Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald, widely admired by Chicago prosecutors for his creative genius in locating new ways to charge people with crimes, said words to this effect: "These are not charges that Mr. Libby outed a covert CIA agent." He is not, apparently, a stupid man, for that charge would have required eventual proof of a violation of the 1982 Identities Act, which obviously has not taken place. (More about that, below.) Then to justify this indictment he referred to a statute in the U.S. Code which upon investigation proves his reputation for creativity since it relates to (can you believe...