FROM MEDIA MATTERS:
Media repeated Libby lawyer's falsehood that Woodward
revelations contradict Fitzgerald
http://mediamatters.org/items/200511170011
In response to Washington Post assistant managing editor Bob
Woodward's recent disclosure that he testified under oath on
November 14 that he had learned from a senior administration
official in mid-June 2003 about CIA operative Valerie Plame,
lawyers for I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby claimed that this
revelation undermined one of special counsel Patrick J.
Fitzgerald's key allegations against Libby. Attorney Ted Wells
stated that, in his announcement of Libby's indictment for
perjury, obstruction of justice, and false statements,
Fitzgerald asserted that Libby "was the first government
official to tell a reporter" about Plame -- a statement now
proven to be "totally inaccurate," according to Wells. But Wells
has misrepresented what Fitzgerald actually said: that Libby
"was the first official known to have told a reporter" this
information [emphasis added].
Later in the press conference, Fitzgerald repeated that Libby
was the first official to disclose Plame's identity to a
reporter -- this time without the qualifier. But by making it
clear at the outset that Libby was only the first official known
to have disclosed the information, as MSNBC host Keith Olbermann
noted in a weblog post, "Fitzgerald was clearly and meticulously
leaving his case open in case an earlier leaker later turned up
-- as evidently he just did."
Despite Fitzgerald's use of this crucial qualifier, numerous
news outlets and media figures have repeated Wells's claim --
that Woodward's disclosure contradicted what Fitzgerald said --
as fact. They include the Associated Press, The Washington Post,
NBC News correspondent David Shuster, Fox News chief Washington
correspondent Jim Angle, ABC News correspondent Elizabeth
Vargas, and others.
On November 16, Wells declared in a written statement that
Fitzgerald's assertion was "totally inaccurate":
First, the disclosure [by Woodward] shows that Mr. Fitzgerald's
statement at his press conference of Oct. 28, 2005, that Mr.
Libby was the first government official to tell a reporter about
Mr. Wilson's wife was totally inaccurate.
Here is what Fitzgerald actually said in the opening statement
of his October 28 press conference:
FITZGERALD: Valerie Wilson's cover was blown in July 2003. The
first sign of that cover being blown was when [syndicated
columnist] Mr. [Robert] Novak published a column on July 14th,
2003.
But Mr. Novak was not the first reporter to be told that
Wilson's wife, Valerie [Plame] Wilson, Ambassador Wilson's wife
Valerie, worked at the CIA. Several other reporters were told.
In fact, Mr. Libby was the first official known to have told a
reporter when he talked to Judith Miller in June of 2003 about
Valerie Wilson.
In putting forth the claim that Woodward's revelation
"contradicted" Fitzgerald's stated version of events, several
media figures highlighted Fitzgerald's subsequent statement,
made during the question-and-answer portion of the press
conference:
FITZGERALD: At the end of the day what appears is that Mr.
Libby's story that he was at the tail end of a chain of phone
calls, passing on from one reporter what he heard from another,
was not true.
It was false. He was at the beginning of the chain of phone
calls, the first official to disclose this information outside
the government to a reporter. And then he lied about it
afterwards, under oath and repeatedly.
But in citing or referring only to this later statement,
numerous news outlets and media figures have presented a
distorted and incomplete version of what Fitzgerald said.
From the November 16 Associated Press article headlined
"Woodward Claim on CIA Leak Disputes Charge":
Bob Woodward's version of when and where he learned the identity
of a CIA operative contradicts a special prosecutor's contention
that Vice President Dick Cheney's top aide was the first to make
the disclosure to reporters.
From the November 17 Washington Post article headlined "Woodward
Could Be A Boon To Libby":
Legal experts said Woodward provided two pieces of new
information that cast at least a shadow of doubt on the public
case against Libby, Vice President Cheney's former chief of
staff, who has been indicted on perjury and obstruction of
justice charges.
Woodward testified Monday that contrary to Special Counsel
Patrick J. Fitzgerald's public statements, a senior government
official -- not Libby -- was the first Bush administration
official to tell a reporter about Plame and her role at the CIA.
Woodward also said that Libby never mentioned Plame in
conversations they had on June 23 and June 27, 2003, about the
Iraq war, a time when the indictment alleges Libby was eagerly
passing information about Plame to reporters and colleagues.
From the November 16 edition of CNN's Live From ...:
KELLI ARENA (CNN correspondent): There are some lawyers who say
that this at least raises reasonable doubt, and that's because
Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor, came out and said
that Lewis Libby was the first person who had spoken to
reporters about Valerie Plame. And if Woodward's timetable is
correct, then he was not the first official to speak to the
press about Valerie Plame.
From the November 16 broadcast of ABC's World News Tonight:
VARGAS: Here in Washington, a lot of people are talking about a
surprising new development in the CIA leak investigation.
Renowned Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward says he found out
about the CIA agent's identity a month before it was revealed in
a newspaper column. This is significant because the special
prosecutor in the case has accused the vice president's chief of
staff, Scooter Libby, of being the first person to leak the
name. Now, that claim is very much in question because The
Washington Post said Mr. Woodward learned about the name from
someone else.
From the November 16 edition of Fox News' Special Report with
Brit Hume:
ANGLE: A surprising development in the CIA leak case today as
Bob Woodward said he told prosecutors he'd been told that Joe
Wilson's wife worked at the CIA a month before Scooter Libby is
accused of telling reporters, undercutting one of the key
assertions of the prosecutor, that Libby was the original
source.
[...]
ANGLE: When special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald announced the
indictment of Libby, one of the key assertions in the charges
was that no one really knew Wilson's wife worked at the CIA
until Libby disclosed it, that in effect, he started the whole
thing.
FITZGERALD [video clip]: He was at the beginning of the chain of
the phone calls, the first official to disclose this information
outside the government to a reporter, and that he lied about it
afterwards, under oath, and repeatedly.
[...]
ANGLE: One of Libby's lawyers, Ted Wells, told Fox "Woodward's
disclosures are a bombshell to Mr. Fitzgerald's case," that the
assertion Libby was the original source "was totally
inaccurate."
From the November 16 edition of MSNBC's Hardball:
SHUSTER: Woodward's conversation with the unnamed senior
official came before Libby spoke about the Wilsons to reporters,
and therefore Woodward's conversation could help Libby's defense
team show that at least one claim about Libby was wrong.
FITZGERALD [video clip]: He was at the beginning of the chain of
the phone calls, the first official to disclose this information
outside the government to a reporter.
SHUSTER: Libby, though, who was at the courthouse today
examining pretrial documents, is charged with obstructing the
investigation, and legal experts say a change in the prosecution
leak chronology may not matter very much in the Libby case.
Several other media figures attributed to Wells the claim that
Fitzgerald's statement had been proven "totally inaccurate," but
failed to correct it.
From the November 16 edition of Fox News' DaySide:
JULIET HUDDY (co-host): There was a Washington Post story this
morning that says Bob Woodward, the famous journalist, learned
about Valerie Plame, you remember her -- she is the former CIA
worker. He learned about her the month before Bob Novak's column
was published. So this obviously takes a little bit of oomph out
of Patrick Fitzgerald's case -- the special prosecutor's case.
MIKE JERRICK (co-host): And Woodward says he knew who she was.
So let's talk a little more about that. Mr. Libby was the first
government -- I mean, statements that Mr. Libby was the first
government official to tell about a reporter about Mr. Wilson's
wife's employment at the CIA was totally inaccurate then,
according to Ted Wells, Libby's attorney.
From the November 17 edition of NBC's Today:
RUSSERT: Well, the Libby lawyers have called it a bombshell,
because they're saying that Mr. Fitzgerald, the special counsel,
said that the first public official to talk to a reporter about
Joseph Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, was Scooter Libby and now
Mr. Woodward seems to contradict that. The Libby lawyers will
then suggest, well, you see that shows the investigation was not
as comprehensive as it should have been.
From the November 17 edition of MSNBC's Connected Coast to
Coast:
O'DONNELL: Scooter Libby's attorney, Ted Wells, says it is a
bombshell. He says that it tears apart special prosecutor
Patrick Fitzgerald's case that Libby was the first person to
reveal this to a reporter and that Libby was involved in some
kind of scheme. Wells says that the revelation by Bob Woodward
that he, in fact, was the first reporter to learn this
information shows that the special prosecutor's case is
baseless. The Washington Times today, in an editorial, is
calling on special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to drop the
charges against Scooter Libby. Still, Scooter Libby was charged
on five counts, an indictment accusing him of perjury,
obstruction of justice, and making false statements.
— J.K.
Posted to the web on Thursday November 17, 2005 at 6:18 PM EST