Karl Rove


Karl Rove announced that he is resigning. Good buy, evil assh*le, go back boil in your pit

I can only applaud Sen. John McCain for his opposition of Bush pro-torture stanza. As he knows what the torture is on his own proper ass, he is against it and is not afraid of the anger of Turd Blossom and Co.

I value his integrity and his hearty desire to be a good man in the party of assholes. But I still wonder – how come he is still a Republican?

So is Rove indicted or not? Why there are only denials and no reports? Simple. He was indicted but is bargaining a plea deal, which is still refused by Fitzerald. It could take a while, so be patient. Read

Thank you Mr. Patrick Fitzgerald. America stands on people like you. Thank you.

Thanks transparent greed for letting us to know that Rove is indeed the next target. It's amazing how many people from Bush inner circle are under criminal investigation. Surely, America is still a free country. In most places in the world the president would just stop all those investigations.

To answer this post, I want to point to my older post. Cheney managed to out the whole CIA cover company, Brewster-Jennings & Associates. If that's not a crime – then what's a crime?

More:

At the least, a dummy company ought to create the appearance of activity, with an office and a valid mailing address, he said. "A cover that falls apart on first inspection isn't very good. What you want is a cover that actually holds up . . . and this one certainly doesn't."

Some in the real estate industry believe something was amiss, if not illegal. "It's almost like out of a spy novel — the tenant that wasn't there," said Griffin, who once oversaw management of the tower. "And they picked a nice address."

The collapse of Plame's cover could compromise any other operatives who claimed to work for Brewster Jennings. Although former officials wouldn't confirm that Plame's cover company used the Arch Street address, they offered no other explanation of the phantom tenant.

My answer to this post, claiming that the latest Fitzgerald filing is invalidating the case against Bush, because uranium claim was not so important.

I'm sorry ma'm, but you have no clue. Nobody is suing anyone for leaking classified or rather quickly de-classified information. The event that triggered the investigation was the blew-up of the fake front company that was pretending to be an energy materials trader and operated on Pakistan and Iran black market, specifically focused on Iran nuclear efforts. The cover was blown up and the company ceased to exist.

The investigation was set to determine the source of the leak to cut hairy tails quickly. The Bush, Cheney and Co denial of involvement had suggested that there is a real problem with classified information. Someone somewhere just knows too much. That damages the whole net of operations, because you don't know what the other side knows anymore.

If the secret service knew from the day one that the source of the operation blew-up is just this stupid idiot Bush, they would cut the damage more efficiently than otherwise. But Bush went onto denial and misled them.

The crime is not the leak. Big deal, we know what kind of idiots are located in WH, so we can expect them to do stupid things. The crime is obstruction of investigation. This whole crowd: Bush, Cheney, Card, Rice, Hadley must be prosecuted for perjury and obstruction of justice, as soon as possible. Let them leak besides the bars.

Reported here and here (and ridiculed by some moron here): the Cheney’s outing of Valerie Wilson (Plame) triggered the outing the chain of other agents working in Iran. The damage is possibly very huge – say thanks to Cheney, Libby and Rove.

It was also reported that the information about Plame was directly stolen from Bush morning briefings. Assuming those briefings are chewed enough to adjust for Bush intelligence, he was also quite aware of what was happening.

Reported here and here: Libby testified that Cheney authorized him the Plame leak. That’s a boomer!

I recall an article somewhere here that Cheney was supposed to deliver Libby $3 million cash to compensate him for covering his ass. What exactly happened? Maybe Libby asked too much, maybe Cheney was not able to fetch his funds from closely watched now offshore locations where he keeps his retirement savings from taxes – it is clear that Libby did not get the money.

I wonder if Cheney will collect now some cash in his turn to cover the ass of other White House folks? It will be too late to give some to Libby, I’m afraid…

What’s interesting is that apparently Libby was extremely clever from the day one. His back-up plan was to be accused, if ever, just in perjury so that he can either get a huge kick-back from Cheney and be rich, or strike a deal with Fitz and be free. Either way he is either rich or free, and Cheney is either poor or behind the bar.

Monica was just waisting her time, this WH is such a golden pipe…

Just to not forget how Plame investigation is moving, this article will remind us that Cheney stuff were shredding important documents related to Plamegate affair.

Fitzgerald, who is fighting Libby’s request, said in a letter to Libby’s lawyers that many e-mails from Cheney’s office at the time of the Plame leak in 2003 have been deleted contrary to White House policy.

More reading here.

Fitzgerald said on his press conference:

But I think what we see here today, when a vice president’s chief of staff is charged with perjury and obstruction of justice, it does show the world that this is a country that takes its law seriously; that all citizens are bound by the law.

But what we need to also show the world is that we can also apply the same safeguards to all our citizens, including high officials. Much as they must be bound by the law, they must follow the same rules.

So I ask everyone involved in this process, anyone who participates in this trial, anyone who covers this trial, anyone sitting home watching these proceedings to follow this process with an American appreciation for our values and our dignity.

Indeed.

Let me also point to the article titled “One indictment for a thousand crimes”, which nails down the whole story better than any before. 

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