Couric & Co.
June 4, 2007 10:15 AM

Libby's Crime And Punishment

(Getty Images/Win McNamee)
Lawyer Andrew Cohen analyzes legal affairs for CBS News and CBSNews.com.

What ought to happen to good men when they do bad things and get caught? What should their punishment be? How should society balance the production and patriotism of an individual’s life with the misdeeds he performs while in high office? Those weighty questions will be answered, at least for one day and in one case, when U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton sentences I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby Tuesday for obstruction and perjury relating to the CIA leak investigation.

Federal prosecutors have asked Walton to aggressively sentence Libby, the former high-ranking White House official, to three years or so for lying to grand jurors and federal investigators when they asked him to explain his role in the improper and perhaps illegal disclosure of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson’s name to the media. In turn, Libby’s lawyers have asked Walton to give their client probation because of his wonderful career of public service. And the federal probation office involved in the Libby case is splitting the baby — recommending that Libby serve between one and two years in prison.

Libby’s lawyers are pleading for mercy and leniency by telling Walton that their client has been a pillar of the recent Washington establishment. Libby is a modern-day Wise Man, his legal tribunes claim, and thus has stored up his fair share of legal and political credits that now he ought to be able to cash in at the bench of justice. Not so, says special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald, who wants Walton to sentence Libby harshly not just as a symbol of what you are not supposed to do when the feds come calling — lie under oath — but also because Libby, a lawyer, should have known better than to try to subvert justice the way he did.

Whatever Walton decides will send a signal from the world of the law to the world of politics. After all, what Libby was doing when he tried to use the media to get back at the Wilsons (at the behest of his bosses) was not much different from what thousands of government officials do every year in this country; backstabbing someone anonymously to achieve a particular political end. And, of course, Libby’s lack of candor before the grand jury and when questioned by the feds also is not much different from what we have come to expect from our politicians — all politicians — when it comes to spinning and parsing their way around “those stubborn facts.” Except that Libby was under oath at the time.

I would bet the “over” here; bet that Libby receives a prison sentence from the judge that is somewhere between the minimum recommended by the probation folks and the minimum recommended by the prosecutor. And then we can all wait for Libby’s appeal to unfold and for President George W. Bush to determine whether he wants to pardon his vice-president’s former chief of staff. Do good men deserve leniency when they do bad things? You tell me. Some would argue that good men who do bad things aren’t good men any more.
Tags:
libby ,
perjury ,
scooter
Topics:
In The News

Video and Galleries

Add a Comment
by ramos937 June 4, 2007 12:37 PM PDT
In one wonderful scene, Sean Connery, playing an unrepentent crook, tells his grandson, "If you can't do the time, don't do the crime". Libby did the crime and must now do the time. To sentence him to probation would make a shambles of any future prosecurtions for basically the same type of crime.
Reply to this comment
by sanfelz June 4, 2007 12:48 PM PDT
The Republican theme of "personal responsibility" is quickly ignored when when that ethic would negatively impact someone they consider one of their own.
Libby, as an attorney, is an officer of the court and should be punished for his actions.
Reply to this comment
by jetranger7 June 4, 2007 1:20 PM PDT
"MANDATORY" - "25-YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISION", NO EXCUSES , NO EXCEPTIONS, NO IF ANDs OR BUTS !!!! TIME TO START LOCKING UP ALL AND ANY OF THESE LYING CORRUPT 2-FACED POLITICIANS, THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ARE GETTING FED-UP WITH THIS TYPE OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR, ENOUGH IS ENOUGH !!!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by lswonder June 4, 2007 2:54 PM PDT
Republicans insisted that President Clinton be impeached because he lied to a grand jury. We heard "Rule of Law" ad nauseum. Now when it's one of their own, we hear that Mr. Libby should be freed or pardoned because he only lied to a grand jury. Showing administration subordinates that they face jail should help us to have more honest administrations. Sent him up the river!
Reply to this comment
by mizpah63 June 4, 2007 11:24 PM PDT
The only difference between organized crime bosses and career politicians is the length of their sentences. We all know who spends more time in prison; we all know who should spend more time in prison.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 June 5, 2007 12:06 AM PDT
All American citizens who commit crimes must face the same legal sanctions, to even begin to posit that someone should be favorably treated by reason of station, be it economic, political, or otherwise, is to make a mockery of the intent of the founders of the country, who held "these truths to be self evident,that all men are created equal...".

Time will shortly bring to light that Mr. Bush, through malicious intent, rising to the level of treason, conspired to commit crimes against humanity, and is responsible for the deaths of 3,000+ Americans, and deliberately uncounted citizens of other sovereign states, for reason of personal enrichment, to "slap" him and his co-conspiritors "on the wrist" will be the same as pardoning Hitler and his cabinet for their crimes, and creates two classes of Americans, subject to different laws.

And so will end the history of one nation called the United States of America.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 June 5, 2007 12:19 AM PDT
As for Libby, he already got off light, the charge should have been "aiding and abetting an act of treason" as well as perjury.

All people are good until they do something bad, Ms. Couric, I fail to see how you can even ask such a question. Find the lyrics to an old song by George Clinton called "Cosmic Slop", and ask whether the protagonist of the song was good or bad. She was a victim of circumstance, while Mr. Libby (and all the way up to Mr. Bush)cannot make such a claim, so theirs is the worse crime.

Reply to this comment
by tomtomasters June 5, 2007 6:55 AM PDT
Maybe Guantanamo is a good place to start for Libby Liar. We all know he lied to cover for Cheney, Rove, and Bush. Bush will pardon him, and continue their organized crime gang in Washington. Where is Lee Harvey Oswald when you really need him?
Reply to this comment

About Couric & Co.

Go for a look behind the scenes at The CBS Evening News with Katie Couric for stuff we like and for surprises. It's also a place for you to post comments and join our conversation about the news.

Add to your favorite news reader
google
yahoo
msn
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented