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by BooMan
Richard Cohen is probably the single worst columnist in America today. He's the worst because he combines all the worst traits of a lazy Beltway journalist with a spot on the coveted Washington Post op-ed pages. Richard Blair reminds us that Mr. Cohen is at least...consistent. When George Herbert Walker Bush pardoned the Iran-Contra crew on Christmas Eve 1992, Cohen was ecstatic. I've got some excerpts from the column via Lexis-Nexis.
...when Weinberger was indicted by Lawrence E. Walsh, the special Iran-contra prosecutor, I despaired. Lying to Congress 'might not warrant jail time' if it is done in a political context. Fifteen years later, Cohen makes the same assertion about lying to grand juries.
I have come to hate the war and I cannot approve of lying under oath -- not by Scooter, not by Bill Clinton, not by anybody. But the underlying crime is absent, the sentence is excessive and the investigation should not have been conducted in the first place. This is a mess. Should Libby be pardoned? Maybe. Should his sentence be commuted? Definitely. Why is Mr. Cohen lazy? Because the underlying crime is not absent, the sentence is at the low end of the sentencing guidelines, and the outing of an undercover intelligence operative should certainly be investigated. I keep writing about this because the enemies of the truth are so relentless. The 'underlying crime' was not charged. There's a reason it was not charged...but before I get to that let me return to Patrick Fitzgerald's response to the 'no underlying crime' defense. FITZGERALD: I'll be blunt. But why wasn't Libby charged with an underlying crime, like leaking classified information or violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act? Fitzgerald explained that, too.
QUESTION: The indictment describes Lewis Libby giving classified information concerning the identify of a CIA agent to some individuals who were not eligible to receive that information. Can you explain why that does not, in and of itself, constitute a crime? I know Mr. Cohen is dumb, but what Fitzgerald is saying here is that it is very hard to prove both that Libby knew all the information (about Plame, and from the NIE) was classified AND that he acted with recklessness. He's saying that Libby's obstruction of his investigation made it difficult for him to prove the underlying crimes. But, since there were underlying crimes..thirty months in prison will vindicate the public's interest. The money quote?
"It's not as if you say, 'Well, this person was convicted but under the wrong statute.'" That's how the Justice system works. And it doesn't matter if you push your own shopping cart in the supermarket. And it doesn't matter if you have a white collar.
As any prosecutor knows -- and Martha Stewart can attest -- white-collar types tend to have a morbid fear of jail. Sorry, Cohen, I don't care if your friends don't want to go to pound-me-in-the-ass prison. If they had done something about prison rape when they were in positions of power the experience of jail wouldn't be so terrifying to them now. Fifteen years ago, Cohen said the Iran-Contra six didn't deserve jail time for lying to Congress in a political context. Today, he says this:
This is not an entirely trivial matter since government officials should not lie to grand juries, but neither should they be called to account for practicing the dark art of politics. If I hadn't just written this, I'd say 'I'm speechless'.
Richard Cohen on White-Collar Crime | 5 comments (5 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Richard Cohen on White-Collar Crime | 5 comments (5 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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