyhill
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To: tobyhill

the author of this piece won an award last time at the correspondence dinner and Bush had to shake his hand. I’d shake it the John Wayne way...........hit em and ask questions later


2 posted on 07/04/2007 4:29:06 PM PDT by advertising guy (If computer skills named us, I'd be back-space delete.)
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To: tobyhill

3 posted on 07/04/2007 4:29:59 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: tobyhill
Bush defied his promise to hold wrongdoers accountable and undercut his 2000 campaign pledge to "restore honor and dignity" to the White House

What is the President going to do with a corrupt Fitzzzzzzzzzzzz, the judge Walton (?) and a total left jury. If the appeal does not work, then the President must pardon.

4 posted on 07/04/2007 4:30:14 PM PDT by Logical me (Oh, well!!!)
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To: tobyhill

Marc Rich

He wasn’t born Rich. No, he was born Marc David Reich in Belgium in 1934 to a working-class Jewish father. Fearing the Nazis, his family fled to America in 1942, changed their name to Rich and tried to start life all over again.

Forty-one years later, Marc Rich was fleeing again, but this time the feared authority was not Adolph Hitler, but the assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, Morris (Sandy) Weinberg. Rich’s crimes included tax evasion, fraud and “trading with the enemy” — Iran, during the hostage crisis.

Rich, by now a multimillionaire, was in Switzerland on the day his indictment came down and decided to stay. Once again, Rich started his life afresh, leaving his old wife Denise for a young blond model, changing the name of one of his Swiss firms and starting a new business.

On Jan. 20, President Clinton gave Rich a chance for a third “do-over.” Clinton wiped all the criminal charges off of Rich’s record with a presidential pardon on his last day in power. The Rich pardon has received special attention because Denise Rich raised and donated more than $1 million to the Democratic Party in recent years and also provided the Clintons directly with a $10,000 contribution to their legal defense fund and $7,300 worth of furniture.

Even left-wing newspapers and columnists have rebuked Clinton for pardoning Rich. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., declared himself “troubled.” Bush White House lawyers looked into overturning the pardon, and House Government Reform Committee Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind., has launched an investigation.

The strange case started with the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973, which established a system of price controls on crude oil produced in or imported to the United States. In 1980 and ‘81, the Energy Department classified oil that came from wells that produce 10 barrels a day or less as “stripper” oil and exempted it from the price caps.

According to his 1983 indictment, Rich saw this regulation as a potential gold mine, setting up a scam to have his company’s oil relabeled “stripper” oil by a reseller, and thus seemingly exempted from the price controls.

To hide this activity and the illegal profits it produced, says Sandy Weinberg, the lead prosecutor in the case, Rich allegedly had a reseller claim Rich’s profits were really its own and then hand over the money through sham transactions to companies Rich controlled in Panama.

This led the government to charge Rich and his partner Pincus Green with fraud and the evasion of $42 million in taxes.

On top of that, Weinberg alleges, Rich bought crude oil from the Ayatollah Khomeini’s Iran while Iran was holding U.S. citizens hostage. This was in direct violation of a U.S. trade embargo — and, in effect, helped to arm the Iranians by giving them needed cash.

Bring all of these activities together into a concerted effort to make illegal profits, and you’ve got what the prosecutor called racketeering — violating federal criminal statutes designed for busting the Mafia.

Rich’s attorneys — at the time of the investigation as well as in the consideration of the pardon — uttered cries of “over-prosecution.” They hoped an agreement could be reached. Rich’s and Green’s attorney, Edward Bennett Williams, met with Weinberg a few times in 1983 to offer a deal: The companies would pay $100 million if all charges were dropped.

This was on top of the $50,000 per day that Marc Rich was paying in contempt-of-court fines for not turning over certain documents. Every Friday, Rich paid $200,000, and every Monday, $150,000. The payments eventually equaled $21 million.

Rich started paying the fines only after the feds, following an anonymous tip, “reeled in a plane on the runway at JFK” (Weinberg’s words) and found it was carrying a paralegal from a New York law firm who had checked on board with two steamer trunks full of subpoenaed documents.

The plane was on its way to Europe.

Weinberg recounts a June 1983 meeting with Williams, in which Williams put his feet up on the prosecutor’s desk and made the pitch. In Weinberg’s view, and in the view of his boss, then-U.S. Attorney Rudy Giuliani, Rich and Green deserved nothing short of jail time. If wealthy criminals could buy their way out of their misdeeds, the prosecutors felt, then they were effectively above the law.

Rich and Green, according to a few sources, were in Europe at the time of the negotiation. When Weinberg told Bennett, “No deal,” the two businessmen decided not to come back. Three months later, a federal grand jury handed down an indictment for fraud, tax evasion and trading with the enemy.

The resellers who were the main co-conspirators in the “stripper oil” fraud were convicted and served 12 months in jail. Rich’s companies pleaded guilty to 78 counts and paid over $150 million, while Rich and Green remained fugitives. Attempts at extradition failed.

That did not mean that they could not profit off the U.S. government. As then-Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va, unearthed in hearings in the early 1990s, while Rich was a fugitive the U.S. mint was contracting to buy metal from one of his companies.

Between fiscal years 1989 and 1992, the mint issued at least 21 separate contracts for nickel, zinc and copper to the company. Also, in 1988, the Defense Logistics Agency lifted its bar on contracting with the same company.

Wise characterized the scandal of dealing with the fugitive Rich this way: “I wonder how the average American taxpayer feels when they go to the shopping center and they reach into their pockets to pull out some change, some coins to pay the sales tax, which they are obligated to pay. And as they pull out that change and put those coins on the desk, they find that the person who provided the metal to the mint and is benefiting is accused of evading the very taxes that the citizen is paying. I don’t think that sits very well with the American taxpayer.”

But President Clinton completely ignored standard procedures in finally pardoning Rich. His action bypassed the Justice Department and blindsided Mary Jo White, the U.S. attorney who serves in the district formerly presided over by Giuliani.


5 posted on 07/04/2007 4:31:18 PM PDT by realcleanguy ("I have not yet begun to fight")
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To: tobyhill

Dosen’t their reaction make you happy.


6 posted on 07/04/2007 4:31:24 PM PDT by new yorker 77 (Speaker Pelosi - Three cheers for Amnesty!)
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To: tobyhill

Who the heck is Ron Fournier ? And why should I care ?


7 posted on 07/04/2007 4:31:37 PM PDT by junkman72 (just another day at the junkyard)
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To: tobyhill

MSNBC and it’s retarded posterboy Olbermann are so irrelevant.


8 posted on 07/04/2007 4:31:52 PM PDT by stm (Fred Thompson in 08! Return our country to the era of Reagan Conservatism)
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To: tobyhill

While I have no great love for George W Bush or his Admin. I hate Democraps and their buddies in the MSM,so it gives me great pleasure to know that commuting Libby’s sentence is driving them NUTS !!!


9 posted on 07/04/2007 4:33:18 PM PDT by Obie Wan (If)
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To: new yorker 77

I love the reaction because it’s really showing the fairness of the neutral media. /s


10 posted on 07/04/2007 4:38:24 PM PDT by tobyhill (only wimps believe in retreat in defeat)
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To: new yorker 77

I love it when liberals cry!


11 posted on 07/04/2007 4:42:13 PM PDT by 1035rep
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To: tobyhill

At least this article toasted Hillary. I can’t even believe she had the nerve to make a statement.


12 posted on 07/04/2007 4:43:39 PM PDT by Always Right
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To: tobyhill

13 posted on 07/04/2007 4:45:00 PM PDT by Man50D (Fair Tax, you earn it, you keep it!)
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To: tobyhill

this is funny, they slam GWB for years going out of their way to attack him, and now the MSM is trying to assert some sort of (snicker) Morla Outrage over Libby’s commutation,

Boo-hoo, they aren’t going to like GWB anyway, so who cares what the MSM has to say about him?


14 posted on 07/04/2007 4:47:34 PM PDT by padre35 (Quod autem isti dicunt non interponendi vos bello)
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To: Always Right
She left them no choice because she just couldn’t stop herself from demonstrating her hypocrisy. Had she kept her mouth shut they wouldn’t have touched her.
15 posted on 07/04/2007 4:47:40 PM PDT by tobyhill (only wimps believe in retreat in defeat)
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To: tobyhill
The hypocrisy is unpardonable

Compared to what the MSM said when clinton did it for money or for terrorists....yep.

16 posted on 07/04/2007 4:54:28 PM PDT by icwhatudo (The rino borg...is resistance futile?)
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To: All
You know the media is working for the Democrats when they repeat the lies in a supposed “Analysis” piece.

“Bush vowed at the start of the investigation to fire anybody involved in the leak of a CIA agent’s identity,”

Hey Ron Fournier, Libby didn’t “leak” any name.

17 posted on 07/04/2007 4:54:44 PM PDT by tobyhill (only wimps believe in retreat in defeat)
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To: icwhatudo
It was pardonable when Bill Clinton did it over 700 times throughout his presidency. The Dallas Morning News did a hit piece this morning claiming President Bush just released all criminals convicted of obstruction and lying and they didn’t even mark it opinion or analysis.
18 posted on 07/04/2007 5:00:23 PM PDT by tobyhill (only wimps believe in retreat in defeat)
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To: tobyhill

Well Ron, your journalism shows the worst in this story.


19 posted on 07/04/2007 5:00:36 PM PDT by Parley Baer
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To: tobyhill

What about our ex BJ president, bent Willie klintoon????????


20 posted on 07/04/2007 5:07:24 PM PDT by chiefqc
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