Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump pardons Cheney aide Libby

- Gregory Korte

WASHINGTON – President Donald

Trump has pardoned I. Lewis “Scooter”

Libby, the George W. Bush administra­tion aide convicted of lying to the FBI in an investigat­ion into a leak of the identity of a covert CIA agent.

The pardon marks a stunning epilogue to a story of Bush administra­tion intrigue, as Libby was a central figure in attempts to discredit reports that the government manipulate­d intelligen­ce in order to justify the invasion of Iraq.

“I don’t know Mr. Libby,” Trump said in a statement.

“But for years I have heard that he has been treated unfairly. Hopefully, this full pardon will help rectify a very sad portion of his life.”

But it also comes amid an FBI investigat­ion into the Trump administra­tion and attempts by Trump and his allies to discredit former FBI Director James Comey – who was the Justice Department official with oversight over the Libby case in 2005. Comey, who was fired by Trump last year, has just written a book calling Trump “unethical and untethered to truth.”

Democrats saw the pardon as a transparen­t attempt by Trump to thwart the investigat­ion into whether his associates colluded with Russia to interfere in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“This pardon sends a troubling signal to the president’s allies that obstructin­g justice will be rewarded,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, DCalif. “The suggestion that those who lie under oath may be rewarded with pardons poses a threat to the integrity of the special counsel investigat­ion and to our democracy.”

Libby was the chief of staff to then-Vice President Dick Cheney, who became a key figure in what became known as the Valerie Plame affair.

Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, was a former ambassador asked by the CIA to confirm whether the Iraqi regime had tried to obtain raw uranium known as “yellowcake” to make nuclear weapons. Wilson said he found no such evidence and wrote an op-ed in The New York Times saying so.

Cheney had asserted that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein was trying to obtain nuclear weapons. And so Libby told journalist­s it was Plame who decided to send her husband on the mission – thus blowing her cover as a CIA agent.

But one of those journalist­s, New York Times reporter Judith Miller, recanted her grand jury testimony in 2015.

In her book, she wrote that special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald cajoled her into testifying against Libby, causing her to give an incomplete and misleading account of her conversati­ons with him.

Libby was convicted of lying to the FBI and was sentenced to 30 months in prison in 2007. A month later, Bush commuted his prison sentence – but specifical­ly required him to complete a two-year probation, pay $250,000 fine and perform 400 hours of community service.

That commutatio­n fell short of the full pardon Cheney, whom Libby served as chief of staff, had urged Bush to grant. A pardon would restore all of Libby’s civil rights.

In pardoning Libby on Friday, the White House cited Miller’s disavowal of her testimony and the fact that the District of Columbia Court of Appeals reinstated his license to practice law in 2016.

The Libby case has some parallels with the current wide-ranging investigat­ion into Trump associates – and even some of the players are the same.

Comey was then the deputy attorney general, and he appointed a special counsel to oversee the FBI investigat­ion. The FBI was then led by Robert Mueller, now the special counsel in the Trump investigat­ion.

Justice Department officials said Friday that Libby did not have a pardon applicatio­n pending with the Office of the Pardon Attorney – a process that requires an FBI background check.

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