Plame Game Redux
The grand jury finds evidence of an aggressive administration campaign to
discredit Joe Wilson. But charging someone with a crime has proven to be far
more difficult.
By Murray Waas
Web Exclusive: 04.22.05
http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&name=ViewWeb&articleId=9588
Two days before columnist Robert Novak named Valerie Plame as a covert CIA
operative, a Bush administration official told a reporter for The Washington
Post that Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson IV, had been sent
to Niger on a sensitive diplomatic mission only because his wife recommended
him for the job. The administration official admitted his role to federal
prosecutors during their investigation into the leak of Plame's identity.
The Bush administration official, according to attorneys familiar with his
testimony, told a federal grand jury that he made the claim to the Post
reporter and others in an effort to undermine Wilson's credibility, who was
alleging at the time that the Bush administration was relying on faulty
intelligence to bolster its case to go to war with Iraq. But the official
just as adamantly denied to the federal investigators that he had ever told
the Post reporter, Novak, or anyone else that Plame was a clandestine CIA
operative.
The Post reporter, Walter Pincus, confirmed in an interview that the
administration official attempted to discredit Wilson by claiming that
Wilson had been sent to Niger on a boondoggle arranged by Wilson's wife. But
Pincus says that the official did not tell him that Plame was anything other
than an analyst.
Such leads have proved tantalizing to FBI agents and prosecutors working for
special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, who for more than a year has
investigated whether Bush administration officials might have broken the law
in disclosing that Wilson's wife was a clandestine CIA officer.
But the above example also underscores just why it has been so difficult to
prosecute anyone in the Plame matter and why it now appears more likely than
not that nobody will be. As I first reported on April 6, Fitzgerald recently
informed a federal court that his investigation had been "for all practical
purposes complete" since October of last year. Absent the full testimony of
reporters Judith Miller of The New York Times and Time magazine's Matthew
Cooper, Fitzgerald seems to have indicated, the trail has gone cold.
Despite the fact that prosecutors might not bring criminal charges, the
grand jury inquiry uncovered evidence that several administration officials
engaged in an aggressive and organized effort to discredit Wilson by
claiming that his mission to Niger was a result of nepotism, according to
sources close to the case. Although several administration officials
admitted to disseminating negative information about Wilson and Plame, they
also asserted that they did not know that Plame was a clandestine CIA
operative. Federal investigators have been skeptical of those accounts,
according to sources close to the case, but unable to prove them false.
U.S. Representative Rush Holt (D-NJ), a member of the House Intelligence
Committee, said in an interview that regardless of whether Bush
administration officials knew that Plame was a clandestine operative, "There
was a deliberate effort to discredit the ambassador by either slandering his
wife or exposing her profession, which was despicable and should be brought
to light." Holt said that now that the Fitzgerald inquiry appears to be
complete, the public should know exactly what Bush administration officials
did to discredit Wilson and expose Plame's employment with the CIA.
Last year, Holt sponsored a resolution calling for the House to
independently investigate the efforts by the Bush administration officials
to discredit Wilson, which led to exposure of his wife's covert CIA status.
But votes on his resolution in four House committees -- Judiciary,
Intelligence, Government Reform, and House International Relations --
narrowly failed, with members voting largely along partisan lines.
Republicans said they voted against his resolution because they did not want
to interfere with the federal criminal inquiry.
It is unclear whether any of the House committees will now undertake such an
investigation. But nine Democrats on the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence last week wrote Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez asking him to
explain to them why Fitzgerald has not brought criminal charges against
anyone in the Plame matter.
Under the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, it is a felony punishable
by up to 10 years in prison for anyone to disclose the identity of a covert
U.S. intelligence operative. Although the law was designed to allow for the
prosecutions of individuals engaging in a "pattern of activities intended to
identify and expose covert agents," it does not rule out the prosecution of
parties responsible for the leak of a single covert agent's identity, such
as the Plame leak.
But the statute also requires an extremely high burden of proof. A
prosecutor must overcome so many legal obstacles before he can bring
criminal charges that prosecutions are always difficult, even under the best
of circumstances. Among other things, prosecutors must prove that the person
disclosing the information knew that its release would reveal a covert
agent's identity. If, as with the example of the Bush administration
official cited above, the official truly did not know that Plame was a
covert operative but merely a CIA employee, that official would not have
violated the law.
The law was written in such a prohibitive manner due to fears that an
overzealous prosecutor or executive branch might use the statute to prevent
legitimate news reporting of governmental abuses, intelligence failures and
scandals, and legitimate dissent.
In light of this legislative history, attorneys for The New York Times,
Time, and 34 other news organizations recently argued, in a brief they filed
in federal court that Fitzgerald should prove that a crime was committed
before he further demands that Miller and Cooper testify before his grand
jury.
"The statute was specifically 'crafted with care' to be used in limited
circumstances," the brief says, "because Congress wanted to 'exclude the
possibility that casual discussion, political debate, the journalistic
pursuit of a story on intelligence, or the disclosure of illegality or
impropriety in government will be chilled by the enactment of the bill.'
Congress intended only disclosures that 'clearly represent a conscious and
pernicious effect to identify and expose agents with the extent to impair or
impede the foreign intelligence activities of the United States.'"
Another barrier to prosecuting anyone under the law is that absent an
admission of wrongdoing by a government official, the only evidence that a
leaker had the intent of violating the law would be the testimony of a
journalist.
But journalists often will not testify. The New York Times' Miller has
refused to testify at all. Cooper, who is facing a contempt citation,
previously gave a sworn deposition to Fitzgerald's office but agreed to
answer only certain questions and not others. (When he was called back and
asked to answer even more questions, he refused and was found in contempt.)
Other journalists -- Pincus and Glen Kessler of The Washington Post, plus
NBC Washington bureau chief Tim Russert -- agreed to answer questions from
the prosecutors, although they said that they did so only after their
sources urged them to.
In the case of the Bush administration official described above, The
Washington Post's Pincus, according to two sources, told Fitzgerald's office
that although the official had provided Pincus with the derogatory
information regarding Plame and Wilson, the official never said that Plame
was a CIA operative. Pincus told me in an interview that he did not use the
information offered up by his source because he did not believe it to be
true. He also said that he cooperated with prosecutors only at the
instructions of sources who wanted to clear their names.
Aside from the difficulty of obtaining the cooperation of journalists who
have pledged confidentiality to their sources, there is also the possibility
that a journalist might purposefully mislead prosecutors. Even if
journalists do not testify in a criminal inquiry, they can mislead
prosecutors in their articles or public statements.
It still can not be definitively determined if Novak, who refuses to comment
on the matter at all, has cooperated with Fitzgerald and, if he has, in what
manner. However, outside legal experts say that it is unlikely that
Fitzgerald would say he had completed most of his investigation without
having talked to Novak.
Before Fitzgerald took over the investigation of the Plame case from a task
force of career Justice Department prosecutors, investigators were
proceeding with the strong belief that that Novak was attempting to mislead
both them and the public, according to people close to the case. Whether
Fitzgerald has reached similar conclusions cannot be determined.
In his original story disclosing Plame's identity, Novak identified Plame as
"an agency operative on weapons of mass destruction." But after it became
known that the Justice Department had initiated a criminal investigation,
Novak changed his story, claiming that his sources had told him only that
Plame was an analyst. He declared on CNN on September 29, 2003: "According
to a confidential source at the CIA, Mrs. Wilson's involvement was an
analyst, not a spy, not a covert operative, and not in charge of undercover
operatives. So what is the fuss about?"
If Novak had misquoted his source, the investigators asked, why had he only
changed his story more than two months after his column first appeared and
after word of the criminal investigation leaked? It is, of course,
traditional practice for journalists to correct mistakes in their stories as
soon as they learn of them. Novak apparently did not do that in this
instance, leading investigators to regard his mea culpa as not credible.
Later, when administration officials, such as the one who spoke to Pincus,
admitted to investigators that they had told reporters that Wilson had been
sent to Niger only as a result of his wife's purported nepotism -- but did
not know she had ever been a clandestine operative -- the investigators came
to believe that Novak and his sources might be misleading them.
A former federal prosecutor who worked with Fitzgerald in the U.S.
Attorney's office in Chicago says that an "earnest and thorough prosecutor"
would want to "exhaust possible avenues of inquiry" before ending an
investigation like the one that Fitzgerald is conducting. The former
prosecutor, now in private practice, said he wanted to discuss the case
because Fitzgerald has been unfairly portrayed as a zealot in the press
because of his demands that reporters testify in the case. The attorney
noted, however, that he knew nothing more than what was on the public record
on the case.
"You have two people who had a conversation," says the attorney, "Novak and
an administration official. If both of them are going to lie -- Novak and
the source -- there is no way to penetrate that. None. It doesn't matter how
meticulous you are a prosecutor, or that you have unlimited resources at
your disposal."
In an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle, Randall D. Eliason, a former
chief of the Public Corruption Section of the U.S. Attorney for the District
of Columbia, argued similarly: "If someone leaks classified information to a
reporter, there are only two likely witnesses: the parties to that
conversation. Even if the identity of the leaker is known, he or she almost
certainly will assert a valid Fifth Amendment privilege not to testify. That
leaves the reporter as the sole available witness to a possible federal
crime.
"Given these facts, the prosecutor has two options: subpoena the reporters
to testify or fold up his tent and go home."
That might explain why Fitzgerald has been uncompromising in his demand that
Miller and Cooper testify before his grand jury. Only they might be able to
tell him whether their sources did or did not tell them that Plame was a
clandestine CIA operative. And their source or sources might or might not
have been the same people who spoke to Novak -- shedding light not only on
whether the government has lied but also whether Novak has as well.
As Fitzgerald himself has asserted in his last court filing: "By October
2004, the factual investigation that might result from such testimony was
for all practical purposes complete. The investigation has since been
stalled by [Miller's and Cooper's] refusal to comply with an order to
testify. The public's right to have this investigation concluded diligently
should be delayed no further."
Even Floyd Abrams, the esteemed First Amendment attorney who is zealously
defending The New York Times and other news organizations in the Plame
matter and who is outspoken in his belief that demanding that reporters
identify their sources is a threat to the Constitution, says that Fitzgerald
is engaging in a legitimate inquiry. "There are even journalists -- despite
the First Amendment issues -- who are invested with the notion of cracking
this case, who would like nothing better than the visage of a high-ranking
official who ought to be punished," Abrams notes. "I can see how Fitzgerald
would want to do everything he could, touch every base, before he says he is
finally done."
It would indeed be tragic and ironic, as Abrams and others have pointed out,
if government officials who broke the law went free, or if no crime were
committed at all, yet Miller and Cooper were to stand convicted of contempt
and perhaps even serve jail sentences. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
refused to rehear their case en banc on April 20, letting stand a previous
ruling compelling their testimony.
In the meantime, those close to Fitzgerald argue that he is hardly the
overzealous prosecutor he is being made out to be in some press accounts. He
does appear to have a legitimate interest in questioning Cooper and Miller,
they say: determining whether or not a high-ranking administration official
may have committed a crime. Certainly, it is competing with perhaps more
important interests relating to the First Amendment, but Fitzgerald's
defenders say it is a legitimate interest all the same.
Murray S. Waas is an investigative reporter. He will be reporting further
about the Plame grand jury on his blog, Whatever Already.
http://www.whateveralready.blogspot.com
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