Senior White House Officials Face Prospect of Life in Prison for
Outing of CIA Agent Plame Unless They Testify for Prosecution
10/17/2005 3:00:00 PM
To: National Desk
http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=55142
Contact: Ilene Proctor, 310-271-5857, for VelvetRevolution.us,
Web:
http://VelvetRevolution.us
WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 /U.S. Newswire/ -- VelvetRevolution.us, a
large coalition of organizations and citizens dedicated to
honest government, has done an analysis of the Federal
Sentencing Guidelines and its probable effect on the sentencing
of any senior White House official convicted in the Valerie
Plame affair. By going after Wilson and his wife, those
officials apparently committed serious crimes which they then
compounded by obstructing justice and committing and suborning
perjury. As a result, they have virtually ensured that, if
convicted, they could receive a sentence up to life in federal
prison under the United States Sentencing Guidelines, which are
used to compute sentences based on severity offense levels. The
higher the level, the greater the sentence, and federal courts
routinely follow the Guidelines in the vast majority of cases.
The best case scenario for those involved would be a conviction
of only a single count of perjury or obstruction of justice,
either of which carries a maximum sentence of five years in
federal prison. Under the Guidelines, that would probably result
in the maximum sentence because both charges have a base offense
level of 14, and those convicted will most probably receive
enhancements of 3 levels for substantial interference with the
administration of justice, 6 levels for victimizing a government
employee and family member, 2 levels for abuse of the public
trust, and 4 levels for being a leader. These total 29 levels,
which equals 87-108 months in federal prison under the
Guidelines, far above the five-year statutory maximum, so the
final sentence will be five years.
However, federal prosecutors rarely issue one-count indictments,
but rather charge every possible violation. In the instant case,
it is highly likely that Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald will
throw the book at them, by charging conspiracy and violation of
the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of l982 ("IIPA") (50
U.S.C., section 421), each carrying a maximum sentence of ten
years, conspiracy and violation of the Espionage Act (18 U.S.C.
793), each carrying ten years, and multiple counts of perjury
and obstruction of justice, each carrying five years. Moreover,
because there was an agreement among many people in this case,
there will most probably also be an overarching conspiracy
charge to violate multiple statutes. It is significant that the
IIPA mandates that any sentence under the Act be imposed
"consecutively" to any other sentence in the indictment. Id. at
section 421(d).
The Federal Sentencing Guidelines reflect the seriousness of a
conviction under the IIPA by setting a base offense level of 30
for disclosure "by a person with, or who had access to,
classified information identifying a covert agent." In the case
of White House officials, the same enhancements mentioned above
will be added to that base level, for a total of 42 levels,
which requires a LIFE sentence. Of course, since the IIPA only
allows for a maximum sentence of ten years, that life sentence
could be imposed only by a conviction on multiple counts, such
as conspiracy, perjury and obstruction of justice, running
consecutively to the IIPA sentence.
Why will these officials receive such a heavy sentence? Well,
because the Guidelines are very specific about adding
enhancements based on conduct of a defendant. In this case,
there will surely be a 6 level enhancement under section
3A1.2(b) because "the victim was a government employee or member
of the immediate family of a government employee and the offense
of conviction was motivated by such status...." Both Valerie
Plame and Joe Wilson clearly meet this definition of a victim
since their lives have been risked and they have suffered severe
emotional harm.
In addition, because an official such as Karl Rove or Scooter
Libby would obviously be considered "an organizer or leader" of
the criminal conduct under section 3B1.1, he would receive
another enhancement of 4 levels. Moreover, all the defendants'
conduct constitutes "an abuse of the public trust" as set forth
in section 3B1.3, which would add another 2 levels.
Furthermore, because of the "willing obstruction and impeding of
the administration of justice during the investigation" by Rove
and those he controls, including the Republican National
Committee, the White House Press Spokesman, and GOP leaders,
they will receive another enhancement of 2 levels under section
3C1.1.
Finally, because of the grievous harm to our country and the
"potential disruption of governmental function," the sentencing
court, even if the guidelines were not so severe, would most
certainly find, under section 5K2.0(a)(1)(A), aggravating
circumstances sufficient to warrant an upward departure from the
guidelines.
Significantly, the White House conspirators will not receive any
sentence reductions for acceptance of responsibility since that
does not apply to persons who obstruct an investigation. Indeed,
the only hope for them under the Guidelines appears to be a
quick decision to cooperate with the Special Prosecutor, and
that does not mean merely meeting with the FBI and testifying
before the grand jury. Instead, it means saving their own skin
by implicating and testifying against fish bigger than they are,
and that means George Bush and Dick Cheney. The days of
Watergate are over where corrupt officials only receive a few
years in prison for their official misconduct. Now, Fitzgerald
and the Sentencing Guidelines control the lives of Rove and
company, unless one of the potential defendants jumps ship very
soon. Clearly, the only guarantee for Rove and his conspirators
to limit their prison time is complete cooperation before
indictment. But if their past decisions are any indication, the
conspirators will go down with the ship, believing until the end
that George Bush will pardon them for their crimes, which he may
not be willing to do if he too is indicted or wants to maintain
a legacy better than Richard Nixon.
http://www.usnewswire.com/
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/© 2005 U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/
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Conclusion: They knew they were misleading America.
http://www.americanprogressaction.org/site/pp.asp?c=klLWJcP7H&b=134880
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/
10/11/05 - Fitzgerald, Scooter, Miller, Rove, Cheney, Grand
Jury, Frog Marching, Wilson, Plame, Cooper... Don't Forget the
Back Story! What Really Matters: A Listeners' Digest! MUST HEAR!
From the Charles Goyette Show Archives! MP3 Audio, Segment 3
CLICK HERE!
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-11-Charles-03.mp3