No Easy Answers


Thursday, May 25, 2006

Government's Reply to Libby's Response Re: News Articles [Doc 110]

Link to Exhibits A-C, which are referenced in the pleading below.


     Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW           Document 110        Filed 05/24/2006      Page 1 of 10



                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                             FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA                      )
                                              )       CR. NO 05-394 (RBW)
                v.                            )
                                              )
I. LEWIS LIBBY,                               )
      also known as "Scooter Libby"           )

              REPLY TO THE RESPONSE OF I. LEWIS LIBBY TO
        GOVERNMENT'S RESPONSE TO COURT'S INQUIRY REGARDING
       NEWS ARTICLES THE GOVERNMENT INTENDS TO OFFER AT TRIAL

        The Government submits the following in reply to the "Response of I. Lewis Libby to

Government's Response to Court's Inquiry Regarding News Articles The Government Intends to

Offer as Evidence at Trial." ("Response").

                                       INTRODUCTION

        In his Response, defendant makes only one new argument in support of his claim of

entitlement to broad discovery of materials relating to potential witnesses, as well as to others

employed by the government agencies that employed those witnesses. Defendant asserts that, by

arguing the relevance of the Vice President's handwritten annotations of the July 6, 2003, New York

Times Op Ed by former Ambassador Joseph Wilson (the "Wilson Op Ed"), the government has

broadly acknowledged that the mental state of persons other than the defendant is relevant to

defendant's guilt or innocence. Therefore, defendant argues, the government cannot logically resist

discovery of documents reflecting the views of other potential witnesses concerning Mr. Wilson and

his trip to Niger.

        Contrary to defendant's suggestion, the relevance of the Vice President's annotations of the

Wilson Op Ed is not remotely comparable to the purported relevance of the documents defendant


                                                  1

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW            Document 110        Filed 05/24/2006       Page 2 of 10



seeks in his Third Motion to Compel. As the defendant admitted in his grand jury testimony, he

communicated extensively with the Vice President regarding the Wilson Op Ed during the relevant

period, and received direction from the Vice President regarding his response to the Wilson Op Ed.

The Vice President's handwritten notes on a clipping of the Wilson Op Ed, which reflect his views

concerning Mr. Wilson and his wife, are evidence of the views the Vice President communicated

during the conversations that the Vice President and his chief of staff had during the period

immediately following the publication of the Wilson Op Ed, and corroborate other evidence

regarding these communications, which are central to the government's proof that defendant

knowingly made false statements to federal agents and the grand jury. Accordingly, the Vice

President's annotations of the Wilson Op Ed are uniquely relevant to the issues of this case. ^1

       No comparable nexus exists with respect to any views concerning Mr. Wilson and his wife

that may have been held or expressed to persons other than the defendant by the other individuals

concerning whom defendant seeks discovery in the Third Motion to Compel. None of these

individuals were defendant's immediate superior. None of them directed defendant's actions with

respect to a response to the Wilson Op Ed. In fact, defendant's relevant contacts with former Under

Secretary of State Marc Grossman, cited by defendant as illustrating the relevance of the state of

mind of others, were limited to defendant's request for, and receipt of, information concerning Mr.

Wilson's trip in May and June 2003.

       Shorn of its efforts to misconstrue the government's argument concerning the relevancy of

the Vice President's annotations to the Wilson Op Ed, defendant's Response amounts to a reiteration


       1
         The government does not purport to recite here all the reasons why the annotated
Wilson Op Ed is admissible at trial as this issue arises in the context of a discovery motion, not a
motion in limine.

                                                 2

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW            Document 110        Filed 05/24/2006       Page 3 of 10



of his previously-stated position that he needs broad discovery in order to help him prepare cross-

examinations of government witnesses (including by demonstrating bias), show the context of the

defendant's alleged crimes, and demonstrate his client's state of mind. As the government

previously has argued, ^2 defendant's expansive discovery requests are inconsistent with applicable

case law and amount to a demand to conduct a fishing expedition through the government's files.

The government has produced to defendant all documents received from any source which relate

to conversations, correspondence, or meetings in which defendant was involved, or which relate to

the defendant's inquiries regarding former Ambassador Joseph Wilson's trip to Niger, including all

documents reflecting relevant communications between defendant and any of the individuals

concerning whom defendant seeks discovery in the Third Motion to Compel. The government has

gone beyond its obligations under Rule 16 to produce additional materials from the Office of Vice

President, Central Intelligence Agency and the State Department that relate generally to Mr. Wilson's

trip. Defendant is entitled to no more.




       2
          The government will not re-argue here the points made in its earlier submissions, and
will not argue in advance issues related to admissibility of evidence that are not necessary to a
determination of defendant's pending discovery motion.

                                                 3

     Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW           Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006       Page 4 of 10



                                           ARGUMENT

I.     The Annotated Wilson Op Ed is Relevant to Establish that Defendant's Immediate
       Superior Was Concerned that Mr. Wilson Was Sent on a "Junket" by his Wife, and
       Communicated His Concern to Defendant. ^3

       While defendant testified before the grand jury that he did not recall seeing the copy of the

annotated Wilson Op Ed until it was shown to him by the FBI in the fall of 2003, as discussed below,

he also testified that he discussed the substance of the Wilson Op Ed with the Vice President and

their conversations included discussion of issues reflected in the Vice President's handwritten notes.

More specifically, during his first grand jury appearance on March 5, 2005, defendant testified in

general terms that he did not remember in any detail his first conversation with the Vice President

about the Wilson Op Ed, but he did recall that the Vice President was upset that the column in his


       3
           Any suggestion that defendant would have to have seen the annotated Wilson Op Ed for
it to be relevant or admissible is meritless. Whether or not defendant ever saw the annotated
Wilson Op Ed, it is relevant and admissible to establish some of the facts noted by defendant's
immediate superior, including the suspicion that Mr. Wilson's wife had "sen[t] him on a junket,"
(handwriting annotated on the Wilson Op Ed), and that his superior communicated these facts to
defendant at or near the time the Wilson Op Ed was published.
         Evidence that the defendant understood the concern that Mr. Wilson might have been
"sen[t] . . . on a junket" by his wife shortly after July 6 would directly contradict defendant's
testimony that he did not recall knowing on July 12 that Mr. Wilson had a wife and did not think
at that time that the wife might have been involved in sending Mr. Wilson on the trip. See
"Government's Response to Court's Inquiry Regarding News Articles the Government Intends to
Offer as Evidence at Trial" at p. 6-7.
         Nor does the annotated Wilson Op Ed present authentication problems. The document
could be authenticated through the testimony of the Vice President, or under Fed. R. Evid.
902(6)("printed material[] purporting to be newspaper[] . . . ." is self-authenticating) and Fed R.
Evid. 901(b)(2) ("Nonexpert opinion on handwriting"). See generally Fed. R. Evid. 901(a)(all
that is required is "evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its
proponent claims"). Contrary to defendant's assertion, the government has not represented that it
does not intend to call the Vice President as a witness at trial. To the best of government's
counsel's recollection, the government has not commented on whether it intends to call the Vice
President as a witness, and the representations it has made regarding the identity of potential
government witnesses have been limited to responses to the defense assertions in defendant's
Third Motion to Compel.

                                                  4

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW            Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006        Page 5 of 10



view falsely attacked his credibility. (March 5, 2004, Grand Jury Transcript at 79.) Defendant then

testified that the Vice President told him repeatedly that he wanted to "get the truth out," including

"all the facts about what he had or hadn't done; what the facts were or were not." (March 5, 2004,

Grand Jury Transcript at 81; see Exhibit A.) Defendant recalled discussing with the Vice President

the issues reflected in the Vice President's handwritten notes but testified that he believed that they

did not discuss the specific issue of Wilson's wife's employment until after the July 14, 2003,

publication of the Novak column, or at least not before the defendant's conversation with Tim

Russert on July 10 or 11, 2003. Ex. A at 84-86. Defendant further testified that the Wilson Op Ed

was discussed in the White House on a daily basis and on multiple occasions each day during the

week following July 6, 2003. ^4 Ex. A at 81.

       During his second grand jury appearance on March 24, 2004, defendant reaffirmed that he

discussed the issue of Mr. Wilson's wife's employment with the Vice President. (March 24, 2004,

Grand Jury Transcript at 83-84 and 86-91, copies of which are annexed as Exhibits B and C.)

Specifically, defendant testified that the Vice President "at times" expressed suspicion regarding why

Mr. Wilson was selected to go on the mission, in light of Mr. Wilson's marital relationship, and

made comments about Mr. Wilson's wife working at the CIA. Ex. B at 83. Defendant placed these

conversations in "late July, maybe September," and in any event not before defendant's conversation

with Tim Russert. Id. at 83-84. Defendant testified that of the issues addressed in the Vice

President's annotations of the Wilson Op Ed that were discussed, only the discussion about Mr.

Wilson's wife "might not have occurred" during the week of July 7, 2003. Ex. C at 91. Defendant



       4
         The President and several other officials traveled to Africa during this period. However,
the Vice President and the defendant did not travel with them.

                                                  5

      Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW          Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006       Page 6 of 10



also testified that he was unsure whether he and the Vice President discussed Ms. Wilson's

employment aboard Air Force Two on July 12, 2003, although he did not recall doing so. Ex. B at

84.

        Defendant's testimony discussed above makes clear that defendant talked to the Vice

President multiple times about the Wilson Op Ed and that, during one or more of these

conversations, the Vice President discussed with defendant issues noted in the Vice President's

handwritten annotations ­ including the issue of Mr. Wilson's wife's employment at the CIA.

Therefore, the annotations corroborate the government's other evidence indicating that these issues

were communicated to defendant by his immediate superior, who also directed defendant during the

critical week after July 6 to get out into the public "all" the facts in response to the Wilson Op Ed.

        The fact that comments regarding Wilson's wife were included among the Vice President's

annotations also supports the proposition that defendant's conversation with the Vice President

regarding Mr. Wilson's wife more likely than not occurred shortly after the publication of the Wilson

Op Ed, rather than later, as defendant claimed. ^5 Evidence placing defendant's conversation with the

Vice President shortly after the publication of the Wilson Op Ed also corroborates the accounts of

a number of government witnesses who will testify that defendant discussed Mr. Wilson's wife on

or before July 8, 2003. Thus, the annotated Wilson Op Ed is highly, and uniquely, relevant to a

determination regarding the truthfulness of defendant's testimony that he did not recall information



        5
            To be clear, the government's argument is not (as the defendant claims) that it is more
likely that the Vice President discussed these issues with defendant merely because he wrote
them down but, rather that, in light of the Vice President's annotation of the Wilson Op Ed with
the words, "Did Wilson's wife send him on a junket?," it is unlikely that, as defendant testified,
the issue was not discussed in defendant's repeated conversations with the Vice President during
the week following the Wilson Op Ed's publication.

                                                  6

      Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW          Document 110        Filed 05/24/2006       Page 7 of 10



regarding Mr. Wilson's wife's employment prior to his conversation with Tim Russert on July 11,

2003.

II.     Documents Related to Other Witnesses Have No Comparable Relevance.

        The defense argues:

        In the same way that the government finds the views of the Vice President regarding Wilson
        and his trip relevant to its case, the defense finds the views of other government officials,
        such as former Under Secretary of State Marc Grossman, regarding Ms. Wilson relevant to
        its case . . . . Just as Mr. Libby was interacting with the Vice President regarding Mr.
        Wilson's charges, so was he also interacting with Mr. Grossman and other government
        officials and their respective agencies.

Response at 5.

        This argument ignores the fact that the Vice President was the defendant's immediate

superior with whom the defendant worked daily and closely, and from whom defendant received

direction regarding the response to be made to the Wilson Op Ed. Understanding what conversations

took place between the Vice President and the defendant during the week of July 7, 2003, is critical

to determining relevant issues in the case: whether defendant recalled Wilson's wife's employment

prior to the conversation with Tim Russert on July 10 or 11, and whether defendant thought it

necessary or appropriate to disclose that fact to reporters that week. Understanding what other

government officials knew or thought about Mr. Wilson's Op Ed simply is not.

        The Vice President ­ not Mr. Grossman or any of the other potential witnesses concerning

whom defendant seeks additional discovery ­ specifically directed the defendant to speak to reporters

during the week following the publication of the Wilson Op Ed. At the time, the Vice President ­

rather than other potential witnesses ­ was upset that his personal credibility had been attacked,

unfairly in his view.



                                                 7

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW            Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006        Page 8 of 10



       By his own account, defendant understood from the Vice President that it was necessary to

get out "all" the facts in response to the Wilson Op Ed. The response to the Wilson Op Ed was a

matter of repeated discussion between the defendant and the Vice President following its publication.

The same cannot be said of the other potential witnesses. As to Mr. Grossman, for example ­ the

only witness other than the Vice President to whom defendant refers in his Response ­ the relevant

conversations between defendant and Mr. Grossman took place in late May and early June, when

defendant asked questions about the unnamed former ambassador who traveled to Niger, and Mr.

Grossman reported information in response to defendant's inquiry. There is no evidence that

defendant and Mr. Grossman had any relevant conversation after that time frame. While in May and

June the defendant likely asked the questions of Mr. Grossman in response to the column written by

Mr. Kristof, the defendant did not seek Mr. Grossman's advice, much less direction, as to how to

respond to press inquiries either before or after publication of the Wilson Op Ed.

       Neither Mr. Grossman nor any other potential witness concerning whom defendant seeks

discovery in his Third Motion to Compel had any authority over defendant's communications with

the press. After the Wilson Op Ed was published, defendant's focus was on what his superior

thought were relevant facts and what should be done to respond to the accusations it contained.

There is no evidence that defendant had any interest in crafting a public response to the Wilson Op

Ed that would protect the interests of any officials or agencies whom he perceived as having interests

in conflict with those of the Vice President and his office.

       In sum, it is the knowledge and state of mind of defendant that is relevant to the issue of guilt

or innocence. The knowledge and state of mind of other government officials is relevant only if

probative of defendant's state of mind. Here, as defendant has acknowledged, the Vice President


                                                  8

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW           Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006       Page 9 of 10



communicated to defendant the facts he considered notable, and also directed defendant to get out

to the public "all" the facts in response to the Wilson Op Ed. Defendant shared the interests of his

superior and was subject to his direction. Therefore, the state of mind of the Vice President as

communicated to defendant is directly relevant to the issue of whether defendant knowingly made

false statements to federal agents and the grand jury regarding when and how he learned about Ms.

Wilson's employment and what he said to reporters regarding this issue.

       For the reasons set forth above and in the government's prior submissions, including the fact

that the government has already produced to defendant all documents received from any source

relating to relevant conversations, correspondence, or meetings involving defendant, defendant's

Third Motion to Compel should be denied.

                                         CONCLUSION

       For all of the foregoing reasons, the United States respectfully requests that this Court deny

the defendant's motion.

                                                     Respectfully submitted,


                                                                   /s/
                                                     PATRICK J. FITZGERALD
                                                     DEBRA RIGGS BONAMICI
                                                     Office of Special Counsel
                                                     Office of the United States Attorney
                                                     Northern District of Illinois
                                                     219 South Dearborn Street
                                                     Chicago, Illinois 60604
                                                     (312) 353-5300



Dated: May 24, 2006



                                                 9

    Case 1:05-cr-00394-RBW           Document 110         Filed 05/24/2006        Page 10 of 10



                                 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

       I, the undersigned, hereby certify that on this 24th day of May, 2006, I caused true and correct

copies of the foregoing to be served on the following parties by electronic mail:

                          William Jeffress, Esq.
                          Baker Botts
                          The Warner
                          1299 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
                          Washington, DC 20004-2400
                          Facsimile: 202-585-1087

                          Theodore V. Wells, Esq.
                          Paul Weiss
                          1285 Avenue of the Americas
                          New York, NY 10019-6064
                          Facsimile: 212-373-2217

                          Joseph A. Tate, Esq.
                          Dechert LLP
                          4000 Bell Atlantic Tower
                          1717 Arch Street
                          Philadelphia, PA 19103-2793
                          Facsimile: 215-994-2222

                          John D. Cline, Esq.
                          Jones Day
                          555 California Street
                          San Francisco, CA 94104
                          Facsimile: 415-875-5700

                                                              Patrick J. Fitzgerald
                                                              Special Counsel
                                                              U.S. Department of Justice
                                                              1400 New York Ave., N.W.
                                                              Washington, D.C. 20530
                                                              202-514-1187

                                                              By:      /s/
                                                              Debra Riggs Bonamici
                                                              Deputy Special Counsel



                                                 10

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