By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 6.21.07 @ 12:08AM
Brute justice is an injustice, pure and simple. Just ask Richard Cohen.
WASHINGTON -- I find myself in unusual company, and I am always
so careful about the company I keep. Nonetheless, here I am arguing
on the same side as Washington Post columnist and
ritualistic liberal Richard Cohen and Christopher Hitchens. At
least Hitchens, a columnist for Vanity Fair and
Slate, is an independent man of the left. Yet here I am on
their side arguing for leniency for Vice President Richard Cheney's
former chief of staff, Scooter Libby. Having been found guilty of
lying under oath, he is about to be sent to prison before his
appeal is considered. In fact his prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald,
has urged he be sent to prison immediately because of his failure
to express remorse; though if he were to express remorse what
grounds would he have for an appeal? Fitzgerald is what is called a
"tough" prosecutor. I would call him something else, either a
failed logician or a brute.
While Libby's case was being shouted through the media and
adjudicated in court, I thought I would simply abide by whatever
the jury decided, notwithstanding my astonishment over a case that
was in every respect a monstrosity. I have written that the case
was a monstrosity, all the more so after it was reported that
Fitzgerald had known all along that the suspected crime he was
empowered to investigate was not a crime. Well, thought I, the jury
will sort things out. Unfortunately the brute prevailed, faulty
logic and all.
Now Cohen and Hitchens have raised serious questions of fairness
and proportion. Lying under oath is destructive to legal
proceedings and must not be permitted even by witnesses who are
otherwise innocent. On this we all agree. Yet we doubt that Libby
lied. In fact, I have long doubted that Libby is stupid enough to
tell the particular lie that he has been found guilty of. It meant
he lied about a long-ago telephone call with the journalist Tim
Russert. What is more, it meant that Libby assumed Russert would
somehow pick up on the lie and repeat it when asked about the
conversation in court, thus making himself a perjurer. What
actually happened is that Russert remembered the conversation
differently, said so in court, and cooked Libby's goose. As
Hitchens puts it, "If Scooter Libby goes to jail, it will be
because he made a telephone call to Tim Russert and because Tim
Russert has a different recollection of the conversation."
Libby's case came out of one of the most absurd news stories of
recent memory. That was the buffoonish Joseph Wilson IV's claim
that the White House sought to punish him for his
anti-Administration stand on weapons of mass destruction by
illegally leaking his wife's identity as a covert CIA agent. Soon
it was learned that Wilson had lied repeatedly. Next it transpired
that his wife was not at the time a covert CIA agent. Finally, by
now Fitzgerald had discovered that she was not covered by the law
and that no crime had been committed. Yet confusion soon was
discovered in Libby's testimony that could be interpreted as
perjury. Now millions of dollars of legal expenses since, Libby is
on his way to jail.
The case was a political scandal that left everyone appearing
scandalous, the White House, Wilson and his anti-war partisans, and
the press, particularly the New York Times. The
Times called for the prosecutors to investigate the source
of assumed White House leaks to the press. As a consequence, one
journalist was jailed and others were threatened. The
Times in its partisan zeal against the Bush White House
actually managed to reduce freedom of the press and open a new
avenue for government coercion of journalists. From the plagiarisms
of Jayson Blair to this latest reckless partisanship, the
Times continues to be its own worst enemy.
What is to be done? The President has the power to pardon and he
ought to pardon Libby. George W. Bush is, as I have observed him, a
tough-minded man of conscience. Surely he recognizes that Libby is
a victim of an overzealous prosecutor, a poisonously partisan
process, and a confused testimony. If Cohen and Hitchens can find
themselves on the same side with me on Libby, perhaps there are
liberal politicians who will too. Whatever the case is, the
President should act. Disgraced and possibly broke, Libby has
suffered enough.
topics:
Law