October 22, 2005
Leak Prosecutor Is Called Exacting and Apolitical
By SCOTT SHANE and DAVID JOHNSTON
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 - In 13 years prosecuting mobsters
and terrorists in New York, Patrick J. Fitzgerald earned
a public reputation for meticulous preparation, a
flawless memory and an easy eloquence. Only his
colleagues knew that these orderly achievements emerged
from the near-total anarchy of his office, where the
relentless Mr. Fitzgerald often slept during big cases.
"You'd open a drawer, looking for a pen or Post-it
notes, and it would be full of dirty socks," recalled
Karen Patton Seymour, a former assistant United States
attorney who tried a major case with him. "He was a
mess. Food here, clothes there, papers everywhere. But
behind all that was a totally organized mind."
That mind, which has taken on Al Qaeda and the Gambino
crime family, is now focused on the most politically
volatile case of Mr. Fitzgerald's career. As the special
prosecutor who has directed the C.I.A. leak
investigation, he is expected to decide within days who,
if anyone, will be charged with a crime.
To seek indictments against the White House officials
caught up in the inquiry would deliver a devastating
blow to the Bush administration. To simply walk away
after two years of investigation, which included the
jailing of a reporter for 85 days for refusing to
testify, would invite cries of cover-up and waste.
Yet Mr. Fitzgerald's past courtroom allies and
adversaries say that consideration of political
consequences will play no role in his decision.
"I don't think the prospect of a firestorm would deter
him," said J. Gilmore Childers, who worked with Mr.
Fitzgerald on high-profile terrorism prosecutions in New
York during the 1990s. "His only calculus is to do the
right thing as he sees it."
Stanley L. Cohen, a New York lawyer who has defended
those accused of terrorism in a half-dozen cases
prosecuted by Mr. Fitzgerald, said he never detected the
slightest political leanings, only a single-minded
dedication to the law.
"There's no doubt in my mind that if he's found
something, he won't be swayed one way or the other by
the politics of it," Mr. Cohen said. "For Pat, there's
no such thing as a little crime you can ignore."
Mr. Fitzgerald, 44, whose regular job is as the United
States attorney in Chicago, is a hard man to pigeonhole.
The son of Irish immigrants - his father, Patrick Sr.,
was a Manhattan doorman - he graduated from Amherst
College and Harvard Law School. Though he is a
workaholic who sends e-mail messages to subordinates at
2 a.m. and has never married, friends say the man they
call Fitzie is a hilarious raconteur and great company
for beer and baseball. Ruthless in his pursuit of
criminals, he once went to considerable trouble to adopt
a cat.
"He's a prankster and a practical joker," said Ms.
Seymour, who now practices law in New York, recalling
when Mr. Fitzgerald drafted a fake judge's opinion
denying a key motion and had it delivered to a
colleague. "But he's also brilliant. When he's trying a
complicated case, there's no detail he can't recall."
Mr. Fitzgerald was appointed in December 2003 by James
B. Comey, then the deputy attorney general and an old
friend, to investigate the disclosure in a column by
Robert Novak of the identity of an undercover operative
for the Central Intelligence Agency, Valerie Wilson,
also referred to by her maiden name, Valerie Plame. Her
husband, Joseph C. Wilson IV, a former diplomat who had
traveled to Niger on behalf of the C.I.A. to check on
reports that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was seeking
uranium there, had publicly accused the White House of
twisting the evidence to justify war against Iraq.
Lawyers involved in the case say Mr. Fitzgerald appears
to be examining whether high-level officials who spoke
to reporters about the Wilsons sought to mislead
prosecutors about their discussions. Those under
scrutiny include Karl Rove, the top political adviser to
President Bush, and I. Lewis Libby Jr., the chief of
staff to Vice President Dick Cheney.
In grand jury sessions, Mr. Fitzgerald has struck
witnesses as polite and exacting. Matthew Cooper, a Time
magazine reporter who wrote about his two and half hours
of testimony, said that the prosecutor's questions were
asked "in microscopic, excruciating detail."
Before he testified, Mr. Cooper recalled that Mr.
Fitzgerald counseled him to say what he remembered and
no more. "If I show you a picture of your kindergarten
teacher and it really refreshes your memory say so," Mr.
Cooper wrote, quoting Mr. Fitzgerald. "If it doesn't,
don't say yes just because I show you a photo of you and
her sitting together."
Judith Miller, the New York Times reporter who wrote
about her two grand jury appearances, said that Mr.
Fitzgerald asked questions that reflected a deep
knowledge of the leak case as he led her through her
dealings with Mr. Libby.
Mr. Fitzgerald has drawn criticism from press advocates
for his aggressive pursuit of journalists he believes
may have been told about the secret C.I.A. employment of
Ms. Wilson. Ms. Miller served nearly three months in
jail this summer before agreeing to testify. In pursuing
leads that have made him a threat to the White House,
Mr. Fitzgerald is following a pattern set by previous
special prosecutors. Some allies of the White House
complain privately that he has taken on some of the
worst traits of his predecessors. Republicans criticized
Lawrence E. Walsh for his handling of the Iran-Contra
scandal in the Reagan administration, while Democrats
attacked Kenneth W. Starr's performance in the
Whitewater probe and Monica Lewinsky sex scandal under
President Clinton. The two prosecutors operated under
the independent counsel law, which both parties let die
in 1999.
Katy J. Harriger, a political scientist at Wake Forest
University who has studied special prosecutors, said
that Mr. Fitzgerald had some advantages over his
predecessors. He has essentially all the powers of the
attorney general to chase evidence, question witnesses
and seek charges. Unlike Mr. Walsh and Mr. Starr, both
former judges, Mr. Fitzgerald is a career prosecutor.
And as a Bush administration appointee, he is less
vulnerable to attack from the White House.
"It will be much harder than it was with Starr to say
this is a partisan prosecution," Ms. Harriger said.
Some attorneys who admire Mr. Fitzgerald detect a hint
of zealotry or inflexibility in his approach and wonder
whether what works with terrorism translates to an
inside-the-Beltway case involving White House officials
and their multilayered relationships with journalists.
In Mr. Fitzgerald's world, a former colleague recalled,
it was pretty clear who had black hats and who had white
hats, there was not a lot of gray.
But Mr. Cohen, whose defense work on behalf of Hamas and
other groups has provoked controversy, says he has
always found Mr. Fitzgerald willing to listen, and to
distinguish between militant rhetoric and genuine
terrorist plotting. "If I need a straight answer from a
federal prosecutor, I call Pat," Mr. Cohen said.
Mr. Fitzgerald's moral grounding began at Our Lady Help
of Christians school in his native Brooklyn. He attended
Regis High School, a Jesuit institution in Manhattan for
gifted students, all of whom attend on scholarship. At
Amherst, where he majored in math and economics, he was
an unassuming kid with a New York accent who was a
stellar student, one others frequently turned to for
help, recalled Walter Nicholson, an economics professor.
At Amherst, he worked part time as a custodian; in the
summers during college and law school, his father helped
him find work as a doorman.
After three years in private practice, he joined the
United States attorney's office for the southern
district of New York and quickly distinguished himself.
"I've tried a lot of cases, and he's probably the
toughest adversary I've ever seen," said Roger L. Stavis,
a New York defense lawyer who faced Mr. Fitzgerald
during the 1995 terrorism trial of Sheikh Omar Abdel
Rahman. Mr. Stavis prided himself on knowing the web of
Muslim extremists but was surprised when Mr. Fitzgerald
asked a witness about Osama bin Laden, then an obscure
figure.
"I thought, 'I don't know who Osama bin Laden is, but
he's in Pat Fitzgerald's crosshairs,' " Mr. Stavis said.
In 2001, Mr. Fitzgerald led the team that convicted four
men in the 1998 bombings of two American embassies in
East Africa.
During his time in New York, Mr. Fitzgerald's hapless
bachelor ways became legendary. For months he did not
bother to have the gas connected to the stove in his
Brooklyn apartment. Once, in a fit of domesticity, he
baked two pans of lasagna, recalled Amy E. Millard, a
New York colleague. Distracted by work, he left them
uneaten in the oven for three months before he
discovered them, Ms. Millard said. When he tried to
adopt a cat, she remembered, he was turned down because
of his work habits and only later acquired a pet when a
friend in Florida had to give up her cat and had it
flown to him to New York.
Some of the cases Mr. Fitzgerald handled after moving to
Chicago in 2001 have expanded his experience into the
sensitive and murky arena of political corruption. He
indicted a former governor of Illinois, George Ryan, in
a scandal involving the Illinois secretary of state's
office, as well as two aides to Mayor Richard Daley on
mail-fraud charges.
But those cases bear little resemblance to the C.I.A.
leak investigation, with its potential implications for
national politics. Samuel W. Seymour, another former New
York prosecutor and Karen's husband, said it is easy to
politically "triangulate" most government lawyers,
noting which were mentored by Democrats or promoted by
Republicans. But not Mr. Fitzgerald.
"Some people may feel he's independent to a fault,
because his independence makes him unpredictable," Mr.
Seymour said. "I think it makes him the perfect person
for this job."
===============

Patrick J. Fitzgerald (born 1961) is the U.S. Attorney
for the Northern District of Illinois. On December 31,
2003, he made national headlines when he was appointed
to continue the investigation into the Plame affair CIA
leak. Fitzgerald was named by Deputy Attorney General
James B. Comey after then Attorney General John Ashcroft
recused himself from the case due to potential conflicts
of interest.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Fitzgerald
Patrick J. Fitzgerald Investigating Bush Administration
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/FITZGERALD.HTM
LEAKGATE: This White House Scandal Finally Tips the
Scale!
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/leakgate.htm
Special prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, is
investigating the outing CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson.
Suspicions have been solidly cast upon Karl Rove and
Scooter Libby. There is no doubt that the crime wasn't
committed alone or without the help of others.
Fitzgerald Launches Web Site
http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/iln/osc/index.html