MADem
(1000+ posts)
Send PM |
Profile |
Ignore
|
Thu May-25-06 01:26 PM
Response to Original message |
1. This is some juicy shit! |
|
Rove talked about his conversations with Novak, which means either he let Novak talk, or Novak said "Screw this, I'm an old man with a bad hip, and I ain't going to jail!" No wonder Novak was so testy in his waning months at CNN:
Suspicious that Rove and Novak might have devised a cover story during that conversation to protect Rove, federal investigators briefed then-Attorney General John Ashcroft on the matter in the early stages of the investigation in fall 2003, according to officials with direct knowledge of those briefings...Sources said that Ashcroft received a special briefing on the highly sensitive issue of the September 29 conversation between Novak and Rove because of the concerns of federal investigators that a well-known journalist might have been involved in an effort to not only protect a source but also work in tandem with the president's chief political adviser to stymie the FBI.
Rove testified to the grand jury that during his telephone call with Novak, the columnist said words to the effect: "You are not going to get burned" and "I don't give up my sources," according to people familiar with his testimony. Rove had been one of the "two senior administration" officials who had been sources for the July 14, 2003, column in which Novak outed Plame as an "agency operative." Rove and Novak had talked about Plame on July 9, five days before Novak's column was published.
Rove also told the grand jury, according to sources, that in the September 29 conversation, Novak referred to a 1992 incident in which Rove had been fired from the Texas arm of President George H.W. Bush's re-election effort; Rove lost his job because the Bush campaign believed that he had been the source for a Novak column that criticized the campaign's internal workings.
They go back a long way, but hey, when you're old and tired, jail doesn't look like a suitable place. The remaining golden years are better spent in the bosom of one's loving family; and politics and power start to lose their appeal.
|