Wednesday, March 07, 2007

As it turns out, the schmuck who chose 'Prosecutor Pat' Fitzgerald to investigate the Valerie Plame leak has already been punished by the Bush regime

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Yesterday I was expressing sympathy (after a fashion) for the presumably unknown schmuck who threw "Prosecutor Pat" Fitzgerald's name into the mix to investigate the Valerie Plame leak when it finally penetrated then-AG John Ashcroft's leadlike skull that he couldn't investigate the administration he was part of. Well, it turns out that the culprit's identity is known, and he has already paid the price for his crime, as Michael Froomkin has chronicled on Discourse.net (there are links in this post which you can check out on-site):

An Honest Man

It’s often forgotten how it came to be that uber prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald got appointed Special Counsel for the Plame investigation. After a period of Attorney General John Ashcroft’s dithering and meddling, it finally dawned on someone that Ashcroft was conflicted out from the Plame case given the likelihood that the White House was involved, so responsibility for deciding what should be done passed to his deputy, James B. Comey. In his capacity as Acting Attorney General, Mr. Comey selected Patrick Fitzgerald because Comey believed Fitzgerald was the best US Attorney in the nation, and thus the best person for the job. (Comey behaved with similar rectitude when he took a principled stand against unfettered domestic surveillance.) And in due course, naturally, Comey got punished for his honesty, being passed over for the top job at Justice, landing on his feet at a defense contractor.

So if you are the sort of person who will celebrate today’s verdict in the Libby trial, not vindictively, but as welcome evidence that the system works (sometimes), then perhaps you might also raise one toast for James B. Comey, patriot.

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