CIA Leak: Karl Rove and the Case of the Missing E-mail
By Michael Isikoff
Newsweek
17 October 2005 Issue
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/100905Y.shtml
The White House's handling of a potentially crucial
e-mail sent by senior aide Karl Rove two years ago set
off a chain of events that has led special prosecutor
Patrick Fitzgerald to summon Rove for a fourth grand
jury appearance this week. His return has created
heightened concern among White House officials and their
allies that Fitzgerald may be preparing to bring
indictments when a federal grand jury that has been
investigating the leak of a CIA agent's identity expires
at the end of October. Robert Luskin, Rove's lawyer,
tells NEWSWEEK that, in his last conversations with
Fitzgerald, the prosecutor assured Luskin "he has not
made any decisions."
But lawyers close to the case, who asked not to be
identified because it's ongoing, say Fitzgerald appears
to be focusing in part on discrepancies in testimony
between Rove and Time reporter Matt Cooper about their
conversation of July 11, 2003. In Cooper's account, Rove
told him the wife of White House critic Joseph Wilson
worked at the "agency" on WMD issues and was responsible
for sending Wilson on a trip to Niger to check out
claims that Iraq was trying to buy uranium. But Rove did
not disclose this conversation to the FBI when he was
first interviewed by agents in the fall of 2003 - nor
did he mention it during his first grand jury
appearance, says one of the lawyers familiar with Rove's
account. (He did not tell President George W. Bush about
it either, assuring him that fall only that he was not
part of any "scheme" to discredit Wilson by outing his
wife, the lawyer says.) But after he testified, Luskin
discovered an e-mail Rove had sent that same day - July
11 - alerting deputy national-security adviser Stephen
Hadley that he had just talked to Cooper, the lawyer
says. In the e-mail, Rove said Cooper pushed him on
whether the president was being hurt by the Niger
controversy. "I didn't take the bait," Rove wrote
Hadley, adding that he warned Cooper not to get "far out
in front on this." After reviewing the e-mail, Rove then
returned to the grand jury last year and reported the
Cooper conversation. He testified that the talk was
initially about "welfare reform" - a topic mentioned in
the e-mail - and that Cooper then changed the subject.
Cooper has written that he doesn't recall a discussion
of welfare reform.
Why didn't the Rove e-mail surface earlier? The lawyer
says it's because an electronic search conducted by the
White House missed it because the right "search words"
weren't used. (The White House and Fitzgerald both
declined to comment.) But the e-mail isn't the only
belatedly discovered document in the case. Fitzgerald
has also summoned New York Times reporter Judith Miller
back for questioning this week: a notebook was
discovered in the paper's Washington bureau, reflecting
a late June 2003 conversation with Vice President Dick
Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis (Scooter) Libby, about
Wilson and his trip to Africa, says one of the lawyers.
The notebook may also be significant because Wilson's
identity was not yet public. A lawyer for the Times
declined to comment.
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INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS ON LEAK-GATE
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LEAK - GATE:
This White House Scandal Finally Tips the Scale!
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/LEAKGATE.HTM
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approaches
International Herald Tribune, France - 3 hours ago
WASHINGTON The prosecutor in the CIA leak case is
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...
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