Sealed vs. Sealed
By Jason Leopold
t r u t h o u t | Report
Monday 12 June 2006
Four weeks ago, during the time when we reported that White
House political adviser Karl Rove was indicted for crimes
related to his role in the leak of covert CIA operative Valerie
Plame Wilson, the grand jury empanelled in the case returned an
indictment that was filed under seal in US District Court for
the District of Columbia under the curious heading of Sealed vs.
Sealed.
As of Friday afternoon that indictment, returned by the grand
jury the week of May 10th, remains under seal - more than a
month after it was handed up by the grand jury.
The case number is "06 cr 128." On the federal court's
electronic database, "06 cr 128" is listed along with a succinct
summary: "No further information is available."
We have not seen the contents of the indictment "06 cr 128". But
the fact that this indictment was returned by the grand jury
hearing evidence in the CIA leak case on a day that Special
Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald met with the grand jury raised a
number of questions about the identity of the defendant named in
the indictment, whether it relates to the leak case, and why it
has been under seal for a month under the heading Sealed vs.
Sealed.
True, the grand jury in the CIA leak case also meets to hear
evidence on other federal criminal cases, including at least one
other high-profile case - crimes related to the Jack Abramoff
lobbying scandal.
The lead prosecutor on the Abramoff case is Peter Zeidenberg,
who has worked alongside Patrick Fitzgerald in the CIA leak
investigation for more than two years and has spent a
considerable amount of time investigating Karl Rove's role in
the leak. Zeidenberg is currently prosecuting David Safavian,
who is on trial in US District Court, charged with obstruction
and lying about his contacts with Abramoff.
Still, legal experts watching the Plame-Wilson investigation
have been paying particularly close attention to Sealed vs.
Sealed since the Karl Rove indictment story was published.
The legal scholars have said that a federal prosecutor can keep
an indictment under seal for weeks or months - something that is
commonplace in high-profile criminal cases - especially if an
investigation, such as the CIA leak probe, is ongoing.
When told about the Sealed vs. Sealed indictment filed in US
District Court, the legal experts became intrigued about the
case because they say that most federal criminal indictments are
filed under US vs. Sealed and that they rarely come across
federal criminal indictments titled Sealed vs. Sealed, which to
them suggests the prosecutor felt it necessary to add an extra
layer of secrecy to an indictment to keep it out of public view.
"The question here is that nobody who I have spoken to - top
criminal attorneys, law professors, etc. - is aware of the left
part of the case title having been sealed," said one former
federal criminal attorney. "That the right-hand side is sealed
is almost pro-forma. But, what is not known is whether the US
Attorney can seal the left hand part of the case title on his
own."
The fact that the indictment has been under seal for more than a
month also suggests that it involves a high-profile
investigation, he said.
Additionally, it's entirely plausible for a federal prosecutor
to obtain permission from a federal magistrate or a judge, have
an indictment unsealed for the limited purpose of having parts
of it read to a defendant and his or her attorneys in an attempt
to have the defendant cooperate with an investigation to avoid
facing further charges, legal experts said.
Jason Leopold spent two years covering California's electricity
crisis as Los Angeles bureau chief of Dow Jones Newswires. Jason
has spent the last year cultivating sources close to the CIA
leak investigation, and is a regular contributor to Truthout. He
is the author of the new book NEWS JUNKIE. Visit
www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.
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VIDEO | Go Tell It on the Mountain
A Film by Rebecca MacNeice
http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm
Larry Gibson's family roots on West Virginia's Kayford Mountain
go back to the 1700s. In 1906, after being swindled by a land
company representing coal mine owners (as happened to countless
other mountaineers), his family found itself with only 50 acres
of its original 500. Now, Gibson hangs onto his mountain and
observes family traditions, despite the disappearance of
landscape all around him - the result of total environmental
destruction caused by mountaintop removal mining. Keeping to
family and Appalachian traditions of annually visiting the
family graveyard, Gibson this year took other locals,
environmental activists and journalists along with him.
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