DOJ Says Cheney's Testimony in
Valerie Plame Leak Classified
Records "protected from disclosure by the National
Security Act of 1947"
By Jason Leopold
The Public Record, September 21, 2008
go to original
See Article III.1
Conspiring to Reveal the Covert Identity
of an Intelligence Officer
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Vice President Cheney: His Plame
testimony now a state secret even as judge
orders his papers to be preserved upon his
leaving office.
source: Getty Images
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WASHINGTON The Department of Justice, in refusing
to release Vice President Dick Cheney’s interview
transcript with the special prosecutor who investigated
the leak of covert CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson
said for the first time last week that contents of
Cheney’s interview have been classified.
In a letter sent Thursday to Citizens of Responsibility
and Ethics in Washington (CREW), the government watchdog
group that filed a Freedom of Information Act request
last month seeking access to the transcript, the DOJ’s
Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) said the documents have
been withheld, in due part, because it contains information
“protected from disclosure by the National Security
Act.”
“We are withholding the records...because they
are protected by the deliberative process, presidential
communications, and law enforcement investigative
privileges,” states the Sept. 18 letter sent
by OLC attorney Paul Coborn to CREW chief counsel
Anne Weissman. “We are also withholding them...because
the records were compiled for law enforcement purposes
and their production “could reasonably be expected
to interfere with enforcement proceedings.”
“The Department is concerned that releasing
the records could interfere with future Department
investigations by discouraging voluntary cooperation.
“Finally, we are withholding portions of the
records...because they are classified and contain
information protected from disclosure by the National
Security Act of 1947.”
In a separate development, a federal judge on Saturday
ordered Cheney to preserve all documents during his
seven years as vice president. CREW sued the vice
president challenging Cheney's narrow interpretation
of his obligations under the Presidential Records
Act, based in large part on his claim that he is not
part of the executive branch. In granting CREW's request
for a preliminary injunction, the court rejected the
arguments of the White House that they were preserving
all vice presidential records, which they defined
narrowly to include only functions "specially
assigned" to the vice president by the president
and his duties as president of the Senate.
Henry Waxman, the Democratic chairman of the he House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee, subpoenaed
Attorney General Michael Mukasey in June for Cheney’s
interview transcript as well a copy the transcript
of President George W. Bush’s interview with
Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, and the grand
jury testimony of Karl Rove, Bush’s former top
aide.
But Mukasey did not state that the either of the
transcripts contained classified information when
he refused to comply with Waxman’s subpoena.
Mukasey advised Bush to assert his executive privilege
powers to block release of the transcripts.
“I am greatly concerned about the chilling
effect that compliance with the [House Oversight]
Committee's subpoena would have on future White House
deliberations and White House cooperation with future
Justice Department investigations,” Mukasey
wrote in a letter to Bush on July 16.
Yet Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor who
spent three years investigating White House officials’
role in the Plame leak, said in a letter sent to Waxman
in July that the interviews he conducted with Bush
and Cheney in 2004 were not protected by grand jury
secrecy rules and could arguably be turned over to
Congress if authorized by the Justice Department.
Moreover, Fitzgerald said that in his capacity as
special counsel he did not enter into a pre-arranged
agreement with the White House to keep secret Bush
and Cheney’s interview transcripts.
“I can advise you that as to any interviews
of either the President or Vice President not protected
by the rules of grand jury secrecy, there were no
"agreements, conditions and understandings between
the Office of Special Counsel or the Federal Bureau
of Investigation" and either the President or
Vice President "regarding the conduct and use
of the interview or interviews,” Fitzgerald’s
July 3 letter addressed to Waxman says.
Fitzgerald has turned over to Waxman’s committee
“FBI 302 reports” of interviews with CIA
and State Department officials and other individuals
involved in the CIA leak, Waxman said in a letter
to Mukasey last December.
But “the White House has been blocking Mr.
Fitzgerald from providing key documents to the Committee,"
including transcripts of Fitzgerald’s interviews
with Bush and Cheney, Waxman said.
Two senior DOJ officials knowledgeable about the
CIA leak investigation said Saturday that officials
in the Office of the Vice President issued a request
to the DOJ recently to classify Cheney’s transcript.
However, the DOJ officials did not know the exact
timing of when the DOJ classified portions of the
transcript. A DOJ spokesman did not return calls for
comment Saturday.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers has
also been actively pursuing the interview transcripts.
In June, he issued a subpoena to Mukasey for a wide-range
of documents related to Fitzgerald’s probe and
was also rejected.
Conyers and Waxman’s interest in the CIA leak
case was revived with the publication in June of former
White House press secretary McClellan’s memoir
which suggested Bush and Cheney played a larger role
in the matter than they have admitted publicly.
Conyers was set to hold a vote Sept. 10 on a contempt
citation for Mukasey for refusing to turn over the
subpoenaed documents to his panel but decided to “defer”
the matter when the DOJ reluctantly released 681-pages
of documents related to a voter identification law
implemented last year in the state of Georgia that
the Michigan Democrat had sought.
But in a letter sent to Conyers Sept. 9, Keith Nelson,
a deputy attorney general, did not say that Cheney’s
interview transcript was classified. Nelson said he
could not release the document because Bush had already
asserted executive privilege.
Senior Bush administration officials disclosed Valerie
Plame Wilson’s identity to several journalists
in June and July of 2003 amid White House efforts
to discredit her husband, former U.S. Ambassador Joseph
Wilson, for challenging Bush’s use of bogus
intelligence to justify invading Iraq.
Valerie Plame Wilson’s CIA employment was revealed
in a July 14, 2003, article by right-wing columnist
Robert Novak, effectively destroying her career. Two
months later, a CIA complaint to the Justice Department
sparked a criminal probe into the identity of the
leakers.
Initially, Bush professed not to know anything about
the matter, and several of his senior aides, including
political adviser Karl Rove and the vice president’s
chief of staff I. Lewis Libby, followed suit.
However, it later became clear that Rove and Libby
had a hand in the Plame leak and that Bush and Cheney
had helped organize a campaign to disparage Wilson
by giving critical information to friendly journalists.
On June 24, 2004, Fitzgerald interviewed Bush for
70 minutes about the Plame leak. The only other member
of the Bush team in the room during the meeting was
Jim Sharp, the private lawyer that Bush hired, according
to a press briefing by then-press secretary Scott
McClellan.
Fitzgerald had interviewed a couple of weeks earlier,
Cheney.
According to sources knowledgeable about the vice
president’s testimony, Cheney was specifically
asked about conversations he had with senior aides,
including Libby, and queried about whether he was
aware of a campaign led by White House officials to
leak Plame’s identity.
It is unknown how Cheney responded to those questions.
Cheney retained a private attorney, Terrence O’Donnell.
At the time of Waxman's comments, Fitzgerald’s
criminal investigation was still underway, leading
to Libby’s indictment in October 2005 and his
subsequent conviction in March 2007 on four counts
of perjury and obstruction of justice.
During closing arguments at Libby’s trial,
Cheney was implicated in the leak, as Fitzgerald acknowledged
that Cheney was intimately involved in the scandal
and may have told Libby to leak Plame's status to
the media.
Fitzgerald told jurors that his investigation into
the true nature of the vice president's involvement
was impeded because Libby obstructed justice.
Libby's attorney, Theodore Wells, told jurors during
his closing arguments that Fitzgerald had been trying
to build a case of conspiracy against the vice president
and Libby and that the prosecution believed Libby
may have lied to federal investigators and to a grand
jury to protect Cheney.
“Now, I think the government, through its questions,
really tried to put a cloud over Vice President Cheney,"
Wells said.
Rebutting Wells, Fitzgerald told jurors: "You
know what? [Wells] said something here that we're
trying to put a cloud on the vice president. We'll
talk straight. There is a cloud over the vice president.
He sent Libby off to [meet with New York Times reporter]
Judith Miller at the St. Regis Hotel. At that meeting
- the two-hour meeting - the defendant talked about
the wife [Plame]. We didn't put that cloud there.
That cloud remains because the defendant obstructed
justice and lied about what happened."
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