PDA

View Full Version : Conyers: Reprieve May Have Quieted Libby


Kurtz
07-08-2007, 04:52 PM
WASHINGTON — The Democrat probing President Bush's decision to erase the prison sentence of a former White House aide said Sunday there is "the suspicion" the aide might have fingered others in the Bush administration if he served time.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers spoke of "the general impression" that Bush last week commuted I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby's 2 1/2 year sentence in the CIA leak case to keep Libby quiet. The White House said Conyers' claim was baseless.

Conyers, D-Mich., has scheduled a committee hearing Wednesday on the matter.

Bush contended Libby's sentence was too harsh. Libby was convicted of lying and obstructing justice in an investigation into the leak of a CIA officer's identity. The former operative said the White House was trying to discredit her husband, a critic of Bush's Iraq policy.

Conyers said the hearings would include pardons made by President Clinton, the first President Bush and possibly other past presidents. In the closing hours of his presidency, Clinton pardoned 140 people, including fugitive financier Marc Rich.

"What we have here _ and I think we should put it on the table right at the beginning _ is that the suspicion was that if Mr. Libby went to prison, he might further implicate other people in the White House, and that there was some kind of relationship here that does not exist in any of President Clinton's pardons, nor, according to those that we've talked to ... is that it's never existed before, ever," Conyers said in a broadcast interview Sunday.

A White House spokesman, Tony Fratto, said in response: "That's a fairly ridiculous and baseless assertion. It may be impossible to plumb the depths of Chairman Conyers' 'suspicions', but we can hope this one is near the bottom."

Conyers' counterpart in the Senate, Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont, said "it would do no good" to ask Libby to testify before Congress. "His silence has been bought and paid for and he would just take the Fifth," Leahy said, referring to the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

A Republican on Conyers' committee took issue with the investigation into Bush's decision in the Libby case.

"It's clearly within the authority of the president," said Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah. "To go after the president on this issue shows a dearth of any opportunity to go after something substantive in this administration. I would prefer that we not waste our time in Congress on these witch hunts and frivolous activities."

A second GOP lawmaker said Bush's action in the Libby case would hold up well against Clinton's pardons. "I think we'll put up the record of the president versus the record of Bill Clinton, and the president will come out relatively good on that," said Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich.

Bush acted last Monday just hours after a federal appeals panel ruled that Libby could not delay his prison term. Libby probably would have had to report soon, which could have put new pressure on the president, who had been sidestepping calls by Libby's allies to pardon Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff.

Conyers said he wants Bush to waive executive privilege and let his pardon lawyers or other experts, "who it appears that he did not consult, explain this in a little more detail. ... Commutations usually follow after a person has served some period of time. And of course, this isn't the case here."

In his commutation decision, Bush left a $250,000 fine. Libby paid the fine on Thursday.

The special prosecutor in the leak case, Patrick Fitzgerald, took issue with Bush's claim the prison term was excessive.

Leahy, asked about the prospect of Fitzgerald testifying before the committee, said, "We may very well find ourselves going down that path."

Conyers appeared on "This Week" on ABC, Cannon and Hoekstra were on "Fox News Sunday" and Leahy spoke on "Late Edition" on CNN.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070708/cia-leak-libby/

Zanoog
07-08-2007, 04:58 PM
:whoop Anybody surprised?

I'm sorry I missed the news this morning it had to be good!

Matt
07-08-2007, 05:17 PM
[Quote]I Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah said, "I would prefer that we not waste our time in Congress on these witch hunts and frivolous activities."
[Quote]

:agree Go straight for the vp who is the culprit behind the whole mess. The reservations mentioned by the jury that convicted Libby indicated that they might think the same thing.
So why didn't the pres consider that when he was trying to 'correct' a decision by the justice system.

Doesn't really matter how bad any other president was.
The action by this president, who has prided himself for not second-guessing a jury, is circumventing the decisions of a judge and jury not to mention a special prosecutor.
It has never been more obvious who is 'running the store'. :twocents

Kurtz
07-08-2007, 05:24 PM
[Quote]I Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah said, "I would prefer that we not waste our time in Congress on these witch hunts and frivolous activities."
[Quote]

:agree Go straight for the vp who is the culprit behind the whole mess. The reservations mentioned by the jury that convicted Libby indicated that they might think the same thing.
So why didn't the pres consider that when he was trying to 'correct' a decision by the justice system.

Doesn't really matter how bad any other president was.
The action by this president, who has prided himself for not second-guessing a jury, is circumventing the decisions of a judge and jury not to mention a special prosecutor.
It has never been more obvious who is 'running the store'. :twocents

bonsai :D

Semantics
07-08-2007, 05:32 PM
Conyers: Reprieve May Have Quieted Libby


Duh. :roll





I'm just overflowing with intelligent replies today. :snicker

Yellowdogtexan
07-08-2007, 09:58 PM
It is clear that bush commuted libby's sentence instead of giving libby a full pardon to keep Libby silent. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19649910/site/newsweek/page/2/In part, Bush may have stopped short of a full pardon precisely to keep Libby and other White House aides away from Democrats on Capitol Hill. Investigators in Congress are eager to call Libby to testify about the Plame case and prewar Iraq intel—an invitation Libby can continue to resist by claiming he can't talk as long as his appeal remains alive in the courts

Ringo
07-09-2007, 07:26 AM
It is clear that bush commuted libby's sentence instead of giving libby a full pardon to keep Libby silent. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19649910/site/newsweek/page/2/

If that was Billy the Scum Clunton, you would MARVEL at a brilliant move he made to fuck the GOP! Well it appears that LibComs are now being fucked and the Criminal Crybaby Conyers, the token Black idiot wants revenge! Is he going full bore after his BRO, Jefferson?

AnnEsthesia
07-09-2007, 07:38 AM
Ringo... this did not 'fuck' the Dems. This screwed the country and the justice system. How you can defend it is astounding.

Trueblue
07-09-2007, 01:32 PM
If that was Billy the Scum Clunton, you would MARVEL at a brilliant move he made to fuck the GOP! Well it appears that LibComs are now being fucked and the Criminal Crybaby Conyers, the token Black idiot wants revenge! Is he going full bore after his BRO, Jefferson?

Once again, your defense is "They did it, too". :lmao

Ringo
07-09-2007, 02:27 PM
Once again, your defense is "They did it, too". :lmao

Of course if anyone brings up a Criminal asshole on the Left, you immediately cry Bush, Bush, Cheney, Libby blah blah blah! Hypocrites shouldn't answer Posts TB!:cheeky

AnnEsthesia
07-09-2007, 02:28 PM
Anyone else notice that Ringo's defense is.... "you liberals do it..." :snicker

Trueblue
07-09-2007, 06:05 PM
Of course if anyone brings up a Criminal asshole on the Left, you immediately cry Bush, Bush, Cheney, Libby blah blah blah! Hypocrites shouldn't answer Posts TB!:cheeky

No, I don't, please don't lie.

Yellowdogtexan
07-09-2007, 07:26 PM
If that was Billy the Scum Clunton, you would MARVEL at a brilliant move he made to fuck the GOP! As is normal, you do not know what you are talking about. President Clinton actually waived executive privilege and allowed his top aides to testify before the House when the repugs investigated the pardons issued by President Clinton. In his letter to bush's counsel, Chairman Conyers noted the following http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/003631.phpWhen President Clinton's pardon of Marc Rich stirred its own controversy back in 2001, former President Clinton took the forthright step of waiving Executive Privilege and permitting some of his closest aides to testify about the facts of the matter. On March 1, 2001, President Clinton's former Chief of Staff John Podesta, his former Counsel Beth Nolan, and one of his closest counselors Bruce Lindsay testified before Chairman Burton's House Government Reform Committee on this matter. As Chairman Burton acknowledged in his opening statement: "We asked the president not to claim executive privilege so his aides could testify, and he's done that, and that's a positive step." (Transcript of March 1, 2001 hearing of the House Government Reform Committee.)President Clinton had nothing to hide and waived executive privilege. bush is hiding the fact that The Scooter has the goods on cheney and bush and therefore issued a commutation to keep the Scooter quiet.

Again, you made a silly claim that was wrong.