9 women, 3 men to decide fate of Scooter Libby
Iraq war, Bush administration remain as factors
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16750149/
Updated: 5:39 p.m. MT Jan 22, 2007
WASHINGTON - A jury, consisting of nine women and three men, was
seated Monday in the perjury and obstruction trial of Vice
President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, I. Lewis
"Scooter" Libby.
Those jurors include an art historian, an investment banker, an
attorney, a retired postal employee, a retired math teacher, and
a former reporter for the Washington Post who once had star
reporter Bob Woodward as his editor and was a neighbor of NBC
News Washington Bureau Chief Tim Russert - both of whom are to
be witnesses in the case.
(MSNBC.com is owned, in part, by NBC News.)
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The jury also includes four critics of the Bush administration's
Iraq policies who expressed their views during questioning.
Three women and one man were seated as alternates. Although the
public knew who they are, the jurors weren't told which ones
were alternates, so they would all pay full attention during the
trial.
The process of selecting the jury took twice as long as
expected.
Libby, a former aide to President Bush and chief of staff to
Vice President Dick Cheney, is the highest-ranking member of the
Republican administration to face criminal charges in a case
surrounding the leak of a CIA agent's name.. He is accused of
lying to investigators about his conversations regarding outed
CIA operative Valerie Plame, who husband was a vocal critic of
the administration.
Opening statements are now expected to begin Tuesday, with Judge
Reggie Walton delivering detailed instructions to the jury,
spelling out the charges against Libby and that the burden of
proof regarding the five charges in the indictment rests on the
prosecution.
Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald then will make opening
remarks laying out his case against Libby. Fitzgerald plans to
spend about 90-minutes setting the scene for the jury.
Related content
* Read the initial questions to the jury (pdf)
* NBC News: How the CIA leak case began
Libby's defense attorney Ted Wells will follow Fitzgerald, using
some audio and visual props to bolster his case that Libby had
no reason to lie to FBI investigators and a grand jury about how
he learned and what he told three reporters about former CIA
employee Valerie Plame.
Depending on how long Wells takes with his opening, the jury may
hear their first witness Tuesday as well.
The politics of I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby
The contentious jury selection process foreshadows a heated
trial set to the backdrop of the war in Iraq.
The potential jurors are drawn from a city where registered
Democrats outnumber Republicans by more than 9-to-1.
Prosecutors say Libby lied to investigators to spare him
political embarrassment. Libby says he didn't lie but rather
forgot details about his conversations because he preoccupied
with national security issues.
While the painstaking selection of a jury closes, it may not be
the end of disputes over how much jurors should hear about the
Iraq war.
fact file LIBBY TRIAL SO FAR
A daily synopsis of the I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby perjury and
obstruction trial.
• Jan. 22, 2007
• Jan. 19, 2007
• Jan. 18, 2007
• Jan. 17, 2007
• Jan. 16, 2007
Jan. 22, 2007
A jury was seated consisting of nine women and three men,
including an art historian, an investment banker, an attorney, a
retired postal employee, a retired math teacher, and a former
reporter for the Washington Post who once had the Post’s Bob
Woodward as his editor and was a neighbor of NBC’s Tim Russert -
both of whom are to be witnesses in the case.
The jury also includes four critics of the Bush administration's
Iraq policies.
Three women and one man were seated as alternates.
Tuesday, Judge Walton will deliver detailed instructions to the
jury, then Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald will spend 90
minutes on opening remarks followed by Libby's defense attorney,
Ted Wells, who will use some audio and visual props to bolster
his case.
Depending on how long Wells takes, the jury may hear their first
witness Tuesday as well.
Joel Seidman, NBC News • Print this
Libby's lawyers, Theodore Wells and William Jeffress, have
labored to keep opponents of the Iraq war and the administration
off the jury. Libby, a former aide to President Bush and Vice
President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, is the
highest-ranking member of the current Republican administration
to face criminal charges.
Defense lawyers asked every juror whether the administration
lied about intelligence to push the nation into war in Iraq and
whether administration officials are believable, particularly
Cheney. He is to be a defense witness.
Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald objected repeatedly during
the first three days that Wells and Jeffress were portraying
this as a trial about politics and the war. Fitzgerald argued
that "the jury will not be asked to render a verdict on the war
or what they think of the war."
Defense questions were so political that one juror even
volunteered that she had voted for Bush, Fitzgerald complained
to the judge.
CONTINUED: The Bush administration factor
The Bush administration factor
The prosecutor wants the trial to stick closely to the five
felony counts against Libby: that Libby obstructed an
investigation into the leaking of CIA officer Valerie Plame's
identity in 2003 and lied to the FBI and a grand jury about
three conversations with reporters about her.
Plame's name and employer were disclosed in a newspaper column,
attributed to two senior administration figures. The column by
Robert Novak was published shortly after Plame's husband,
ex-ambassador Joseph Wilson, accused Bush of saying Iraq was
trying to buy uranium for nuclear weapons long after the
administration knew the story was untrue.
Walton said during pretrial hearings that he does not want the
trial wandering far from the charges. But he responded to
Fitzgerald's objections last week by saying the defense has a
right to know if a potential juror "has a very negative attitude
to the Bush administration."
So the judge gave Wells and Jeffress considerable latitude. He
even let them ask several potential jurors if they could assure
the court their opposition to Bush's war policies would not
subconsciously influence their deliberations.
Politics and Judge Walton interview
National Public Radio interviewed Judge Walton, who got his last
three jobs from Republican presidents. He said that when he was
first appointed as a Superior Court judge by President Reagan,
he was a Democrat. He told NPR, "as a judge you don't let party
affiliation have an impact," not allowing any hint of his party
preferences now. He also told NPR that he is a supporter of
affirmative action programs. "I am a product of affirmative
action." said Walton. "If not for affirmative action, I wouldn't
have gotten into law school," he said.
Politics is an important aspect of the Libby trial. Even some of
the questions jury candidates are being asked focus on politics
and give some clues about the course the trial will take. For
example:
"Do any of you have feelings or opinions about the Bush
Administration or any of its policies or actions, whether
positive or negative, that might affect your ability to give a
former member of the Bush Administration a fair trial?"
"Do you have any feelings or opinions about Vice President
Cheney, whether positive or negative, that might affect your
ability to be fair in this case or that might affect your
ability to fairly judge Vice President Cheney's believability?"
fact file POSSIBLE LIBBY TRIAL WITNESSES
Attorneys are not required to submit witness lists but many
possible witnesses have been named in court documents.
PROSECUTION
• John (Jack) Eckenrode
• Robert Grenier
• Marc Grossman
• Craig Schmall
• Judith Miller
• Ari Fleischer
• David Addington
• Cathie Martin
• Bill Harlow
• Tim Russert
• Matt Cooper
• Stephen Hadley
• George Tenet
DEFENSE
• I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby
• Dick Cheney
• Colin Powell
• Reporters
• Robert Novak
• Bob Woodward
• Richard Armitage
• Joseph Wilson
The former lead FBI agent in charge of the CIA/Leak
investigation. He first interviewed Libby and sat in on the
White House interviews of both President Bush and Vice President
Cheney. Both were not under oath when they spoke to prosecutors.
Source: NBC News • Print this
Jurors' political leanings are important because parts of the
trial will focus on White House operations in the months leading
up to the Iraq war. That's the time period when Libby allegedly
talked with reporters about Valerie Plame, an undercover CIA
agent whose husband publicly criticized the Bush
administration's justification for war. Libby's defense team
wants to find jurors who may be sympathetic to the Bush
administration, while prosecutors are looking for jurors who may
be more critical of the White House.
More than politics at issue
Potential jurors are also being asked questions that focus on
their thoughts regarding memory:
"Is there anyone who believes that everyone's memory is like a
tape recorder and therefore all individuals are able to remember
exactly what they said and were told in the past?"
"Is there anyone who believes that it is absolutely impossible
for a person to believe very strongly that he or she has certain
memories about something, even though it is determined that
those memories are inaccurate?"
Faulty memory is also a key part of Libby's defense strategy.
His lawyers contend that Libby did not intentionally obstruct
the investigation into the CIA leak. Instead, his lawyers say he
was so preoccupied with his many responsibilities at the White
House that he simply forgot the correct sequence of events.
Whatever other arguments over evidence occur, those jurors will
hear that Wilson claimed administration officials leaked his
wife's identity to punish him and scare other war critics in the
intelligence agencies into silence.
They also will hear from the defense that whatever errors Libby
made in describing his conversations with reporters in 2003
resulted from innocent memory failure as he was dealing with a
wide array of issues involving the war and national security.
NBC's Joel Seidman contributed to this story.
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CIA LEAKGATE INFO AND LINKS:>>
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