Originally published July 4, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified July 4, 2007 at 2:03 AM
Bush won't rule out Libby pardon
President Bush held out the possibility Tuesday that he eventually may pardon I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby as the White House sought to fend...
The Washington Post

President Bush explained his decision.

"Scooter" Libby was top aide to the vice president.
WASHINGTON — President Bush held out the possibility Tuesday that he eventually may pardon I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby as the White House sought to fend off Democratic outrage and conservative disappointment over the president's decision to commute the 30-month prison term of the vice president's former chief of staff.
A day after he intervened to keep Libby out of prison, Bush refused to reject the idea of issuing a full pardon, which some conservatives have been urging him to grant. A pardon would erase the four felony convictions Libby received for lying to federal investigators about his role in a White House leak of a covert CIA officer's identity.
"As to the future," the president told reporters, "I rule nothing in or nothing out."
Meanwhile, the federal judge who presided over Libby's trial said Tuesday that the elimination of the prison term calls into question another part of Libby's sentence.
When Bush announced his decision Monday evening, he emphasized that Libby still faced what the president characterized as a "harsh" sentence, and noted that he was leaving in place a $250,000 fine and two years of supervised probation.
On Tuesday, however, U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton, a Bush appointee, filed a court order saying that federal law "does not appear to contemplate a situation in which a defendant may be placed under supervised release without first completing a term of incarceration."
Walton asked prosecutors and defense lawyers to tell the court by Monday how they think the matter should be handled "in unusual circumstances such as these."
As the judge tried to sort through the legal fallout, congressional Democrats began to mine the political consequences of the president's action. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., announced a hearing next week to explore what he called "the presidential authority to grant clemency and how such power may be abused."
"Taken to its extreme," he said, "the use of such authority could completely circumvent the law-enforcement process and prevent credible efforts to investigate wrongdoing in the executive branch."
Libby, 56, was Vice President Dick Cheney's top aide and a key figure in forging the administration's foreign policy until he was indicted in 2005. He was the only person charged in a three-year federal investigation, led by Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, of whether any administration officials broke the law when they leaked to reporters the identity of covert CIA officer Valerie Plame. No one was charged with the leak itself.
Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, was sent by the CIA to evaluate reports that Iraq was trying to buy uranium in Africa for a nuclear-weapons program. Wilson concluded that the reports were inaccurate. Shortly after the Iraq war started in 2003, he accused the White House of distorting intelligence to convince the public that the invasion was justified.
Libby was one of four high-ranking administration officials found to have leaked Plame's identity to Washington, D.C., journalists. Prosecutors said the leak was part of a White House campaign to tarnish Wilson's reputation by insinuating that Plame had a role in his selection for the Africa mission.
White House press secretary Tony Snow sought to portray the president's action as a middle ground that avoids what Bush has called an "excessive" prison term while leaving the felony conviction intact.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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