United States of America v.
I. Lewis Libby, also known as
"Scooter Libby" (Case No. 1:2005-cr-00394-RBW) is the
federal trial of
I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, a former high-ranking official in the
George W. Bush administration.
Libby served as
Assistant to
the President under
George W.
Bush and
Chief
of Staff to the Vice President of the United States and
Assistant to the Vice President for National Security Affairs under
Dick Cheney from 2001–2005. Libby
resigned from his government positions hours after his indictment
on October 28, 2005.
Libby was indicted by a federal
grand
jury on five
felony counts of
making false statements to federal
investigators, perjury for lying to a federal grand jury, and
obstruction of justice for
impeding the course of a
federal grand jury
investigation concerned with the possibly-illegal leaking by
government officials of the classified identity of a
covert agent of the
CIA,
Valerie Plame Wilson, the wife of
former Ambassador
Joseph C.
Wilson IV. Pursuant to the grand
jury leak investigation, Libby was convicted on March 6, 2007, on
four counts of perjury, obstruction of justice, and making false
statements. He was
acquitted of one count
of making false statements.
Libby was sentenced to 30 months in prison and
fined $250,000. The sentence was
commuted in June 2007 by President Bush, voiding
the prison term. The convictions still stand on the record.
Events leading up to the trial
The Plame affair
The
so-called Plame affair ensued after the
identity of Valerie Plame was leaked to journalists, which took
place after her husband Joseph Wilson criticized the Bush
administration's rationale
for the Iraq War on July 6, 2003 by publicly stating that he
had found no evidence for the claim that Saddam Hussein's regime
had attempted to buy yellowcake uranium in Niger
(a claim
that first emerged due to the Niger uranium forgeries) in a
New York Times op-ed
entitled "What I Didn't Find in Africa".
Wilson had been sent on a fact-finding mission to Niger but had
found no evidence for the claim that Iraq had been attempting to
buy yellowcake uranium in Africa, as part of an active
weapons of mass destruction
program. Nonetheless, this claim was repeated by president Bush
during the
Iraq disarmament
crisis that preceded the Iraq War. President Bush's
controversial "
16 words" in his
2003
State of the Union
Address alluded to the Niger claim:"The British government has
learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities
of uranium from Africa." Bush's claim was apparently based on the
forged uranium documents.
On March 7, 2003, 11 days before the United
States-led coalition invasion of
Iraq, the International Atomic Energy
Agency
(IAEA) released its report determining that
documents indirectly cited by
President Bush as suggesting that Iraq had tried to buy 500 tons of
uranium from Niger were actually "obvious" forgeries.
On July 14, 2003, a newspaper column commenting on Wilson's claims
written by
Robert Novak, entitled
"Mission to Niger", disclosed Plame's name and status as an
"operative" who worked in a CIA division on the proliferation of
weapons of mass
destruction. Wilson, her husband, stated in various interviews
and subsequent writings (as listed in his 2004 memoir
The
Politics of Truth) that his wife's identity was covert and
that members of the administration knowingly revealed it as
retribution for his op-ed entitled "What I Didn't Find in Africa",
published in
The New York Times on July 6, 2003. Some
argue that his wife's employment at the CIA was no longer
classified: Victoria Toensing, who helped craft the Intelligence
Identities Protection Act, claims in her
Washington Post
opinion piece "
The Plame Game: Was This a Crime?" that since Valerie
Plame had not held a foreign post for over five years, she no
longer qualified for covert status.
On
September 26, 2003, at the request of the CIA, the Department of
Justice
and the FBI began a criminal investigation into the
possible unauthorized disclosure of classified information
regarding Valerie Wilson’s CIA affiliation to various reporters in
the spring of 2003. During this ongoing federal inquiry
"into the alleged unauthorized disclosure of a CIA employee's
identity," a possible violation of criminal statutes, including the
Intelligence
Identities Protection Act of 1982, and Title 18,
United States Code, Section 793, Libby
testified to FBI agents and to the grand jury.
Libby was charged with lying to FBI agents and to the grand jury
about two conversations with reporters,
Tim
Russert of
NBC News and
Matthew Cooper of
Time magazine. According to
the Indictment, the obstruction of justice count alleges that while
testifying under oath before the grand jury on March 5 and March
24, 2004, Libby knowingly and corruptly endeavored to influence,
obstruct and impede the grand jury’s investigation by misleading
and deceiving the grand jury as to when, and the manner and means
by which, he acquired, and subsequently disclosed to the media,
information concerning the employment of Valerie Wilson by the
CIA.
CIA grand jury investigation
On December 30, 2003,
Patrick J.
Fitzgerald was named
Special
Counsel by
Deputy Attorney
General James B. Comey and charged with conducting the
investigation into the Plame affair. Fitzgerald was granted the
full
plenary power of the Attorney
General in the Libby case, as clarified by Comey in letters of
February 6, 2004, and August 12, 2005.
On October 28, 2005, after twenty-two months of the investigation,
Special Counsel Fitzgerald
indicted Libby
in the
United
States District Court for the District of Columbia. On November
3, 2005, Libby appeared at his
arraignment before Judge Reggie B. Walton and
pled not guilty.
The text of the filed indictment includes: one count of
obstruction of justice (Title 18,
United States Code, section 1503) for impeding the grand jury's
investigation; two counts of
perjury (18 USC
§1623) for lying under oath before the grand jury on March 5 and
March 24, 2005; and two counts of making false statements (18 USC
§1001(a)(2)) and in connection with for making "materially false
and intentionally misleading statements" to FBI agents who
interviewed him on October 14 and November 26, 2004.
David Corn speculated that Libby is using
Graymail as a defense tactic, based on the
large amount of classified material that has been requested by his
defense and the addition of the graymail expert John D. Cline to
his defense team.
On February 3, 2006, Walton set a trial date of January 8,
2007.
On February 3, 2006, the defense
subpoenaed
The New York Times, its former reporter
Judith Miller, who had been jail
for 85 days after refusing to tell the grand jury about
conversations she had with Libby,
Time magazine and its
reporter Matthew Cooper, and Tim Russert of NBC News for documents
related to the Plame affair. According to Pete Yost of the
Associated Press, the subpoenaed reporters
and organizations would have until April 7 to turn over the
material or challenge the subpoenas:
The subpoena to Miller seeks her notes and other
materials, including documents concerning Plame prepared by Miller
and Times columnist Nicholas D.
Kristof.
Kristof wrote the first account of the criticism that Plame's
husband was leveling at the Bush administration.
Referring to Plame's husband, though not by name, a May 6, 2003,
Times column by Kristof raised the possibility the Bush
administration might have disregarded prewar intelligence
suggesting Iraq did
not have weapons of mass destruction.
Three weeks after Kristof's column appeared, Libby started making
inquiries at the State Department
about the unnamed envoy in Kristof's column,
according to the indictment.
The subpoena to the Times also calls for:
—
Documents of contacts between any Times employee and any of eight
people, including then-
CIA Director
George Tenet and then-
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, regarding Joe Wilson.
—Documents concerning a recent
Vanity Fair article in which
Miller said she talked to many people in the government about
Plame.
—Drafts of a personal account by Miller, published in the Times,
about her grand jury testimony.
—Documents regarding Miller's interactions with a Times editor in
which Miller may have been told to pursue a story about Joe Wilson
and a trip he made to Niger on behalf of the CIA.
On February 9, 2006,
Murray Waas
reported in
The National Journal that Libby had testified
to the grand jury that he had been authorized by his superiors to
disclose classified information regarding intelligence estimates of
Iraq's weapons programs. Waas identified Vice President Cheney as
one such superior on the basis of unpublished statements of lawyers
with knowledge of the situation and documents that Waas says were
filed with the court.
On February 23, 2006, Libby's attorneys filed a motion to dismiss
the indictment against him. According to Toni Locy, reporting for
the Associated Press, "The defense attorneys ... said Fitzgerald's
appointment violated federal law because his investigation was not
supervised by the attorney general." Libby's attorneys argued that
only the
U.S. Congress can approve such an
arrangement," and that the appointment of Fitzgerald as Special
Counsel by then-United States Deputy Attorney General James B.
Comey, himself acting as Attorney General in Ashcroft's place,
violated the Appointments Clause (
United States Constitution,
Article II § 2).
On April 5, 2006, court filings distributed widely in the press and
news media the next day, revealed that Libby had testified during
the grand jury investigation about information that Vice President
Cheney and President Bush had authorized disclosing; reportedly,
the original intent of the filing was to restrict Libby's access to
further classified information in defense
discovery.
A court filing by Libby's defense team argued that Valerie Plame
was not foremost on the minds of administration officials as they
sought to rebut charges made by her husband, Joseph Wilson, that
the White House manipulated intelligence to make a case for
invasion. The filing indicates that Libby's lawyers don't intend to
say he was told to reveal Plame's identity.
On May 24, 2006, Fitzgerald filed a response to a motion by Libby's
lawyers, offering summaries of Libby's grand jury testimony and
excerpts from Libby's testimony of March 5, 2004 and March 24,
2004.
On September 22, 2006, according to Matt Apuzzo for the Associated
Press, Libby's attorney's reported that "Libby Plans to Testify in
CIA Leak Trial" United States v. Libby in his own defense.
Overview of the trial and the presidential commutation
The trial in the case of the
United States of America v.
I. Lewis Libby began on January 16, 2007.On March
6, Libby was convicted of four out of the five counts against him.
He was found guilty of two counts of perjury in testimony before a
federal grand jury, one count of obstruction of justice in a
federal grand jury investigation, and one of two counts of making
false statements to federal investigators. He was acquitted on the
second count of making false statements (indictment count
three).
The jury rendered its verdict at noon on March 6, 2007. It
convicted Libby on four of the five counts against him—two counts
of perjury, one count of obstructing justice in a grand jury
investigation, and one of the two counts of making false statements
to federal investigators—and acquitted him on one count of making
false statements.
Initially, Libby's lawyers announced that they would be seeking a
new trial but that, if they were not to get one, they would appeal
Libby's conviction. Later they decided not to seek a new trial, but
they still plan to appeal Libby's conviction. On June 5, 2007,
Judge
Reggie Walton sentenced Libby to
30 months in federal prison, a fine of
$250,000, and two years of supervised
release, including 400 hours of community service. Libby appealed
Judge Reggie Walton's subsequent order that he report to prison
pending the appeal of his conviction. Two weeks later he lost that
appeal.
President Bush commuted Libby's sentence on July 2, 2007,
eliminating the prison term while not changing the other parts and
their conditions. Judge Walton queried aspects of that presidential
commutation.
Sentencing of Libby
Given current federal sentencing guidelines, which are not
mandatory, if he had been convicted on all five counts, Libby's
sentence could have ranged from no imprisonment to imprisonment of
up to 25 years and a fine of $US1,000,000. Given those non-binding
guidelines, according to lawyer, author,
New Yorker staff writer, and CNN
senior legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin on
Anderson Cooper
360°, the sentence based on Libby's conviction on four counts
could have been between "one and a half to three years."
The United States Government was seeking a 30 to 37-month sentence
according to the sentencing guidelines memorandum filed in court by
prosecutor Fitzgerald.Jeralyn Merritt,
"Scooter Libby: Gov't Seeks 30 to 37 Month Sentence",
TalkLeft (accredited press blog), May 25, 2007, accessed
May 26, 2007. (Provides link to 18-page sentencing memorandum.);
cf. Jeralyn Merritt,
"Libby: Government Files Sentencing Guideline
Calculations",
TalkLeft (accredited press blog), May
26, 2007, accessed May 26, 2007. On June 5, 2007, Libby was
sentenced to thirty months in prison and fined $250,000. According
to Apuzzo and Yost, the judge also "placed him on two years
probation [supervised release] after his prison sentence expires.
There is no parole in the federal system, but Libby would be
eligible for [supervised] release after two years."
Libby ordered to jail pending appeal
According the CNN News, "After the June 5 sentencing, [Judge]
Walton said he was inclined to jail Libby after the defense laid
out its proposed appeal, but the judge told attorneys he was open
to changing his mind"; however, on June 14, 2007, Judge Walton
"ordered" Libby "to report to prison while his attorneys appeal his
perjury and obstruction." Although "Libby's attorneys asked that
the order be stayed ... U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton
denied the request and told Vice President Dick Cheney's former
chief of staff that he has 10 days to appeal the ruling"; in
denying Libby's request, which had questioned Special Counsel
Patrick Fitzgerald's "authority
to charge Libby," as quoted by CNN, Judge Walton said: "'Everyone
is accountable, and if you work in the White House, and if it's
perceived that somehow (you're) linked at the hip, the American
public would have serious questions about the fairness of any
investigation of a high-level official conducted by the attorney
general,'" supporting Fitzgerald's authority in the case. The judge
was also responding to an
Amicus
curiae brief that he had permitted to be filed, which had not
apparently convinced him to change his mind, as he subsequently
denied Libby bail during his appeal. Prior to Judge Walton's order,
Josh Gerstein stated, in
The New York Sun, "Bail remains a
critical question for Libby. Judge Walton has indicated he is not
inclined to grant it. Many political observers believe that if
Libby gets bail and his appeals fail, he stands a better chance of
receiving a presidential pardon because President Bush's term will
be nearing its end. Technically, the scholars took no position on
the question of bail, but if Judge Walton agreed with them [i.e.,
their arguments], bail would be highly likely." Though "Judge
Walton granted the scholars permission to file their brief,"
Gerstein reports, "his order doing so contained a caustic footnote
questioning the motivation of the legal academics and suggesting he
might not give a great deal of weight to their opinion[:]
"It is an impressive show of public service when twelve
prominent and distinguished current and former law professors are
able to amass their collective wisdom in the course of only several
days to provide their legal expertise to the court on behalf of a
criminal defendant," the judge wrote.
"The Court trusts that this is a reflection of these
eminent academics' willingness in the future to step to the plate
and provide like assistance in cases involving any of the numerous
litigants, both in this Court and throughout the courts of this
nation, who lack the financial means to fully and properly
articulate the merits of their legal positions even in instances
where failure to do so could result in monetary penalties,
incarceration, or worse.
The Court will certainly not hesitate to call for such
assistance from these luminaries, as necessary in the interests of
justice and equity, whenever similar questions arise in the cases
that come before it."
Noting that "Libby is the first sitting White House official to be
indicted in 130 years," CNN News also reported that "At the
beginning of Thursday's [June 5, 2007] hearing, Walton told the
court that he had received 'harassing' and 'hateful' messages[:]
'In the interest of full disclosure, I have received a number of
harassing, angry and mean-spirited phone calls and messages. Some
wishing bad things on me and my family," the judge said. 'Those
types of things will have no impact. ... I initially threw them
away, but then there were more, some that were more hateful,'
Walton said. 'They are being kept.'"
Jeffrey Toobin, CNN's senior legal
analyst, "called the ruling 'a very dramatic and, to me, surprising
decision,'" since, he pointed out, "'Many white collar defendants
get bail pending appeal,' ... citing
Martha Stewart and some
insider traders as examples" and concluding:
"'Judge Walton has had it with Scooter Libby,' who, Toobin said,
also got a stiff sentence for his crimes in the first place. 'This
is going to put President Bush in a very difficult position
regarding the question of a pardon.'"
New York Times reporter Neil Lewis estimated subsequently that
Libby's prison sentence could begin within "two months," explaining
that
Judge Walton’s decision means that the defense lawyers
will probably ask a federal appeals court to block the sentence, a
long-shot move.
It also sharpens interest in a question being asked by
Mr. Libby’s supporters and critics alike: Will President Bush
pardon Mr. Libby?
...
So far, the president has expressed sympathy for Mr.
Libby and his family but has not tipped his hand on the pardon
issue.
...
If the president does not pardon him, and if an appeals
court refuses to second-guess Judge Walton’s decision, Mr. Libby
will probably be ordered to report to prison in six to eight weeks’
time.
Federal prison authorities will decide
where.
"Unless the Court of Appeals overturns my ruling, he
will have to report," Judge Walton said.
On June 20, 2007, Libby appealed Walton's ruling in federal appeals
court. The next day, Judge Walton filed a 30-page expanded ruling,
in which he explained his decision to deny Libby bail in more
detail.
On July 2, 2007, according to Cary O'Reilly (
Bloomberg
News) and other news media, "the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit ... [unanimously] denied his request for release. The
decision will increase pressure on President George W. Bush to
decide soon whether to pardon Libby, 56, as the former White House
official's supporters have urged."
Presidential pardon and clemency issues
Soon after the verdict, calls for Libby to be
pardoned by President George W. Bush began to appear
in some newspapers; some of them are posted online by the Libby
Legal Defense Trust. U.S. Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid issued a press release about the
verdict, urging President Bush to pledge not to pardon Libby, and
other Democratic politicians followed his lead.
Surveying "the pardon battle" and citing both pro and con
publications,
The Washington Post online columnist
Dan Froomkin concludes that many U.S.
newspapers opposed a presidential pardon for Libby. In an op-ed
published in the
The Washington Post, former federal
prosecutor William Otis argues that the sentence is too stringent
and that, instead of pardoning Libby, President Bush should commute
his sentence.
After the sentencing, President Bush stated on camera: "... [I]
will not intervene until Libby's legal team has exhausted all of
its avenues of appeal ... It wouldn't be appropriate for me to
discuss the case until after the legal remedies have run its
course."
Presidential commutation of Libby's prison sentence
After denial of Libby's bond by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit, President Bush commuted the prison term portion of
Libby's sentence on July 2, 2007, leaving in place the felony
conviction, the $250,000 fine, and the terms of probation
(supervised release).
The President's commutation statement states (in part):
Mr. Libby was sentenced to thirty months of prison, two
years of probation, and a $250,000 fine.
In making the sentencing decision, the district court
rejected the advice of the probation office, which recommended a
lesser sentence and the consideration of factors that could have
led to a sentence of home confinement or probation.
I respect the jury’s verdict.
But I have concluded that the prison sentence given to
Mr. Libby is excessive.
Therefore, I am commuting the portion of Mr. Libby’s
sentence that required him to spend thirty months in
prison.
My decision to commute his prison sentence leaves in
place a harsh punishment for Mr. Libby.
When
Keith Olbermann interviewed
former Ambassador
Joseph C.
Wilson, the husband of Valerie
Plame, on the MSNBC television program
Countdown with Keith
Olbermann on the night of July 2, 2007, Joe Wilson
expressed his and others' outrage:
There is nothing this administration does that shocks
me anymore - it is corrupt from top to bottom.
... American citizens were outraged that the president of the
United States would short circuit the rule of law and the system of
justice.
... We know in America the difference between right and wrong, even
if this administration doesn't.
Wilson also complained (as he has done before) that the President's
action and others' actions leading to Bush's commutation of Libby's
sentence could seriously damage United States national security by
harming its intelligence capability - "for the CIA, its covert
officers, and for the agents that are recruited by officers, those
who would put their lives at risk in order to obtain the
intelligence we need will think long and hard about it when they
see that the administration with impunity will betray its covert
officers, will engage in treason."
On the following evening, in his "Special Comment," Olbermann
called for both President Bush and Vice-President Cheney to
resign.
Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald objected to President Bush's
characterizing Libby's sentence as "excessive," stating:
We fully recognize that the Constitution provides that
commutation decisions are a matter of presidential prerogative and
we do not comment on the exercise of that prerogative.
We comment only on the statement in which the President
termed the sentence imposed by the judge as
"excessive."
The sentence in this case was imposed pursuant to the
laws governing sentencings which occur every day throughout this
country.
In this case, an experienced federal judge considered
extensive argument from the parties and then imposed a sentence
consistent with the applicable laws.
It is fundamental to the rule of law that all citizens
stand before the bar of justice as equals.
That principle guided the judge during both the trial
and the sentencing.
The day after the commuting of Libby's sentence, James Rowley
(Bloomberg News) reported that President Bush has not ruled out
pardoning Libby in the future and that Bush's press spokesman,
Tony Snow, denied any political motivation
in the commutation. Quoting Snow, Rowley added: "'The president is
getting pounded on
the right
because he didn't do a full pardon.' If Bush were 'doing the
weather-vane thing' he 'would have done something
differently.'"
Nevertheless, that evening CNN reported that, pursuant to
widespread criticism by Democratic leaders and other
Democratic
politicians,
Representative
John Conyers, Jr. announced that there
would be a formal
Congressional investigation of
Bush's commutation of Libby's sentence and other presidential
reprieves. "The Use and Misuse of Presidential Clemency Power for
Executive Branch Officials", held by the
U.S. House Judiciary
Committee and chaired by Congressman Conyers, occurred on July
11, 2007.
Responses to verdict
Comment on the verdict by prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald
Speaking to the media outside the courtroom after the verdict,
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald said that "The jury worked very long
and hard and deliberated at length ... [and] was obviously
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had lied and
obstructed justice in a serious manner. ... 'I do not expect to
file any further charges,' Fitzgerald said. 'We're all going back
to our day jobs.'" As "the trial confirmed [that the leak] came
first from then-Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage," and since
Fitzgerald did not charge Armitage and expects to charge no one
else, Libby's conviction "closed ... the nearly-four year
investigation into how the name of Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame,
and her classified job at the CIA were leaked to reporters in 2003
just days after Wilson publicly accused the administration of
doctoring prewar intelligence."
During his October 28, 2005 press conference about the grand jury's
indictment of Libby, Fitzgerald had already explained that Libby's
obstruction of justice through perjury and false statements had
"prevented him [Fitzgerald] -- and the grand jury -- from
determining whether the alleged leak violated federal law," due to
Libby's obscuring the facts of his own discussions about the
then-still-classified covert CIA identity of Valerie Plame (what he
had said to whom, when, where, and why).
During his media appearance outside the courtroom after the verdict
in the Libby case, Fitzgerald fielded questions from the press
about others involved in the Plame affair and in the CIA leak grand
jury investigation, such as Richard Armitage and Vice President
Dick Cheney, whom he had already described as "under a cloud"
caused by Libby's obstruction of justice, as already addressed in
his conduct of the case and in his closing arguments in
court.
Comment on the verdict by Libby's defense team
After the verdict, initially, Libby's lawyers announced that he
would seek a new trial, and that, if that attempt were to fail,
they would
appeal Libby's conviction. "'We
have every confidence Mr. Libby ultimately will be vindicated,'
defense attorney
Ted Wells told reporters.
He said that Libby was 'totally innocent and that he did not do
anything wrong.' Libby did not speak to reporters." His lawyers
took no questions.
Although later Libby's defense team decided against seeking a new
trial, his supporters continued to speak of appealing the verdict
prior to sentencing.
Comment on the verdict by juror Denis Collins
As reported in
CNN Newsroom, and subsequently on
Larry King Live on CNN and
by various other television networks, including MSNBC (on
Scarborough Country),
one juror––"
Denis Collins, a
Washington resident and self-described registered Democrat," who is
a former reporter for
The Washington Post and author of a
book on espionage––"said he and fellow jurors found that passing
judgment on Libby was 'unpleasant.' But in the final analysis, he
said jurors found Libby's story just too hard to believe.... 'We're
not saying we didn't think Mr. Libby was guilty of the things we
found him guilty of, but it seemed like ... he was the fall
guy'.... Collins said the jury believed Libby was 'tasked by the
vice president to go and talk to reporters.'" Collins offers a
day-by-day account of his experience as Juror #9 at the Libby trial
in an "Exclusive" at
The
Huffington Post.
Responses to commutation
President Bush's commutation of Libby's prison sentence became the
subject of a hearing on "The Use and Misuse of Presidential
Clemency Power for Executive Branch Officials" held by the
U.S. House Judiciary
Committee, chaired by Representative
John Conyers, Jr., on July 11, 2007.
Speculation about possible witnesses prior to the start of the
trial
In May 2006, the Associated Press had reported that Patrick
Fitzgerald was considering calling Vice President Cheney as a
witness for the prosecution. In December 2006, at a pretrial
hearing, defense lawyer
Ted Wells
reportedly said: "'We're calling the vice president.'" If that had
occurred, it would have marked the first time that a sitting Vice
President was called to testify in a criminal trial.
On December 19, 2006, news organizations reported that Vice
President Dick Cheney would be called to testify as a witness for
the defense and that "former New York Times reporter
Judith Miller and NBC News
Washington bureau chief
Tim Russert were
expected to be prosecution witnesses" during Libby's trial, to
begin in January 2007.
Ultimately, Vice President Cheney was not called as a witness in
the trial.
In a January 2007 interview with
Wolf
Blitzer, Cheney commented on the ongoing trial: "Now, Wolf, you
knew when we set up the interview you can ask all the questions you
want, I'm going to be a witness in that trial within a matter of
weeks, I'm not going to discuss it. I haven't discussed with
anybody in the press yet, I'm not going to discuss it with you
today."
Press coverage of the trial
Blogs have played a prominent role in the
press coverage of this trial. Scott Shane, in his article "For
Liberal Bloggers, Libby Trial Is Fun and Fodder," published in
The New York Times on February 15, 2007, quotes
Robert Cox, president of the
Media Bloggers Association, who
observes that United States of America v. I. Lewis Libby is "the
first federal case for which independent bloggers have been given
official credentials along with reporters from the traditional news
media."Scott Shane,
"For Liberal Bloggers, Libby Trial Is Fun and
Fodder",
The New York Times February 15, 2007
[appended correction].
On January 3, 2007, the first team of bloggers to announce that
they had been granted press credentials was
Firedoglake, a progressive blog founded by
Jane Hamsher. Less than a week later,
on January 9, the Media Bloggers Association announced that several
of its affiliated bloggers had been granted press credentials
too.
Among those representing the traditional press and mainstream media
reporter
David Shuster began live
blogging the trial for MSNBC on
Hardblogger, an online feature linked at
Hardball with Chris
Matthews, as well as reporting on camera in segments of
various MSNBC News programs. A transcript of Schuster's broadcast
report on the first day of the trial, during which Schuster says
that the prosecution summarized evidence to support its allegations
that Vice President Dick Cheney was involved in Libby's actions
relating to the Plame affair, is posted on several of these news
blogs.
Some controversy arose among various bloggers about who is
primarily responsible for acquiring Libby trial press credentials,
with numerous mainstream-media accounts, including
The
Washington Post, giving Cox and his Media Bloggers Association
credit:
...for the first time in a federal court, two of these
seats [in the actual courtroom] will be reserved for
bloggers.
After two years of negotiations with judicial officials
across the country, the Media Bloggers Association, a nonpartisan
group with about 1,000 members working to extend the powers of the
press to bloggers, has won credentials to rotate among his
members.
The trial of I.
Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the highest-ranking Bush
administration official to face criminal charges, could "catalyze"
the association's efforts to win respect and access for bloggers in
federal and state courthouses, said Robert Cox, the association's
president.
Robert Cox is trying to foster standards. His Media Bloggers
Association won court credentials for bloggers....
Bloggers from
Firedoglake disputed some of these
statements. Scott Shane's article in
The New York Times
contains the following "appended correction":
[The] front-page article on Thursday about bloggers
covering the perjury trial of I.
Lewis Libby Jr. referred imprecisely to the role of
Robert A.
Cox, president of the Media Bloggers Association, in
securing credentials.
Mr. Cox negotiated access for his association, which
was the first blogger group to be granted credentials to cover the
trial.
He did not negotiate on behalf of firedoglake.com and
other blogs that received their credentials later.
Shane concludes: "With no audio or video feed permitted, the
Firedoglake 'live blog' has offered the fullest, fastest public
report available. Many mainstream journalists use it to check on
the trial."
On February 7, 2007, during the examination of journalist
Tim Russert, as covered on MSNBC, video clips of
Libby's Grand Jury testimony were played; Russert's current
testimony contradicts key parts of Libby's previous testimony, in
that on the stand Russert denied that he told (or even could have
told) Libby about Mrs. Wilson's working for the CIA, as Libby has
claimed.
On February 13, as the defense was beginning to present its case,
however, defense lawyers told the court that neither Cheney nor
Libby would be taking the stand. In addition to their blogging,
Jane Hamsher, Marcy Wheeler and Jeralyn Merritt also appeared on
camera via
PoliticsTV.com at the end of most days to sum
up that day's legal proceedings directly observed in the courtroom,
providing links to these video programs in their online accounts.
For example, they appeared on camera to present their views of
February 14, the day the defense rested, and did a similar roundup
at the end of the trial, covering the closing arguments for the
prosecution and the defense.
Beginning on February 26, the media reported that one of the twelve
jurors had been "dismissed" because she "was exposed to information
about the trial...but the judge allowed the jury to continue
deliberations with 11 members."
YearlyKos, a political convention for American
liberal political activists, organized by readers
and writers of Daily Kos, an
influential American political blog, which took place in Chicago
from August
2 through August 5, 2007, hosted a panel discussion, on August 2,
by Christy Hardin Smith of Firedoglake, Jeralyn Merritt
(TalkLeft), and Marcy Wheeler (The Next Hurrah)
on their experiences of "live-blogging" the Libby trial, moderated
by Merritt; the panel also included Sheldon L. Snook, Chief
of Staff to the
Chief Judge of the
United
States District Court for the District of Columbia, who was
"the court official in charge of news media at the Libby
trial."
Book on the case
An "instant book" on USA v. LIBBY, entitled
The United States
v. I.
Lewis
Libby ("Edited with Reporting by
Murray Waas" with research assistance by Jeff
Lomonaco), was published by
Sterling
Publishing's Union Square Press imprint on June 5, 2007.
Raphael Schweber-Koren (R.S.K.), of Media Matters for America,
draws upon Waas's book in pointing out fallacies and other errors
in the arguments calling for overturning Libby's conviction,
reducing his sentence, or pardoning him.
See also
Notes
- Joseph C. Wilson IV, "What I Didn't Find in Africa," New York
Times, July 6, 2003, accessed September 17, 2006.
- "President Delivers "State of the Union: The U.S.
Capitol", press release, The White House, January 28, 2003,
accessed July 23, 2007. (Full transcript of the speech.)
- "16 Words", CNN.com, March 7, 2003, accessed July 23,
2007.
- "Transcript of El Baradei's U.N. Presentation",
CNN, March 7, 2003, accessed July 28, 2007.
- Joseph
C. Wilson 4th, "What I Didn't Find in Africa", The New
York Times, July 6, 2003, accessed June 10, 2007.
- James B. Comey, (letter to Patrick J. Fitzgerald), December 30,
2003, accessed March 18, 2006.
- James B. Comey, to Patrick J. Fitzgerald, February 6, 2004,
accessed July 17, 2007.
- James B. Comey, (letters to Patrick J. Fitzgerald, related
memoranda, and transcripts), December 30, 2003 to March 17, 2006,
accessed July 17, 2007.
- , United States of America v. I. Lewis Libby, United
States District Court for the District of Columbia, October 28,
2005, accessed February 10, 2007.
- David Corn, [1], Capital Games (blog), The Nation.
- Murray Waas,
"Administration: Cheney 'Authorized' Libby to Leak
Classified Information", The National
Journal, February 9, 2006, accessed March 13, 2006.
- John King, "Ex-Cheney Aide Gets Trial Date: Libby Faces
Charges Stemming from Leak of CIA Operative's Name", CNN,
February 3, 2006, accessed February 26, 2007.
- Pete Yost (Associated Press), "Libby Lawyers Subpoena Times, Other News
Organizations", Newsday, March 16, 2006. [Outdated URL].
- Toni Locy (Associated Press), "Ex-White House Aide Seeks Dismissal of Charges in
Leak Case", boston.com, February 24, 2006,
accessed July 17, 2007.
- , United States of America v. I. Lewis Libby, No.
05-314, United
States District Court for the District of Columbia February 23,
2006, accessed March 17, 2006.
- Cf. "Libby's Guilty Verdict: Media Myths and Falsehoods
to Watch for", Media Matters for
America, March 6, 2007, accessed June 8, 2007.
- "Allegation: Cheney Told 'Scooter' Libby That Bush
Authorized Iraq Intelligence Leak, U.S. v. I. Lewis ‘Scooter’
Libby", FindLaw.com, April 5, 2006, accessed April 26,
2007.
- National News, New York Post, April
13, 2006, accessed April 26, 2007. [Outdated link.]
- Patrick J. Fitzgerald, , United States Department of
Justice (Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW Document 110 Filed
05/24/2006), June 5, 2004, rpt. by JustOneMinute (blog), accessed March
13, 2007 (10 pages).
- Page 2 of , (Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW Document 110 Filed
05/24/2006), rpt. by JustOneMinute (blog), accessed March
13, 2007.
- Matt Apuzzo, "Libby Plans to Testify in CIA Leak Trial",
The Washington Post, September 22, 2006, accessed April
28, 2007.
- Q&A: Lewis 'Scooter' Libby Trial.
- Introduction posted in Jeralyn Merritt, moderator, "Verdict in the Libby Trial", transcript,
The Washington Post ("Live Online" discussion) March 6,
2007, 2:00–3:00 p.m., ET.
- David Stout and Neil Lewis, "Libby Guilty of Lying in C.I.A. Leak Case",
The New York Times, March 6, 2007, accessed March 6]],
2007.
- Paul Courson, Brianna Keilar, Jeffrey Toobin, and Brian Todd, "Libby Found Guilty of Perjury, Obstruction",
CNN
Newsroom, March 6, 2007, accessed March 6, 2007.
- Michael J. Sniffen and Matt Apuzzo (Associated Press), "Libby Found Guilty in CIA Leak Trial: Ex-Cheney Aide
Libby Found Guilty of Obstruction, Perjury, Lying to the FBI in CIA
Leak Case", ABC
News, March 6, 2007, accessed June 10, 2007 (4
pages).
- "Libby Lawyer Demands New Trial After
Conviction", CNN Newsroom March 6, 2007, accessed
march 6, 2007.
- Mel Sembler,
"Message from
the Chairman", Libby Legal Defense
Trust, June 1, 2007, accessed June 7, 2007.
- Paul Courson, Brianna Keilar, Brian Todd, Jeffrey Toobin, and
the Associated Press, "Libby Sentenced to 30 months in Prison",
CNN, June 5, 2007, accessed June 5, 2007.
- Matt Apuzzo and Pete Yost (Associated Press), "Libby Sentenced to 2 1/2 Years in Prison",
The Boston Globe, June 5, 2007, accessed July 5,
2007.
- Cary O'Reilly, " Libby, Ex-Cheney Aide, Must Go to Jail During
Appeal (Update2)", Bloomberg.com, July 2, 2007, accessed
July 2, 2007. According to O'Reilly, "The appeals court case is
U.S. v. Libby, 07-3068, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit (Washington)."
- Cf. Matt Apuzzo (Associated Press), "Court to Libby: Go Directly to Jail",
The Globe and Mail, July 2, 2007,
accessed July 2, 2007. ["The U.S. Bureau of Prisons has not yet
assigned Mr. Libby a prison or given him a date to surrender, but
last week it designated him as federal inmate No. 28301-016."]
- See also the updated account in Matt Apuzzo, "Court Won't Delay Libby Prison Sentence",
Associated Press, July 2, 2007,, accessed July 2,
2007.
- Edwin Chen, "Bush Commutes Libby's Prison Term in CIA Leak Case
(Update 2)", Bloomberg News, July 2, 2007, accessed
July 2, 2007.
- [George W. Bush,
[http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2007/07/20070702-4.html
"Grant of Executive Clemency: A Proclamation by the President of
the United States of America"], The White House, July 2,
2007, accessed July 2, 2007.
- Neil Lewis and Jim Rutenberg, " "Libby Pays Fine; Judge Poses Probation Query",
The New York Times, July 6, 2007, accessed July 6,
2007.
- Anderson
Cooper, "Breaking News", Anderson
Cooper 360°, broadcast on CNN, July 3, 2007, 10 p.m.-12
a.m. EDT, accessed July 3, 2007.
- Anderson Cooper 360°, March 6, 2007, 10:00 p.m–12:00
a.m., ET, live; scheduled to be repeated on March 7, 2007,
1:00–3:00 a.m., ET.
- See qualification in Jeralyn Merritt, "Scooter Libby: 30 Months in Prison, $250k Fine",
TalkLeft (accredited press blog), June 5, 2007, accessed
June 5, 2007: "Note: CNN [in its television broadcasts and some
online reports] erroneously reported that Libby's sentence included
2 years probation. In fact, it was supervised release, which is
similar but different from probation, and replaced parole in the
federal system in 1987."
- "Judge Orders Libby Jailed during Appeal",
CNN News, June 14, 2007, accessed June 14, 2007.
- Cf. "Motion for Leave to File Brief As Amici Curiae and
Brief of Law Professors Vikram Amar, Randy E. Barnett, Robert H. Bork, Alan M. Dershowitz,
Viet D. Dinh,
Douglas W.
Kmiec, Gary S.
Lawson, Earl M.
Maltz, Thomas W. Merrill, Robert F. Nagel,
Richard
D. Parker, and Robert J. Pushaw As Amici Curiae in Connection
with Defendant's Motion for Bail Pending Appeal", filed June 8,
2007, online posting, Scooter Libby Defense Trust, June 7,
2007, accessed June 15, 2007.
- Cf. Josh Gerstein, "National: Professors Back Libby on Appeal:
Group Includes Dershowitz, Bork", The New York Sun, June
8, 2007, updated June 9, 2007, accessed June 15, 2007.
- Neil A. Lewis and David Stout, "Judge Won't Delay Libby Prison Term", The
New York Times, June 14, 2007, accessed June 16, 2007.
- Associated Press, "Libby Appeals Sentencing Ruling", New York
Times, June 20, 2007, accessed June 20, 2007.
- Josh Gerstein, "Libby Judge Files Expanded Opinion: Details Decision
Not Allowing Libby to Remain Free", New York Sun, June 22,
2007, accessed June 22, 2007.
- Libby Legal Defense Trust: In the News; the Libby
Legal Defense Trust also features a "Message from the Chairman",
former Ambassador Mel Sembler, and the Advisory Committee, June 1,
2007, accessed March 7, 2007.
- Harry Reid,
press release, democrats.senate.gov,
March 6, 2007, accessed April 5, 2007; cf. news account in "Democrats to Bush: Don't Pardon Libby", CNN
News March 7, 2007, accessed April 5, 2007.
- Dan Froomkin, "Many Newspapers Oppose Pardon",
White House Watch (column and blog),
The Washington Post, June 7, 2007, accessed June 7,
2007.
- William Otis, "Neither Prison Nor Pardon: Justice in the Libby
Case Lies With Bush's Third Option", The Washington
Post, June 7, 2007: A-27; online posting,
washingtonpost.com, June 7, 2007, accessed June 7,
2007.
- Jim Rutenberg, "Bush in Dilemma on Libby Pardon", International Herald
Tribune, June 7, 2007, accessed June 7, 2007.
- Keith Olbermann, interview of Joseph C. Wilson, Video
clip, YouTube, Countdown, MSNBC, July 2,
2007, accessed July 3, 2007.
- Keith Olbermann, "Olbermann:
Bush, Cheney Should Resign: 'I didn’t vote for him, but he’s my
president, and I hope he does a good job.’" Countdown with
Keith Olbermann, MSNBC, July 4, 2007, Special
Comment, accessed July 4, 2007.
- Patrick Fitzgerald, "Statement of the Special Counsel",
Office of Special Counsel, July 2,
2007, accessed July 3, 2007; see also "Statement of Special Counsel", Editor
& Publishe], mediainfo.com, July 3, 2003,
accessed July 3, 2007.
- James Rowley, "Bush Won't Rule Out Pardon for Libby as Aide
Defends Clemency", Bloomberg News, July 3, 2007,
accessed July 3, 2007.
- Anderson Cooper, "Breaking News", Anderson Cooper
360°', broadcast on CNN, July 3, 2007, 10 p.m.-12 a.m. EDT,
accessed July 3, 2007; cf. "Political Bulletin: Bush Bashed Over Libby
Commutation: Furious Democrats Will Hold Hearings",
US News and World Reports,
July 3, 2007, accessed July 3, 2007.
- "Jurors Convict Libby on Four of Five Charges:
Cheney’s Ex-aide Faces Jail Time in CIA Leak Case; Sentencing Set
for June", MSNBC, March 6, 2007, updated 9:18 p.m., ET,
accessed March 7, 2007.
- CNN video clip of Fitzgerald's remarks, March
6, 2007, accessed June 8, 2007. (Access limited to one viewing per
day.)
- Michael J. Sniffen and Matt Apuzzo (Associated Press), "Libby Found Guilty in CIA Leak Trial: Ex-Cheney Aide
Libby Found Guilty of Obstruction, Perjury, Lying to the FBI in CIA
Leak Case", ABC News, March 6, 2007, accessed June 10,
2007.
- "Libby's Guilty Verdict: Media Myths and Falsehoods to
Watch for", Media Matters for America, March 6, 2007,
accessed June 8, 2007.
- Transcript of Special Counsel Fitzgerald's press
conference, The Washington Post, October 28, 2005,
accessed June 8, 2007.
- Transcript and video clips presented on Hardball
with Chris Matthews, MSNBC, March 6, 2007, 7:00–8:00 p.m., ET;
repeated on March 7, 2007, 3:00–4:00 a.m., ET.
- "Libby Found Guilty of Perjury, Obstruction",
CNN Newsroom, March 6, 2007, accessed March 6, 2007.
- "Libby Lawyer Demands New Trial After
Conviction", CNN Newsroom, March 6, 2007, accessed
march 6, 2007.
- Ambassador Mel
Sembler, Chairman, Libby Defense Trust, and the Advisory
Committee, "Message from the Chairman", Libby Defense
Trust, scooterlibby.com, June 1, 2007, accessed June
5, 2007.
- Joe Strupp, "Former Colleagues at 'Wash Post' Discuss (Now
Famous) Libby Juror", Editor & Publisher,
March 6, 2007, 5:05 p.m., ET, accessed March 6, 2007. (Subscription
with archive required.)
- Denis
Collins, "Inside the Jury Room: Huffington Post Exclusive: What
the Jury Thought, Day by Day, Witness by Witness, at the Scooter
Libby Trial", The Huffington Post, March 7, 2007, accessed
March 7, 2007.
- "Political Bulletin: Bush Bashed Over Libby
Commutation: Furious Democrats Will Hold Hearings", US News
and World Reports, Washington News, July 3, 2007, accessed
July 3, 2007.
- "The Use and Misuse of Clemency Powers by Officials
of the Executive Branch", judiciary.house.gov,
July 11, 2007, accessed July 11, 2007.
- Julie Hirschfeld Davis (Associated Press), "Bush Refuses to Explain Libby Order", Fox
News, July 11, 2007, accessed July 11, 2007.
- Associated Press, "Special
Counsel: Cheney May Be Called to Testify", MSNBC May
26, 2006.
- Kevin Bohn, "Libby Trial Watchers Wonder What May Have
Been", CNN, February 22, 2007, accessed March 2,
2007.
- James Vicini (Reuters), "Cheney To Be Called to Testify in CIA Leak
Case", The Boston Globe, December 19, 2006, accessed
December 20, 2006.
- Matt Apuzzo (Associated Press), "Cheney to Be Defense Witness in CIA Case",
San Francisco Chronicle,
December 19, 2006, accessed December 20, 2006.
- Amy Goldstein and Carol D. Leonnig, "Libby Defense to Rest Without Testimony by Him or
Cheney", The Washington Post, February 14, 2007.
- Quoted from a transcript of "Interview of the Vice President by Wolf Blitzer,
CNN 'Situation Room'", originally broadcast on
The Situation Room January 24, 2007,
9:50 a.m., ET-10:12 a.m., ET), press release, online posting by The
Office of the Vice President, The White House, January 24,
2007, News & Policies.
- The Scooter Libby Trial, Media
Bloggers Association, February 20, 2007–28 June, 2007 (updated
periodically), accessed June 30, 2007.
- Christy Hardin Smith, "Guess Who Is Going To DC?"
Firedoglake (accredited press blog) January 3, 2007,
accessed February 15, 2007.
- Robert Cox, "Federal Court Credentials Bloggers", Media
Bloggers Association, January 9, 2007, accessed February 15,
2007.
- David
Shuster, "Prosecutors Introduce First Evidence at Libby Trial",
Hardblogger (accredited press blog), MSNBC,
January 23, 2007, accessed January 24, 2007.
- Jeralyn
Merritt, "The Scooter Libby Headline for Day One",
TalkLeft (accredited press blog), January 23, 2007,
accessed January 24, 2007
- Alan Sipress, "Too Casual To Sit on Press Row? Bloggers'
Credentials Boosted With Seats at the Libby Trial", The
Washington Post, January 11, 2007, accessed January 25, 25,
2007 (registration required).
- "About Those Jury Instructions",
Firedoglake (accredited press blog) February 15, 2007,
accessed February 15, 2007.
- Cf. Marcy
Wheeler, "On Bringing Me into the Feed",
The Next
Hurrah (blog), February 8, 2007, accessed February 15,
2007 (on process of gaining accreditation as a press blogger).
- "Russert Testifies in Libby Perjury Trial: Packed
Court Hears NBC Newsman Deny Identifying CIA Operative",
Hardball with Chris Matthews, MSNBC, February 7,
2007, accessed February 9, 2007. The Washington Post
provided audio clips and transcripts of Libby's Grand Jury
Testimony for March 5, 2004 and March 24, 2004, cited by Jeralyn
Merritt, "Today's Russert Testimony". TalkLeft
(accredited press blog), February 7, 2007, accessed February 9,
2007.
- An audio clip and transcript of the complete testimony are
presented by National Public Radio in "Legal Affairs: Lewis Libby's Complete Grand Jury
Testimony", National Public Radio, February 9, 2007,
accessed February 17, 2007 (duration: 8 hours).
- Amy Goldstein and Carol D. Leonnig, "Libby Defense to Rest Without Testimony by Him or
Cheney", The Washington Post, February 14, 2007.
- Richard B. Schmitt, "Libby Juror Dismissed: Panel of 11 Continues
Deliberations," The Los Angeles Times, February
27, 2007, accessed February 27, 2007.
- Jeralyn Merritt, "Announcing the YKos Panel on Live-Blogging the Scooter
Libby Trial", TalkLeft, July 17, 2007, accessed July
17, 2007.
- "Live Blogging the Libby Trial", program listing,
YearlyKos convention, August 2, 2007, accessed July 28,
2007.
- Press release, Sterling Publishing, March 6, 2007, downloadable
document file from publisher: US_v_ILewisLibby_Release.doc"); see catalogue description; both accessed June 18,
2007.
- R.S.K. [Raphael Schweber-Koren], "Exonerating Libby of Underlying Crime, Post's Cohen
Confused about Elements", Media Matters for America,
June 21, 2007, accessed June 22, 2007.
Additional references
- Leonnig, Carol, and Amy
Goldstein. "Libby Given 2 1/2-Year Prison Term: Former
White House Aide 'Got Off Course,' Judge Says". The Washington
Post, June 5, 2007. Accessed July 17, 2007.
- Parry, Robert. "Shame on the Washington Post, Again". The Baltimore Chronicle &
Sentinel February 19, 2007. Accessed March 13, 2007.
- "Scooter Libby Video Thread". Featured video
clips of "Collins Opening Remarks". Press interview with juror
Denis Collins uploaded to YouTube by "ctblogger" at Connecticut Blog. Aired originally on
MSNBC March 6, 2007, 12:55 p.m., ET. Accessed March 6, 2007.
- Toensing, Victoria. "Trial in Error: If You're Going to Charge Scooter,
Then What About These Guys?" The Washington Post
February 18, 2007. Accessed March 13, 2007.
External links
- Background on the Plame Investigation at
The Washington Post.
Accessed July 20, 2007.
- CNN Special Reports: CIA Leak Investigation
compiled by CNN Newsroom; incl. interactive timeline in
Case History. Updated periodically. Accessed July 20, 20,
2007.
- "Documents From The Trial of I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby" compiled by the Associated
Press.
- "Legal Affairs: Lewis Libby's Complete Grand Jury
Testimony". Full audio clip and transcript provided by National
Public Radio on npr.org, February 7, 2007. Accessed July
20, 2007.
- "The Lewis Libby Case". Archive of articles
concerning I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby broadcast on National Public
Radio. Updated periodically. Accessed July 20, 2007.
- Libby Legal Defense Trust: In the news. Site of news,
statements, and legal filings which is paid for by supporters of
Scooter Libby.
- "Scooter Libby" Index at Salon.com.
- Times Topics: I. Lewis Libby Jr. (Index of news articles
pertaining to Libby published in The New York Times;
incorporates: "The Counts", a summary of the Libby trial verdict;
"Diary of the Leak Trial", a graphical
timeline; and multimedia links. Access to some archived articles
requires TimesSelect subscription.) Accessed July 20, 2007.
- "United States of America, v. I. Lewis Libby, Defendant": "Order". Criminal No.
05-394 (RBW). United States District Court for the District of
Columbia. Filed January 10, 2007. Accessed February 10, 2007.
- United States Department of Justice: Office of Special
Counsel Trial Exhibits in United States of America v. I. Lewis
Libby. March 6, 2007. Accessed April 26], 2007. (Public release of
linked transcripts, exhibits, and orders.)
- United States v. I. Lewis Libby. Photo gallery with news
captions at The Washington Post. Accessed July 20,
2007.