7:15a - 7:30a
Bob Prechter - CREDIT BUBBLE IS ABOUT READY TO BURST!!!
http://www.elliottwave.com -
http://www.bearmarketcentral.com/qtcinterviewp1.htm
Guest: Larry Johnson, Bob Prechter
Subject: Stock Market Crash, C I A, Valerie Plame, Bush
Administration Indictments
WOW....
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.37 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-02.mp3
================
New York Times Reports
"CIA LEAK" - LIBBY "OUTS" CHENEY - TENET
Tue Oct 25, 2005 13:44
http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?disc=149495;article=94666;title=APFN
CLICK: 10/25/05 - ANOTHER DAY OF OUSTANDING TALK RADIO
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
6:30 am-7:00 am
Larry Johnson CIA - on Valerie Plame (GREAT REPORT)
http://www.berg-associates.com/larryc.htm
* Listen to the MP3 Audi o - Segment 1 (9.65 MB)
"CIA LEAK" - LIBBY "OUTS" CHENEY - TENET ( REPORTED NY TIMES )
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-01.mp3
7:15a - 7:30a
Bob Prechter - CREDIT BUBBLE IS ABOUT READY TO BURST!!!
http://www.elliottwave.com -
http://www.bearmarketcentral.com/qtcinterviewp1.htm
Guest: Larry Johnson, Bob Prechter
Subject: Stock Market Crash, C I A, Valerie Plame, Bush
Administration Indictments
WOW....
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.37 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-02.mp3
CIA LEAK "FROG MARCHING SONG" W/CALLERS (OUTSTANDING)
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.23 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-03.mp3
================================================
LIBBY "OUTS" CHENEY - TENET - "CIA LEAK"
SOURCE W/LINKS:
New York Times Reports Dick Cheney Leaked CIA Operative Name
The New York Times is reporting that Vice President Dick Cheney
was an Executive branch source of the illegal leak of CIA
operative Valerie Plame Wilson's name.
The Times reports in its October 25, 2005 edition, "I. Lewis
Libby Jr., Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, first
learned about the C.I.A. officer at the heart of the leak
investigation in a conversation with Mr. Cheney weeks before her
identity became public in 2003, lawyers involved in the case
said Monday." The Times also reports that Mr. Cheney received
Wilson;s name from CIA Director George Tenet.
Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is expected to hand down
indictments this week in his office's investigation of this
leak. This information increases the likelihood that Vice
President Dick Cheney could be indicted for illegally passing on
highly confidential goverment information, which is a criminal
offense.
If indicted, Dick Cheney may consider resigning from the Office
of the Vice President.
------------------------------------
NY TIMES:
October 24, 2005
Cheney Told Aide of C.I.A. Officer, Notes Show
By DAVID JOHNSTON, RICHARD W. STEVENSON and DOUGLAS JEHL
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 - I. Lewis Libby Jr., Vice President Dick
Cheney's chief of staff, first learned about the C.I.A. officer
at the heart of the leak investigation in a conversation with
Mr. Cheney weeks before her identity became public in 2003,
lawyers involved in the case said Monday.
Notes of the previously undisclosed conversation between Mr.
Libby and Mr. Cheney on June 12, 2003, appear to differ from Mr.
Libby's testimony to a federal grand jury that he initially
learned about the C.I.A. officer, Valerie Wilson, from
journalists, the lawyers said.
The notes, taken by Mr. Libby during the conversation, for the
first time place Mr. Cheney in the middle of an effort by the
White House to learn about Ms. Wilson's husband, Joseph C.
Wilson IV, who was questioning the administration's handling of
intelligence about Iraq's nuclear program to justify the war.
Lawyers involved in the case, who described the notes to The New
York Times, said they showed that Mr. Cheney knew that Ms.
Wilson worked at the C.I.A. more than a month before her
identity was made public and her undercover status was disclosed
in a syndicated column by Robert D. Novak on July 14, 2003.
Mr. Libby's notes indicate that Mr. Cheney had gotten his
information about Ms. Wilson from George J. Tenet, the director
of central intelligence, in response to questions from the vice
president about Mr. Wilson. But they contain no suggestion that
either Mr. Cheney or Mr. Libby knew at the time of Ms. Wilson's
undercover status or that her identity was classified.
Disclosing a covert agent's identity can be a crime, but only if
the person who discloses it knows the agent's undercover status.
It would not be illegal for either Mr. Cheney or Mr. Libby, both
of whom are presumably cleared to know the government's deepest
secrets, to discuss a C.I.A. officer or her link to a critic of
the administration. But any effort by Mr. Libby to steer
investigators away from his conversation with Mr. Cheney could
be considered by Patrick J. Fitzgerald, the special counsel in
the case, to be an illegal effort to impede the inquiry.
White House officials did not respond to requests for comment,
and Mr. Libby's lawyer, Joseph Tate, would not comment on Mr.
Libby's legal status. Randall Samborn, a spokesman for Mr.
Fitzgerald, declined to comment on the case.
Mr. Fitzgerald is expected to decide whether to bring charges in
the case by Friday, when the term of the grand jury expires. Mr.
Libby and Karl Rove, President Bush's senior adviser, both face
the possibility of indictment, lawyers involved in the case have
said. It is not publicly known whether other officials also face
indictment.
The notes help explain the legal difficulties facing Mr. Libby.
Lawyers in the case said Mr. Libby testified to the grand jury
that he had first heard from journalists that Ms. Wilson may
have had a role in dispatching her husband on a C.I.A.-sponsored
mission to Africa in 2002 in search of evidence that Iraq had
acquired nuclear material there for its weapons program.
But the notes, now in Mr. Fitzgerald's possession, also indicate
that Mr. Libby first heard about Ms. Wilson - who is also known
by her maiden name, Valerie Plame - from Mr. Cheney. That
apparent discrepancy in his testimony suggests why prosecutors
are weighing false statement charges against him in what they
interpret as an effort by Mr. Libby to protect Mr. Cheney from
scrutiny, the lawyers said.
It is not clear why Mr. Libby would have suggested to the grand
jury that he might have learned about Ms. Wilson from
journalists if he was aware that Mr. Fitzgerald had obtained the
notes of the conversation with Mr. Cheney or might do so. At the
beginning of the investigation, Mr. Bush pledged the White
House's full cooperation and instructed aides to provide Mr.
Fitzgerald with any information he sought.
The notes do not show that Mr. Cheney knew the name of Mr.
Wilson's wife. But they do show that Mr. Cheney did know and
told Mr. Libby that Ms. Wilson was employed by the Central
Intelligence Agency and that she may have helped arrange her
husband's trip.
Some lawyers in the case have said Mr. Fitzgerald may face
obstacles in bringing a false-statement charge against Mr.
Libby. They said it could be difficult to prove that he
intentionally sought to mislead the grand jury.
Lawyers involved in the case said they had no indication that
Mr. Fitzgerald was considering charging Mr. Cheney with
wrongdoing. Mr. Cheney was interviewed under oath by Mr.
Fitzgerald last year. It is not known what the vice president
told Mr. Fitzgerald about the conversation with Mr. Libby or
when Mr. Fitzgerald first learned of it.
But the evidence of Mr. Cheney's direct involvement in the
effort to learn more about Mr. Wilson is sure to intensify the
political pressure on the White House in a week of high anxiety
among Republicans about the potential for the case to deal a
sharp blow to Mr. Bush's presidency.
Mr. Tenet was not available for comment Monday night. But
another former senior intelligence official said Mr. Tenet had
been interviewed by the special prosecutor and his staff in
early 2004, and never appeared before the grand jury. Mr. Tenet
has not talked since then to the prosecutors, the former
official said.
The former official said he strongly doubted that the White
House learned about Ms. Wilson from Mr. Tenet.
On Monday, Mr. Rove and Mr. Libby both attended a cabinet
meeting with Mr. Bush as the White House continued trying to
portray business as usual. But the assumption among White House
officials is that anyone who is indicted will step aside.
On June 12, 2003, the day of the conversation between Mr. Cheney
and Mr. Libby, The Washington Post published a front-page
article reporting that the C.I.A. had sent a retired American
diplomat to Niger in February 2002 to investigate claims that
Iraq had been seeking to buy uranium there. The article did not
name the diplomat, who turned out to be Mr. Wilson, but it
reported that his mission had not corroborated a claim about
Iraq's pursuit of nuclear material that the White House had
subsequently used in Mr. Bush's 2003 State of the Union address.
An earlier anonymous reference to Mr. Wilson and his mission to
Africa had appeared in a column by Nicholas D. Kristof in The
New York Times on May 6, 2003. Mr. Wilson went public with his
conclusion that the White House had "twisted" the intelligence
about Iraq's pursuit of nuclear material on July 6, 2003, in an
Op-Ed article in The New York Times.
The note written by Mr. Libby will be a crucial piece of
evidence in a false-statement case against him if Mr. Fitzgerald
decides to pursue it, lawyers in the case said. It also explains
why Mr. Fitzgerald waged a long legal battle to obtain the
testimony of reporters who were known to have talked to Mr.
Libby.
The reporters involved have said that they did not supply Mr.
Libby with details about Mr. Wilson and his wife. Matthew Cooper
of Time magazine, in his account of a deposition on the subject,
wrote that he asked Mr. Libby whether he had even heard that Ms.
Wilson had a role in sending her husband to Africa. Mr. Cooper
said that Mr. Libby did not use Ms. Wilson's name but replied,
"Yeah, I've heard that too."
In her testimony to the grand jury, Judith Miller, a reporter
for The New York Times, said Mr. Libby sought from the start of
her three conversations with him to "insulate his boss from Mr.
Wilson's charges."
Mr. Fitzgerald asked questions about Mr. Cheney, Ms. Miller
said. "He asked, for example, if Mr. Libby ever indicated
whether Mr. Cheney had approved of his interview with me or was
aware of them," Ms. Miller said. "The answer was no."
In addition to Mr. Cooper and Ms. Miller, Mr. Fitzgerald is
known to have interviewed three other journalists who spoke to
Mr. Libby during June and July 2003. They were Walter Pincus and
Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post and Tim Russert of NBC
News.
Mr. Pincus and Mr. Kessler have said that Mr. Libby did not
discuss Mr. Wilson's wife with them in their conversations
during the period. Mr. Russert, in a statement, declined to say
exactly what he discussed with Mr. Libby, but said he first
learned the identity of Mr. Wilson's wife in the column by Mr.
Novak.
==========================
CLICK: 10/25/05 - ANOTHER DAY OF OUSTANDING TALK RADIO
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
6:30 am-7:00 am
Larry Johnson CIA - on Valerie Plame
http://www.berg-associates.com/larryc.htm
* Listen to the MP3 Audi o - Segment 1 (9.65 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-01.mp3
7:15a - 7:30a
Bob Prechter
http://www.elliottwave.com -
http://www.bearmarketcentral.com/qtcinterviewp1.htm Stock
Market
Guest: Larry Johnson, Bob Prechter
Subject: Stock Market Crash, C I A, Valerie Plame, Bush
Administration Indictments
WOW....
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.37 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-02.mp3
CIA LEAK W/CALLERS (OUTSTANDING)
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.23 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-25-Charles-03.mp3
This White House Scandal Finally Tips the Scale!
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/LEAKGATE.HTM