No one ever talks about the racism that caused people hardship anymore. I guess that is because Aaron's not there.
Racism, resources blamed for bridge incident
Evacuees say they were turned back by police
Tuesday, September 13, 2005; Posted: 7:24 p.m. EDT (23:24 GMT)
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- As the heart of a hurricane-ravaged New Orleans filled with sewage-tainted floodwaters and corpses, Mayor Ray Nagin urged people to cross a bridge leading to the dry lands of the city's suburban west bank.
But some evacuees who tried that route told CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360" and "News Night with Aaron Brown" that they were met by police with shotguns who refused to allow them into Gretna, a nearby town on the other side.
1010
commercials
Avian Flu Vaccine 100 Percent Effective in Pittsburgh Animal Tests
By Rosanne Skirble Washington27 February 2006
Skirble Report - Download MP3 Skirble Report - Download RealAudio Listen to Skirble Report
Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have genetically engineered an avian flu vaccine from components of the deadly H5N1 virus. The Journal of Virology reports that the new vaccine completely protected all mice and chickens immunized against the disease.
The vaccine combines a live virus that causes the common cold with genetic material from the H5N1 virus and is grown in cells. This differs from the conventional procedure that uses a dead virus cultured in eggs.
RALLY AGAINST BOOT CAMP
'Don't let this murder be a coverup,' mom tells crowd
Fueled by outrage, hundreds gathered to support Martin Lee Anderson's family, hurling questions but finding no answers.
BY CARA BUCKLEY
cbuckley@MiamiHerald.com
PANAMA CITY - The dead boy's mother gripped the podium and stared fiercely at the crowd, her voice rising, swelling and finally cracking with bitterness, rage and loss.
''This is my son Martin Lee Anderson on January 3 -- before he went to boot camp,'' said Gina Jones, holding up a photo of a grinning Martin, 14, to a church packed with supporters Saturday.
Jones held up another photo, this one of Martin's body, dressed in a black suit, lying in an open casket. ''This is how he came out,'' she continued. ``Don't let this murder be a cover-up. Don't let my baby's death be in vain.''
The crowd, brought together by the NAACP and word of mouth through local churches, sat rapt, hushed but for a few sniffles, still but for the motion of tiny packages of tissues passed along the pews.
1014
Much better tone tonight. More supportive regarding the people of the USA. We have a nation to protect in many ways. No more business as usual. No more.
Oh, how wonderful. It's John Roberts backing up the bad boys. Another propaganda poster boy persona crated to promote feel good feelings about the new Chief Justince. Can't find this journalists credentials anywhere on the CNN website. Probably another Bush/Rove appointee.
There isn't enough proof of their DISINTEREST in harming this country by providing trustworthy personnel and procedurs. They should have provided this AHEAD of any sale. They didn't care about it BEFORE the alarms went out. They won't care about it after the heat is off either.
Vote N0. Trent Lott is showing prudent decisions when he states he will override the Bush Veto.
1018
The News Secretary
1020
commercials
Eto'o backed by anti-racism group
A Spanish anti-racism group have given their backing to Barcelona striker Samuel Eto'o, who came close to walking off during the game at Real Zaragoza on Saturday because of racist abuse.
Eto'o had to be persuaded by his team-mates and the referee to continue after the Zaragoza fans sent a steady stream of abuse his way during Barcelona's 2-0 win.
"It is not enough to show leaflets and films against racism in our stadiums," said the general secretary of the Coalition Against Racism (CECRA), Gerardo Gonzalez. "This problem is a real risk to professionals because it limits their performance by being humiliated and creating fear."
He continued: "Clubs are allowing this issue to slip through their hands and it is a serious problem.
"Despite the number of important black and South American players, there are scarcely any on club boards or as coaches.
"What is more, in recent years in contrast to what is happening in other areas of society, there are less and less fans going to watch games from other races and ethnic backgrounds. They are not going out of a fear of being attacked or insulted."
1024
Florida has the "W"rong priorities
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Felon's life tossed by storm
When he failed to check in with his probation officer during Hurricane Wilma, a Broward man was thrown in jail for six years.
BY NATALIE P. McNEAL
nmcneal@herald.com
Since moving to a shelter at the Westgate Tabernacle Church last fall, Javier Arroyo had been trying to get his life on track.
Up until then, Arroyo, a convicted felon, had lost his job and was struggling to keep a roof over his family's head. He continued to have problems with his probation, and was once sent back to prison for six months after he was caught with marijuana.
But this time -- determined to provide for his wife and infant son -- he found a job and kept it. He went to work daily, helped out at the church and won the respect of church workers for his hard work and dedication.
But on Nov. 17, after repeated unsuccessful attempts to reach his probation officer following Hurricane Wilma, Arroyo, 26, finally made contact.
He was immediately arrested.
1030
commercials
High court must protect the nation's water
Wetlands issues before the Supreme Court boil down to a battle between intrusive development and the need to protect the environment.
The Supreme Court should make certain that federal environmental protections on the books for decades prevail. Siding with developers could be devastating for protections under the Clean Water Act.
The court heard arguments last week in two Michigan cases. One in volves a property owner who wanted to sell land to a developer for a shopping mall, so the owner filled 50 acres of wetlands with sand to make the sale. Another case pits a couple who want to build condominiums on land that includes 16 acres of wetlands.
1033
Pets are an extention of ourselves. They give people comfort. They deserve a special place in society for the quality of life they add to ours. Pet rescue is not a luxury. It should have special status. Pet's lives are not their own making. Spay and neuter. Adopt.
1039
I have been a target of religious bigotry. This is a diary.
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
Niger Delta: Fears, Tears And Jeers
commercials
Philippines' Mudslide Search Called Off
Mail this story to a friend Printer friendly version
PHILIPPINES: February 27, 2006
MANILA - The search for survivors from a deadly Philippine mudslide was called off as rescue workers gave up hope for nearly 1,000 people buried under a huge crust of earth and debris, a senior official said on Saturday.
Southern Leyte province Governor Rosette Lerias said 139 bodies had been retrieved since the Feb. 17 landslide obliterated the remote farming community of Guinsaugon, about 675 km (420 miles) southeast of Manila.
1051
Why that was Mayor Nagin.
1054
The News Secretary
1055
commercials
Exclusive: Joran van der Sloot Tells 'Primetime' About Night With Natalee Holloway
Feb. 22, 2006 — In an exclusive interview with ABC News' Chris Cuomo for "Primetime," Joran Van der Sloot, the Dutch teen seen with American Natalee Holloway the night she disappeared from Aruba in May, said he planned to have sex with her when they left a bar together.
"We were planning on going to my house, because she said she wanted to go to my house," he said. "My intention was to take her to the house to have sex with her."
The Case of Missing Alabama Teen Natalee Holloway:Why, Despite the Civil Suit Against Joran van der Sloot, It Will Likely Remain UnsolvedBy JONNA SPILBOR
The world knows Natalee Holloway as the pretty Alabama teen who took a class trip to the island of Aruba from which she never returned. Natalee went missing on May 30th 2005 -- ironically, the very day the class was scheduled to return to the States.
1059
My buddy. The Honorable Cleric. I like the guy. He is faithful. He is dedicated and lives a life of purpose for his flock and not his own wealth. His lineage is charismatic with his followers. The militia that has come to love him for his spiritual purity numbers at least 10,000 according to a recent report. That doesn't sound like the actual number. If I remember when the assistant to the Ayatollah was killed last year that militia numbered about that then.
I don't know what to say about Jill Carrol. She's tenative. I have a feeling the people holding her are afraid to release her as something worse might happen to the women they are concerned about. I do believe Jill is well cared for as her captures want recognition for their purpose. In all honesty, the Iraqis have reasons to worry about the prisons. I don't want to get them upset either. I believe the recent photos of Rumsfeld's prison in Iraq were probably released to contribute to the excerbation of hostilities. You know the people that feel this desperate for relief from the USA military needs to understand many people in this country are not happy but only helpless to do anything. However. When they kill civilians they lose support and some people return to supporting the military occupation. They needs to seek support for their views through their political venues and primarily with the help and influence of their Holy Men. There needs to be an official Iraqi Islamic Inspection unit that assures the well being of the people held while advocating for the release of 'casual' occupants held for minor causes.
1114
1109
commercials
Debate over port security goes on
By The Sentinel, February 25, 2006
When we wrote early last week about the controversy over the sale of a seaport management firm to a company from the United Arab Emirates, the story was still one among dozens in the news cycle.
Within a day of our editorial reaching print, the story had leaped onto front pages nationwide and had begun crowding every other story off TV and radio news and talk shows. Politicians of both parties, from senators and congressmen to governors in the affected states and even the mayor of Baltimore, weighed in against the transaction.
1122
Starting up the business again after sixty days post Katrina is a heroic feat. Congratulations to dedicated owners to a quality eatery. Nice.
1123
I think it is quite interesting that newsprint from all over the world are seeking the best of news.
Iraqi minister optimistic about Carroll's release
BEIJING, Feb. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabr says he believes that kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll remains alive and will be recovered safely.
1126
commercials
1130
"Things are a huge mess." Agreed.
http://weather.unisys.com/satellite/sat_ir_enh_hem_loop-12.html
That vortex over the Atlantic is huge. The 'landmark' of 36 North still holds when it comes to heat distribution. I am impressed with the lack of heat over the subtropics. There is a huge heat dump over Siberia and approaching the Alaskan peninsula.
1137
Let's ask if FEMA is listening to this plea. Well, Andy, we are looking at gross government waste again. They seemed to have abandoned the FEMA trailers and now they are trying to build temporary housing. BUILD IT AND THEY WILL COME.
One Team, One Fight --Cooperation Brings RecoveryDecision makers from FEMA, the Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (OHSEP), Plaquemines Parish government officials, along with members of the local school board, social workers, government contractors and numerous representatives of community and faith-based voluntary organizations are gathering to plan the temporary housing that is bringing displaced residents back home to this part of south Louisiana to rebuild a demolished area. They came from across the parish, from across the state and across the nation. Most didn’t know each other five months ago, but many have worked together on a daily basis ever since.
I forgot the link. Here it is.
http://www.fema.gov/
1139
commercials
1142
I've never been into this book. It's fiction. Nothing wrong with fiction. I just don't go there frequently. Hey, Below Eight is out. I think I might go see that tomorrow. I have a crush on "Old Jack." So far there is a 3.6 out of 5 by some customer views.
I'm saying 'Good Night.'
Philippines' Mudslide Search Called Off
Mail this story to a friend Printer friendly version
PHILIPPINES: February 27, 2006
MANILA - The search for survivors from a deadly Philippine mudslide was called off as rescue workers gave up hope for nearly 1,000 people buried under a huge crust of earth and debris, a senior official said on Saturday.
Southern Leyte province Governor Rosette Lerias said 139 bodies had been retrieved since the Feb. 17 landslide obliterated the remote farming community of Guinsaugon, about 675 km (420 miles) southeast of Manila.
1051
Why that was Mayor Nagin.
1054
The News Secretary
1055
commercials
Exclusive: Joran van der Sloot Tells 'Primetime' About Night With Natalee Holloway
Feb. 22, 2006 — In an exclusive interview with ABC News' Chris Cuomo for "Primetime," Joran Van der Sloot, the Dutch teen seen with American Natalee Holloway the night she disappeared from Aruba in May, said he planned to have sex with her when they left a bar together.
"We were planning on going to my house, because she said she wanted to go to my house," he said. "My intention was to take her to the house to have sex with her."
The Case of Missing Alabama Teen Natalee Holloway:Why, Despite the Civil Suit Against Joran van der Sloot, It Will Likely Remain UnsolvedBy JONNA SPILBOR
The world knows Natalee Holloway as the pretty Alabama teen who took a class trip to the island of Aruba from which she never returned. Natalee went missing on May 30th 2005 -- ironically, the very day the class was scheduled to return to the States.
1059
My buddy. The Honorable Cleric. I like the guy. He is faithful. He is dedicated and lives a life of purpose for his flock and not his own wealth. His lineage is charismatic with his followers. The militia that has come to love him for his spiritual purity numbers at least 10,000 according to a recent report. That doesn't sound like the actual number. If I remember when the assistant to the Ayatollah was killed last year that militia numbered about that then.
I don't know what to say about Jill Carrol. She's tenative. I have a feeling the people holding her are afraid to release her as something worse might happen to the women they are concerned about. I do believe Jill is well cared for as her captures want recognition for their purpose. In all honesty, the Iraqis have reasons to worry about the prisons. I don't want to get them upset either. I believe the recent photos of Rumsfeld's prison in Iraq were probably released to contribute to the excerbation of hostilities. You know the people that feel this desperate for relief from the USA military needs to understand many people in this country are not happy but only helpless to do anything. However. When they kill civilians they lose support and some people return to supporting the military occupation. They needs to seek support for their views through their political venues and primarily with the help and influence of their Holy Men. There needs to be an official Iraqi Islamic Inspection unit that assures the well being of the people held while advocating for the release of 'casual' occupants held for minor causes.
1114
1109
commercials
Debate over port security goes on
By The Sentinel, February 25, 2006
When we wrote early last week about the controversy over the sale of a seaport management firm to a company from the United Arab Emirates, the story was still one among dozens in the news cycle.
Within a day of our editorial reaching print, the story had leaped onto front pages nationwide and had begun crowding every other story off TV and radio news and talk shows. Politicians of both parties, from senators and congressmen to governors in the affected states and even the mayor of Baltimore, weighed in against the transaction.
1122
Starting up the business again after sixty days post Katrina is a heroic feat. Congratulations to dedicated owners to a quality eatery. Nice.
1123
I think it is quite interesting that newsprint from all over the world are seeking the best of news.
Iraqi minister optimistic about Carroll's release
BEIJING, Feb. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabr says he believes that kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll remains alive and will be recovered safely.
1126
commercials
1130
"Things are a huge mess." Agreed.
http://weather.unisys.com/satellite/sat_ir_enh_hem_loop-12.html
That vortex over the Atlantic is huge. The 'landmark' of 36 North still holds when it comes to heat distribution. I am impressed with the lack of heat over the subtropics. There is a huge heat dump over Siberia and approaching the Alaskan peninsula.
1137
Let's ask if FEMA is listening to this plea. Well, Andy, we are looking at gross government waste again. They seemed to have abandoned the FEMA trailers and now they are trying to build temporary housing. BUILD IT AND THEY WILL COME.
One Team, One Fight --Cooperation Brings RecoveryDecision makers from FEMA, the Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (OHSEP), Plaquemines Parish government officials, along with members of the local school board, social workers, government contractors and numerous representatives of community and faith-based voluntary organizations are gathering to plan the temporary housing that is bringing displaced residents back home to this part of south Louisiana to rebuild a demolished area. They came from across the parish, from across the state and across the nation. Most didn’t know each other five months ago, but many have worked together on a daily basis ever since.
I forgot the link. Here it is.
http://www.fema.gov/
1139
commercials
1142
I've never been into this book. It's fiction. Nothing wrong with fiction. I just don't go there frequently. Hey, Below Eight is out. I think I might go see that tomorrow. I have a crush on "Old Jack." So far there is a 3.6 out of 5 by some customer views.
I'm saying 'Good Night.'
Friday, February 24, 2006
The Bush Administration has a long way to go to provide comprehensive National Security
1000
Now a hostage situation in Pheonix? It was a school shooting earlier today.
Update 3: Teen Critical After Ore. School Shooting
A young gunman opened fire on a 16-year-old at school early Thursday, hitting the teen four times, then held the gun to his own head after police cornered him, authorities said.
Police spokesman Sgt. Aaron Dunbar said the shooter appeared to be a student. He was arrested shortly after the attack at Roseburg High School.
The school went into lockdown after the shots were fired about 7:45 a.m.
The victim, whose identity has not been released, was hit three times in the torso and once in the elbow, said Vic Fresolone, CEO of Roseburg's Mercy Hospital.
He "is doing very well, better than can be expected considering the bullet wounds," Fresolone said.
The suspect was not immediately identified and no motive for the shooting was disclosed.
http://www.forbes.com/business/manufacturing/feeds/ap/2006/02/23/ap2549047.html
1012
History of the ethnic struggle in Iraq.
1014
Round table
This isn't going to resolve soon. There has been more hate than peace since Hamas was elected in Palestine. Iran's president is a horror and part of the focus to this escalation. If Sunnis are leaving any talks with the central government this is probably going to escalate.
Iraq bloodshed mounts
More than 130 die in sectarian violence as Sunnis pull out of gov't talks
BAGHDAD (Reuters) — More than 130 people, including dozens who joined a demonstration against sectarian violence, were killed in bloodshed across Iraq despite calls for calm on Thursday from leaders fearful of civil war.
A day after a suspected Al Qaeda bomb destroyed a major Shiite shrine, Iraq cancelled all leave for the police and army and minority Sunni political leaders pulled out of US-backed talks on forming a national unity government, accusing the ruling Shiites of fomenting dozens of attacks on Sunni mosques. Washington, which wants stability in Iraq to help it extract around 130,000 US troops, has also called for restraint, reflecting international fears that the oil-exporting country of 27 million may be slipping closer to all-out sectarian war.
http://www.jordantimes.com/fri/news/news1.htm
1019
Commercial lead in compliments of Frankenstein
1022
The Sunnis are either foolish or playing 'the game' to escalate violence. If al Qaeda is involved as they are the only group outside the USA military with that kind of fire power; then it is al Qaeda that is the common enemy. No doubt al Qaeda has bombed all the Mosques in question. The Shi'ites are unlikely participants. It all depends what the Sunnis want and who exactly is taking their side to the UN talks.Al Qaeda statement
An Internet statement from the Mujahedeen Council, which includes Al Qaeda in Iraq, blamed Shiite leaders for blowing up the shrine to justify attacks and vowed a "shocking response."
The United Nations Security Council, rarely able to find a common voice on Iraq since its bitter divisions over the US invasion in 2003, sounded a note of alarm in calling on Iraqis to rally behind a non-sectarian government
Commercial lead in compliments of Frankenstein
1026
The leeves
1029
The port security of the USA. There isn't going to be anymore foreign companies involved with the security of this nation. This issue is not going away. There are currently ONLY two American companies providing security in the New York Area. That is outrageous given the events in the last yeas. Then Bush has the nerve to say he averted an attack on the 'Liberty Building' in California. Hello? He can't even get the name right.
DUBAI PORTS WORLD
• Headquarters: United Arab Emirates
• Ownership: Dubai government
• Acquired CSX World Terminals in 2005
• Took its current name in late 2005 when the Dubai government merged DPI Terminals with the Dubai Ports Authority
• Manages port operations in Algeria, Djibouti, India, Malaysia, Romania, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. With CSX World Terminals acquisition, DP World added port and container logistics operations in Asia, Australia, Europe and Latin America.
• DP World will acquire Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co. for $6.8 billion. The London-based company runs commercial operations at terminals in New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, New Orleans, Miami and Philadelphia.
• Online: www.dpiterminals.com
http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/business/13936680.htm
They are just taking up the entire world, aren't they? One of their customers is Saudi Arabia?
Oh, forget it. This deal give them access to CSX Corp. That is a railway company. Remember all the rail accidents in recent years including a runaway train that dumped lumber all over a city. Where was that. I always figured that was a rehersal for something. No way. Not CSX. Nope !
Facts about Dubai Ports World
(Reuters)
22 February 2006
Dubai Ports World is at the center of the Washington controversy over whether the firm, owned by Dubai, should take over managing six major ports in the United States.
Here are five facts about Dubai Ports World.
Shareholders at Britain’s P&O, who had been managing the ports, voted last week in favour of Dubai Port’s multibillion dollar bid, giving the firm control over the management of P&O’s global operations, including in the US ports of New York and New Jersey, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Miami.
The deal made Dubai Ports World the world’s third-largest ports group.
Dubai Ports World purchased the global port assets of US freight rail company CSX Corp. in 2005 for $1.15 billion. US Treasury Secretary John Snow is a former chairman of CSX, but left the company a year before the Dubai deal.
One of DP World’s top executives, David Sanborn, was nominated by President George W. Bush in January to become the administrator of the Maritime Administration in the US Department of Transportation. At least one senator plans to hold up Sanborn’s confirmation until more questions about the port deal are answered.
Dubai Ports has international operations in the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Germany, Romania, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Djibouti, India, China, Malaysia, South Korea and Australia in addition to the UAE.
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theworld/2006/February/theworld_February623.xml§ion=theworld
1031
commercials
Last batch of Iraqi counterterrorism forces end training
The programme is to move in March to a new facility in Iraq
AMMAN (AP) — A final group of 77 Iraqi soldiers completed counterterrorism training in the Kingdom on Thursday.
The programme is to move in March to a new facility in Iraq.
The graduation brings to 533 the number of soldiers who have taken the three-month course on counterterrorism and counterinsurgency tactics under American, Jordanian and Iraqi trainers since it began in 2003 at the Counterterrorism Centre of the Special Operations Command.
http://www.jordantimes.com/fri/homenews/homenews4.htm
1033
Scientology - "Enturbulated" - easy one to learn. Rolling Stone article. Whatever.
1046
CSX
http://www.csx.com/
No country outside the USA should have access to CSX. For god sake, what is Bush thinking. There is a railway people have been ranting about for years including Joe Biden that runs right through DC. No.
A conclusion was never reached to the cause. There was a lot of criticism of the eminent train closing in on the town without sufficient warning by the government. Too many questions. This was the second incident of it's kind in a short period of time.
Human Error Caused Runaway Train
Commerce Residents Upset By Lack Of Warning
POSTED: 2:47 p.m. PDT June 22, 2003
COMMERCE, Calif. -- As crews continued to clear debris from Friday's train derailment Sunday, railroad officials and experts said their only other option was a risky chase-and-capture maneuver using a locomotive.
...The Times also reported that investigators are leaning towards human error as the cause of the accident, but have not ruled out other causes such as equipment failure. An anonymous source told the Times that two railroad workers -- one at the front of the train and one at the rear -- each mistakenly thought the brakes had been set by the other.
http://www.nbc4.tv/news/2286280/detail.html
Freight Train Crashes Into Homes
No Fatalities Have Been Reported
POSTED: 12:13 p.m. PDT June 20, 2003
UPDATED: 9:25 p.m. PDT June 20, 2003
LOS ANGELES -- Runaway freight cars speeding toward Los Angeles were intentionally derailed in an eastern suburb Friday, hurling tons of lumber onto trackside homes but causing only a handful of minor injuries.
Railroad workers diverted the 31 cars onto a side track at noon after they had raced nearly 30 miles at speeds sometimes topping 70 mph. At least 11 derailed, unleashing a tornado-like blizzard of wood, newsprint and fiberboard that engulfed trackside homes, destroying two and damaging two.
"That was the last chance we felt we had to derail them before they went into downtown Los Angeles," Union Pacific Railroad spokesman John Bromley said.
http://www.nbc4.tv/news/2284304/detail.html
1105
Shut up Anderson. You are enflaming circumstances that don't exist. People are upset about ANY foreign companies securing it's ports. Your an idiot Anderson and completely out of touch with the reality people of this country realize as appauling.
1113
I told you they had designs on CSX.
Treasury officials say Snow has severed all relations with CSX 24 Feb 2006 02:42 GMT... it was selling foreign port operations to Dubai Ports World, Treasury officials said Thursday. Treasury ... parties have questioned whether U.S. security against terrorist attacks will be jeopardized by having a ... be jeopardized by having a state-owned United Arab Emirates company operating at the ports. 2006 Associated ...
http://www.einnews.com/uae/newsfeed-UAETerrorism
In case one is wondering where UAE is. A stone's throw from Iran.
http://www.terrorism.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Countries&file=index&view=249
1118
The News Secretary
1120
In case you try to contact the security for Port Elizabeth, it is an international call.
http://www.mscgva.ch/contact/container_security/contact_container_security_detail_eid_88_lid_9.html
We believe in the importance of operating as independent carriers, responding quickly to your needs with prompt, effective and global solutions. With us you deal with a single, global and highly specialized company which is able to provide the necessary answers to all your particular transportation requirements.
http://www.mscgva.ch/about_us/about_us.html
Mediterranean Shipping Company, S.A.40, Avenue Eugène-Pittard - CH-1206, Geneva - SwitzerlandTel : +41 22 703 8888 - Fax: +41 22 703 8787 - Email: info@mscgva.ch
1129
Hostage stand off. One hostage escaped. A court hostage circumtance. Motive. Where were the metal detectors? Ah, the USA. Such a secure country.
1131
Association of American Railroads
Freight Railroad Security PlanWhen America came under attack on September 11, 2001, the railroad industry responded swiftly. Working closely with local, state and federal authorities and utilizing their own police forces, railroads increased inspections and patrols, restricted access to key facilities, briefly suspended the movement of freight in the New York area and changed certain operational practices as anti-terrorist measures.
http://www.aar.org/Rail_Safety/Rail_Security_plan.asp
1133
New freight security system
LOUISVILLE, KY – Safefreight Technology has created a new freight security division to focus on helping fleets make their operations more secure, preventing cargo theft and other criminal activity, the company announced at the 2002 Mid America Trucking Show.
Safefreight Security Solutions is comprised of security and threat experts who help assess a fleet's vulnerability to cargo theft and other criminal acts, and then designs security procedures to correct those problems.
Those procedures also include use of Safefreight's trailer freight alarm system, which helps prevent unauthorized loading and unloading of cargo.
Robert Bevelacqua, a former U.S. Special Forces officer, will head up Safefreight's new security division.
Safefreight said that federal government research indicates that losses to cargo theft hover between $12 billion to $15 billion a year in the United States.
http://driversmag.com/ar/fleet_new_freight_security/index.html
1137
This was 2002. There probably hasn't been much movement since them.
Freight security measures likely to tighten
http://www.bizjournals.com/dallas/stories/2002/12/09/focus3.html
GREATER METROPLEX — The international trade community has stepped up cargo vigilance to comply with the federal government's strict eye on security — but stronger measures are likely ahead. ...
...Mann agrees that once the C-TPAT program gains momentum it will be a boon to the international trade community.
"Not only is it good security, it is good business," he said.
"Forwarders and brokers should know who their supplier is, why they are shipping and how they are securing cargo."
1146
C-TPAT
http://r0.unctad.org/ttl/docs-unctadxi/c-tpat.pdf
C-TPAT offers businesses an opportunity to play an active role in the war against terrorism. By participating in this first worldwide supply chain security initiative, companies will ensure a more secure supply chain for their employees, suppliers and customers. Beyond these essential security benefits, CBP will offer potential benefits to C-TPAT members, including:
A reduced number of inspections (reduced border times)
An assigned account manager (if one is not already assigned)
Access to the C-TPAT membership list
Eligibility for account-based processes (bimonthly/monthly payments, e. g.)
An emphasis on self-policing, not CBP verifications
http://www.intl-freight.com/c-tpat.htm
1150
Online C-TPAT Application Process - Qualifications and Instructions
http://www.customs.ustreas.gov/xp/cgov/import/commercial_enforcement/ctpat/onlinectpat_app_process/
Effective July 15, 2005, Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (C-TPAT) has implemented a streamlined Online C-TPAT application process for all C-TPAT membership enrollment categories. Companies must now apply for C-TPAT membership via Online C-TPAT Application Process. C-TPAT will not accept paper membership applications postmarked after July 15th, 2005.
Before submitting your Online C-TPAT application, please print the "Online C-TPAT Application Process - Qualifications and Instructions" for your application category. Read the instructions carefully and collect all application information.
Previous applicants should continue to submit C-TPAT information via e-mail to industry.partnership@dhs.gov.
1153
THE COAST GUARD AT WAR:
NATIONAL SECURITY & MILITARY PREPAREDNESS
http://www.uscg.mil/HQ/G-CP/HISTORY/h_militaryindex.html
The USCGC Tampa is sunk with all hands during World War I.A painting by LT(jg) John D. Wisinski, USCG.
1158
You did better with your breaking news skill tonight, Anderson. Keep trying.
Enough.
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
Carlyle Owns the USA
1000
Frankenstein wants to know what the Commander and Chief's 'next move' is? You don't know? Rove has a hotline to your desk.
1001
The Political Trouble of the Bush Administration is never too much for Andy to handle.
1001
What does it matter if Bush knew about 'the deal?' He approves of it and advocates for it anyway. Oh, just a communication problem. I don't think so.
Why Veto UAE port leases?
By Dick H bio
It is just my opinion that if someone with the resources and staff follow this story it will be obivous why the Veto threat.
Just follow the money.
The UAE Goverment purchased the firm of P@O, a private held British firm ,for the sum of 6.8 billion dollars.
What did they purchase?
The port leases, and contracts, of world wide operations. Among them the six USA ports.I have not seen,or heard what the value of our lease with P@O is worth.It must be considerable as the UAE already fas dispached a team to Washington to defend the purchase.
The Carlyle Group,a private owned investement firm ,is headed by George Herbert Bush. His official title being Senior Advisor.The senior legal counselor of the group in none under than James Baker, former Sect'y fo State and Sect'y under Bush one.If you recall Mr. Baker has been named the envoy in charge of restructering Iraq's debt.
Another orginal founder of the group is former British Prime Minister John Majors. Also in the past several years Andrew Foster ,the Queen of Englands personal banker,resigned his CEO postion of the Coutts Group owner of the Royal Bank of Scotland. His reasoning was he always wanted to be involved in the Carlyle Group. It is said the group has holdings, or partners, in every country in the far east. Including Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and rumered the UAE.
One step further,Robert Kjellander, the Treasure of the Republican National Committee, was George W"s campaign chairman in three mid west states. Mr Kjellander isa lobbyist from Sprinfield Il.He received a four million fee from the Carlyle group, in arranging with Gov. Ryan, of Illinois, State pension funds be invested with the Carlyle Group. This is the same Mr. Ryan that current special proscuter Patrick Fitzgearld recently prosicuted sucessfully for fraud.
NOW IS THE VETO THREAT ,in todays political climate starting to make sense? Dick H
http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/26980
I don't care who made the decision. I don't care if the president knew or not. I don't want it !!!!!!!!!!!!
1010
The New Talking Head at CNN. Conveniently named, John Roberts, is another 'kiss up.'
1012
Commercial
Carlyle is above reproach. It doesn't have to use 'channels' every other company does inside or outside the USA.
Tribe moves on from Abramoff
MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) - The Saginaw Chippewa Indian tribe is trying to move on from the scandal involving indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
The tribe hasn't shied away from hiring Washington lobbyists, but it has changed its policy on campaign donations.
"The tribe is strongly committed to eliminating any questionable donations," said Larry Rosenthal, a Saginaw Chippewa lobbyist from Washington-based Ietan Consulting LLC. "The tribal council wanted more accountability."
Abramoff - who pleaded guilty to conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion charges in January - worked for the tribe from late 2001 to late 2003. The Saginaw Chippewas say they paid about $14 million to Abramoff and his former associate, Michael Scanlon. Federal prosecutors have accused Abramoff and Scanlon of defrauding several tribes who were their clients, including the Saginaw Chippewas.
http://www.record-eagle.com/2006/feb/21tribe.htm
1015
Port Security Investigation Triggers Changes
Exclusive NBC 6 Report Highlights ID Crisis
POSTED: 7:44 pm EDT May 24, 2004
UPDATED: 8:02 pm EDT May 24, 2004
MIAMI -- An exclusive NBC 6 investigation into how ID cards are handed out at the Port of Miami is getting results, as a port official has resigned over failure to report a previous arrest and subsequent probation.
Soyica Mincy resigned from her job as a port administration secretary after officials learned she failed to notify her bosses about her 2000 arrest and probation for trying to set-up a drug scam while working at the Miami Police Department.
Now, two other port workers highlighted in the NBC 6 report are under investigation.
The NBC 6 investigation revealed secret memos written by a police supervisor that outlined worker after worker at the port who shouldn't have gotten an ID because of criminal records.
NBC 6 has also learned that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has requested a review of several hundred IDs, concerned that those IDs may have been issued without following proper procedure, such as a required fingerprint check."
http://www.whisprwave.com/2004/05/port-security-investigation-triggers.html
Gov. Bush has faith in brother's administration and ports deal
CORAL GABLES, Florida (AP)—Governor Jeb Bush says he has faith in his brother's administration over its decision to allow an Arab-owned company to operate major U.S. ports, including in Miami.
Dubai Ports World, a state-owned business in the United Arab Emirates, is expected to take over a British company that has been running six U.S. ports.
Several South Florida congress members and politicians say the deal should be closely examined.
U.S. Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen says she has no specific concerns about the company but just the fact that UAE was where a number of the September Eleven hijackers were harbored in warrants further examination.
Florida's governor says he thinks criticism by some Congress members is unwarranted because his brother, President Bush, could press for more details by the time the sale is supposed to go through on March second.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has said that the company went through a "very extensive" review process.
http://www.tampabays10.com/news/news.aspx?storyid=25980
Huge Gaps In Port Security Exposed
Chris Halsne
KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Investigative Reporter
UPDATED: 11:29 am PDT April 30, 2004
SEATTLE -- KIRO Team 7 Investigators go undercover to repeatedly expose huge gaps in security at the Port of Seattle.
Video: Hidden Camera Investigation Finds Security Gaps At Port
Based on our warning, security has already changed -- making it tougher for potential terrorists and dangerous cargo to enter ships.
Investigative Reporter Chris Halsne spent several months punching holes in security up and down the coast.
KIRO Team 7 Investigators documented dozens of violations of access control at several terminals. Getting next to ships and valuable cargo containers was too easy.
We can't share with you all the flaws, but it's safe to say getting into the port didn't take us more than a few seconds.
Every Saturday morning, trucks roll onto the Seattle docks. No need to slow down for a guard shack at Terminal 18. It's empty.
Various guards shows up later, but don't enhance security much as we watched them routinely wave truckers through without checking ID.
"No. That's standard procedure. There's nobody ever comes out and questions what you're doing," said a veteran trucker.
The driver could lose his job if caught talking to KIRO Team 7 Investigators, maybe even land in jail for showing us security holes at the Port of Seattle. He's speaking out for fear terrorists will take advantage of security lapses here.
"I have never yet -- ever -- seen a container opened up for them to inspect what's inside it. Somebody could plant a bomb in one and haul it there and just, it's not hard to duplicate the paperwork or anything, run it in, drop it and leave, and you're gone," the trucker said.
KIRO Team 7 Investigators decided to test security beyond the easy-access entry point at Gate 18. Surely armed guards wouldn't allow just anyone into a known terror target.
We didn't have to sneak or climb a fence. With the help of an authorized professional hauler, KIRO Team 7 Investigators drove a truck through the gate.
This time, the guard didn't even get out of his chair. We entered secured shipping areas and lingered for hours. We could touch shipping containers at will.
No security ever asked us what we were doing or who we were. Nobody asked us to leave, or for ID.
"If you had been guys with bad intent, if you would have been terrorists ... that's a mess," said Robert Ramsey, a security consultant.
While in the military, Ramsey sneaked into foreign countries as a spy. He watched the ease of our entry into the Port of Seattle with some alarm.
"Your mind gets to thinking about nightmare scenarios and seeing video like this is just another one to think about, if security is that lax," Ramsey said.
When we called the Port of Seattle to inform them of security lapses, a curious thing happened. KIRO Team 7 Investigators were immediately placed on a federal watch list.
My name and description are posted at all these guard shacks. I am considered a threat.
The watch list ploy appears to us an attempt at intimidation. However, Port of Seattle spokesperson Mick Schultz says he called federal agents at U.S. Customs and Border Patrol for a different reason.
"On principal, it's important to take the whole security issue seriously, whether it be a reporter doing an investigative story or someone who may in fact represent a threat," Schultz said.
The Coast Guard captain in charge of security for all area shipping yards says he does not consider us or our investigation a threat.
"I told everyone we need to take this seriously. We can't let this stuff happen here, at least not on my watch it won't happen," said Capt. Danny Ellis of the U.S. Coast Guard.
Capt. Ellis says a new federal law requires tougher access control and container security by July 1. It will be the private shipping companies and the Port of Seattle's responsibility to make that happen.
"We're very concerned. The Madrid bombing, big chaos. We don't want that to happen on the West Coast. One day shut-down costs Puget Sound $280 million," Ellis said.
The Coast Guard uses computer tracking for ships and cargo arriving from overseas. That system works, but our videotape reveals troubling security gaps when trucks, containers and people arrive via land.
We observed private, often low-paid security guards, too often fail to follow basic rules.
Copyright 2004 by KIROTV.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://www.kirotv.com/news/3252275/detail.html
1020
The News Secretary
1022
commercials
Halliburton Detention Centers
Now is the time for all good people to come to the aid of their country and become unapologetically paranoid. Paranoia should now be the normal state of mind for thinking people. Sneers and dismissive remarks about "conspiracy theorists" must be ignored. We don't want to end up like the proverbial frog who boils to death because the heat was turned up slowly.
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=43&ItemID=9765
1026
Amazing. A bigot occupies the White House and hate groups flourish. Hate organizations have increased to 800 in the five years of George Walker Bush.
Oh, yeah it's all economic. It isn't as though the administration doesn't give permission for hate.
Court allows church's hallucinogenic tea
By Joan Biskupic, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Tuesday that adherents of a small Brazilian-based religion practicing in New Mexico may continue to use a hallucinogenic tea. The court rejected arguments by the Justice Department that the communion ritual undermines federal anti-drug law.
e court broadly interpreted the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act, intended to protect people from U.S. laws that appear to be neutral but can impinge on sacramental practices. (Related item: Opinion:Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao Do Vegetal)
Chief Justice John Roberts said in his opinion for the court that Congress sought "a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing ... governmental interests."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-02-21-court-tea_x.htm
1033
Commercials
Editorial: Racism? We thought you should know
To the residents of University Plaza,
We’d like this opportunity to let you know that there’s been some racist graffiti in your community (for more details, see the story on Page 1). We have to tell you because the people who run University Plaza didn’t think it was necessary.
Racist words and phrases have been written on marker boards in University Plaza’s residential buildings, as well as on the side of Mario’s Pizza. It’s sad, really, that in a community supposedly made up entirely of college students there can be such shameful ignorance and intolerance. Even if the graffiti was just a joke, it’s still perceived as a threat to its victims, and rightly so.
http://www.bupipedream.com/pipeline_web/display_article.php?id=1696
1036
The Genographic Project
Fine.
It is a great project. With political atmosphere in DC, it's dangerous to your personal security. Extraordinary rendition awaits millions.
https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/index.html
Submit your DNA at your own invasion of privacy, there is no telling if the US Government will demand the files of this project in the future.
Global Gene Project to Trace Humanity's Migrations
Hillary Mayell for National Geographic News
April 13, 2005
New DNA studies suggest that all humans descended from a single African ancestor who lived some 60,000 years ago. To uncover the paths that lead from him to every living human, the National Geographic Society today launched the Genographic Project at its Washington, D.C., headquarters.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/04/0413_050413_genographic.html
1044
Anderson turns every personality trait not aligned with his approval into a 'personality disorder.'
I have one. A personality disorder whereby narcisstic behavior dominates every news broadcast. Hm. "The Anchor Narcisstic Behavior Disorder." This is a conclusive disorder easily diagnosed when a news anchor believes he can be Tom Cruise.
1047
MRI for detection of lies.
I'll never have an MRI again !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ahhhhhhhhh........
1050
I've had enough of this do-do...
Frankenstein will be back and they the program has to compete with The Daily Show and it gets ugly.
Good night.
Frankenstein wants to know what the Commander and Chief's 'next move' is? You don't know? Rove has a hotline to your desk.
1001
The Political Trouble of the Bush Administration is never too much for Andy to handle.
1001
What does it matter if Bush knew about 'the deal?' He approves of it and advocates for it anyway. Oh, just a communication problem. I don't think so.
Why Veto UAE port leases?
By Dick H bio
It is just my opinion that if someone with the resources and staff follow this story it will be obivous why the Veto threat.
Just follow the money.
The UAE Goverment purchased the firm of P@O, a private held British firm ,for the sum of 6.8 billion dollars.
What did they purchase?
The port leases, and contracts, of world wide operations. Among them the six USA ports.I have not seen,or heard what the value of our lease with P@O is worth.It must be considerable as the UAE already fas dispached a team to Washington to defend the purchase.
The Carlyle Group,a private owned investement firm ,is headed by George Herbert Bush. His official title being Senior Advisor.The senior legal counselor of the group in none under than James Baker, former Sect'y fo State and Sect'y under Bush one.If you recall Mr. Baker has been named the envoy in charge of restructering Iraq's debt.
Another orginal founder of the group is former British Prime Minister John Majors. Also in the past several years Andrew Foster ,the Queen of Englands personal banker,resigned his CEO postion of the Coutts Group owner of the Royal Bank of Scotland. His reasoning was he always wanted to be involved in the Carlyle Group. It is said the group has holdings, or partners, in every country in the far east. Including Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and rumered the UAE.
One step further,Robert Kjellander, the Treasure of the Republican National Committee, was George W"s campaign chairman in three mid west states. Mr Kjellander isa lobbyist from Sprinfield Il.He received a four million fee from the Carlyle group, in arranging with Gov. Ryan, of Illinois, State pension funds be invested with the Carlyle Group. This is the same Mr. Ryan that current special proscuter Patrick Fitzgearld recently prosicuted sucessfully for fraud.
NOW IS THE VETO THREAT ,in todays political climate starting to make sense? Dick H
http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/26980
I don't care who made the decision. I don't care if the president knew or not. I don't want it !!!!!!!!!!!!
1010
The New Talking Head at CNN. Conveniently named, John Roberts, is another 'kiss up.'
1012
Commercial
Carlyle is above reproach. It doesn't have to use 'channels' every other company does inside or outside the USA.
Tribe moves on from Abramoff
MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) - The Saginaw Chippewa Indian tribe is trying to move on from the scandal involving indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
The tribe hasn't shied away from hiring Washington lobbyists, but it has changed its policy on campaign donations.
"The tribe is strongly committed to eliminating any questionable donations," said Larry Rosenthal, a Saginaw Chippewa lobbyist from Washington-based Ietan Consulting LLC. "The tribal council wanted more accountability."
Abramoff - who pleaded guilty to conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion charges in January - worked for the tribe from late 2001 to late 2003. The Saginaw Chippewas say they paid about $14 million to Abramoff and his former associate, Michael Scanlon. Federal prosecutors have accused Abramoff and Scanlon of defrauding several tribes who were their clients, including the Saginaw Chippewas.
http://www.record-eagle.com/2006/feb/21tribe.htm
1015
Port Security Investigation Triggers Changes
Exclusive NBC 6 Report Highlights ID Crisis
POSTED: 7:44 pm EDT May 24, 2004
UPDATED: 8:02 pm EDT May 24, 2004
MIAMI -- An exclusive NBC 6 investigation into how ID cards are handed out at the Port of Miami is getting results, as a port official has resigned over failure to report a previous arrest and subsequent probation.
Soyica Mincy resigned from her job as a port administration secretary after officials learned she failed to notify her bosses about her 2000 arrest and probation for trying to set-up a drug scam while working at the Miami Police Department.
Now, two other port workers highlighted in the NBC 6 report are under investigation.
The NBC 6 investigation revealed secret memos written by a police supervisor that outlined worker after worker at the port who shouldn't have gotten an ID because of criminal records.
NBC 6 has also learned that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has requested a review of several hundred IDs, concerned that those IDs may have been issued without following proper procedure, such as a required fingerprint check."
http://www.whisprwave.com/2004/05/port-security-investigation-triggers.html
Gov. Bush has faith in brother's administration and ports deal
CORAL GABLES, Florida (AP)—Governor Jeb Bush says he has faith in his brother's administration over its decision to allow an Arab-owned company to operate major U.S. ports, including in Miami.
Dubai Ports World, a state-owned business in the United Arab Emirates, is expected to take over a British company that has been running six U.S. ports.
Several South Florida congress members and politicians say the deal should be closely examined.
U.S. Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen says she has no specific concerns about the company but just the fact that UAE was where a number of the September Eleven hijackers were harbored in warrants further examination.
Florida's governor says he thinks criticism by some Congress members is unwarranted because his brother, President Bush, could press for more details by the time the sale is supposed to go through on March second.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has said that the company went through a "very extensive" review process.
http://www.tampabays10.com/news/news.aspx?storyid=25980
Huge Gaps In Port Security Exposed
Chris Halsne
KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Investigative Reporter
UPDATED: 11:29 am PDT April 30, 2004
SEATTLE -- KIRO Team 7 Investigators go undercover to repeatedly expose huge gaps in security at the Port of Seattle.
Video: Hidden Camera Investigation Finds Security Gaps At Port
Based on our warning, security has already changed -- making it tougher for potential terrorists and dangerous cargo to enter ships.
Investigative Reporter Chris Halsne spent several months punching holes in security up and down the coast.
KIRO Team 7 Investigators documented dozens of violations of access control at several terminals. Getting next to ships and valuable cargo containers was too easy.
We can't share with you all the flaws, but it's safe to say getting into the port didn't take us more than a few seconds.
Every Saturday morning, trucks roll onto the Seattle docks. No need to slow down for a guard shack at Terminal 18. It's empty.
Various guards shows up later, but don't enhance security much as we watched them routinely wave truckers through without checking ID.
"No. That's standard procedure. There's nobody ever comes out and questions what you're doing," said a veteran trucker.
The driver could lose his job if caught talking to KIRO Team 7 Investigators, maybe even land in jail for showing us security holes at the Port of Seattle. He's speaking out for fear terrorists will take advantage of security lapses here.
"I have never yet -- ever -- seen a container opened up for them to inspect what's inside it. Somebody could plant a bomb in one and haul it there and just, it's not hard to duplicate the paperwork or anything, run it in, drop it and leave, and you're gone," the trucker said.
KIRO Team 7 Investigators decided to test security beyond the easy-access entry point at Gate 18. Surely armed guards wouldn't allow just anyone into a known terror target.
We didn't have to sneak or climb a fence. With the help of an authorized professional hauler, KIRO Team 7 Investigators drove a truck through the gate.
This time, the guard didn't even get out of his chair. We entered secured shipping areas and lingered for hours. We could touch shipping containers at will.
No security ever asked us what we were doing or who we were. Nobody asked us to leave, or for ID.
"If you had been guys with bad intent, if you would have been terrorists ... that's a mess," said Robert Ramsey, a security consultant.
While in the military, Ramsey sneaked into foreign countries as a spy. He watched the ease of our entry into the Port of Seattle with some alarm.
"Your mind gets to thinking about nightmare scenarios and seeing video like this is just another one to think about, if security is that lax," Ramsey said.
When we called the Port of Seattle to inform them of security lapses, a curious thing happened. KIRO Team 7 Investigators were immediately placed on a federal watch list.
My name and description are posted at all these guard shacks. I am considered a threat.
The watch list ploy appears to us an attempt at intimidation. However, Port of Seattle spokesperson Mick Schultz says he called federal agents at U.S. Customs and Border Patrol for a different reason.
"On principal, it's important to take the whole security issue seriously, whether it be a reporter doing an investigative story or someone who may in fact represent a threat," Schultz said.
The Coast Guard captain in charge of security for all area shipping yards says he does not consider us or our investigation a threat.
"I told everyone we need to take this seriously. We can't let this stuff happen here, at least not on my watch it won't happen," said Capt. Danny Ellis of the U.S. Coast Guard.
Capt. Ellis says a new federal law requires tougher access control and container security by July 1. It will be the private shipping companies and the Port of Seattle's responsibility to make that happen.
"We're very concerned. The Madrid bombing, big chaos. We don't want that to happen on the West Coast. One day shut-down costs Puget Sound $280 million," Ellis said.
The Coast Guard uses computer tracking for ships and cargo arriving from overseas. That system works, but our videotape reveals troubling security gaps when trucks, containers and people arrive via land.
We observed private, often low-paid security guards, too often fail to follow basic rules.
Copyright 2004 by KIROTV.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://www.kirotv.com/news/3252275/detail.html
1020
The News Secretary
1022
commercials
Halliburton Detention Centers
Now is the time for all good people to come to the aid of their country and become unapologetically paranoid. Paranoia should now be the normal state of mind for thinking people. Sneers and dismissive remarks about "conspiracy theorists" must be ignored. We don't want to end up like the proverbial frog who boils to death because the heat was turned up slowly.
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=43&ItemID=9765
1026
Amazing. A bigot occupies the White House and hate groups flourish. Hate organizations have increased to 800 in the five years of George Walker Bush.
Oh, yeah it's all economic. It isn't as though the administration doesn't give permission for hate.
Court allows church's hallucinogenic tea
By Joan Biskupic, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Tuesday that adherents of a small Brazilian-based religion practicing in New Mexico may continue to use a hallucinogenic tea. The court rejected arguments by the Justice Department that the communion ritual undermines federal anti-drug law.
e court broadly interpreted the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act, intended to protect people from U.S. laws that appear to be neutral but can impinge on sacramental practices. (Related item: Opinion:Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao Do Vegetal)
Chief Justice John Roberts said in his opinion for the court that Congress sought "a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing ... governmental interests."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-02-21-court-tea_x.htm
1033
Commercials
1036
Editorial: Racism? We thought you should know
To the residents of University Plaza,
We’d like this opportunity to let you know that there’s been some racist graffiti in your community (for more details, see the story on Page 1). We have to tell you because the people who run University Plaza didn’t think it was necessary.
Racist words and phrases have been written on marker boards in University Plaza’s residential buildings, as well as on the side of Mario’s Pizza. It’s sad, really, that in a community supposedly made up entirely of college students there can be such shameful ignorance and intolerance. Even if the graffiti was just a joke, it’s still perceived as a threat to its victims, and rightly so.
http://www.bupipedream.com/pipeline_web/display_article.php?id=1696
1036
The Genographic Project
Fine.
It is a great project. With political atmosphere in DC, it's dangerous to your personal security. Extraordinary rendition awaits millions.
https://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/index.html
Submit your DNA at your own invasion of privacy, there is no telling if the US Government will demand the files of this project in the future.
Global Gene Project to Trace Humanity's Migrations
Hillary Mayell for National Geographic News
April 13, 2005
New DNA studies suggest that all humans descended from a single African ancestor who lived some 60,000 years ago. To uncover the paths that lead from him to every living human, the National Geographic Society today launched the Genographic Project at its Washington, D.C., headquarters.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/04/0413_050413_genographic.html
1044
Anderson turns every personality trait not aligned with his approval into a 'personality disorder.'
I have one. A personality disorder whereby narcisstic behavior dominates every news broadcast. Hm. "The Anchor Narcisstic Behavior Disorder." This is a conclusive disorder easily diagnosed when a news anchor believes he can be Tom Cruise.
1047
MRI for detection of lies.
I'll never have an MRI again !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ahhhhhhhhh........
1050
I've had enough of this do-do...
Frankenstein will be back and they the program has to compete with The Daily Show and it gets ugly.
Good night.
Friday, February 17, 2006
...and Aaron Brown didn't do the same thing? He lead a team in Sri Lanka. This is pure discrimination !
CNN's Cooper relishes new role
On vacation last week, CNN's Anderson Cooper flew to Oaxaca, Mexico, to attend the Day of The Dead festival, where families go to local cemeteries with food and drink to "welcome back all the souls who have departed."
... "It's been a remarkable year and a terrible year, and I've learned a lot and I've seen a lot," Cooper says. "It started literally from the ball drop at Times Square, where I was, and four hours later I was on a plane to Sri Lanka for the tsunami. I was in Niger for the starvation of children, and that was tough. And then Katrina was overwhelming."
THE DAY OF THE DEAD.
FINE.
COOPER'S GOT AN AFFECTION FOR NECROPHILIA.
There is a highly pervasive underpinning to all this 'shows.' It isn't news. It's sensationalized killing and dying as well as disease. It's not a healthy balance of anything.
On vacation last week, CNN's Anderson Cooper flew to Oaxaca, Mexico, to attend the Day of The Dead festival, where families go to local cemeteries with food and drink to "welcome back all the souls who have departed."
... "It's been a remarkable year and a terrible year, and I've learned a lot and I've seen a lot," Cooper says. "It started literally from the ball drop at Times Square, where I was, and four hours later I was on a plane to Sri Lanka for the tsunami. I was in Niger for the starvation of children, and that was tough. And then Katrina was overwhelming."
THE DAY OF THE DEAD.
FINE.
COOPER'S GOT AN AFFECTION FOR NECROPHILIA.
There is a highly pervasive underpinning to all this 'shows.' It isn't news. It's sensationalized killing and dying as well as disease. It's not a healthy balance of anything.
Fickle CNN slouches to the right
Commentary: Plus Lewis' shame and Iger-Jobs
...At CNN, Headline News is considered to be a diamond in the (very) rough. Because it spews breaking news all the time (when, of course, it isn't showing some airhead Hollywood-gossip nonsense), the station frees up CNN to show prime-time "programs," starring the likes of Anderson Cooper, Paula Zahn and Aaron Br -- oops! Aaron Brown was terminated last year. Maybe I'm just projecting my readers' wishes that his show was still on CNN
... CNN shouldn't be running a news supermarket. It should stand for something -- anything. Not only would it be a better network, but the morale of its beleaguered troops would go up. Pssst -- so might those precious ratings.
Commentary: Plus Lewis' shame and Iger-Jobs
...At CNN, Headline News is considered to be a diamond in the (very) rough. Because it spews breaking news all the time (when, of course, it isn't showing some airhead Hollywood-gossip nonsense), the station frees up CNN to show prime-time "programs," starring the likes of Anderson Cooper, Paula Zahn and Aaron Br -- oops! Aaron Brown was terminated last year. Maybe I'm just projecting my readers' wishes that his show was still on CNN
... CNN shouldn't be running a news supermarket. It should stand for something -- anything. Not only would it be a better network, but the morale of its beleaguered troops would go up. Pssst -- so might those precious ratings.
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
I grew tired of Non-News
I wanted to remind everyone what a real anchor was all about. This was the last time Aaron hosted NewsNight. It was the day Libby was arrested. I thought Joe Wilson's comments were particularly of interest.
There is just no one like Aaron Brown. He was never much good at pointing out mildew or mold but he sure could lead a nation in shock from a rooftop. Those are pictures that we'll never see again.
Lewis Scooter Libby Indicted in CIA Investigation;
Karl Rove Off the Hook?;
Inside an Intelligence Meltdown
Aired October 28, 2005 - 22:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
AARON BROWN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again, everyone. It began with 16 words uttered by the president about Iraq and nuclear weapons, only 16 words in a very long speech. It became a battle and a scandal, and now, perhaps, a crime.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
ANNOUNCER: Vice President Cheney's chief of staff is indicted. After two years of secretive digging, the special prosecutor sends shockwaves through the Bush White House.
GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Special counsel Fitzgerald's investigation and ongoing legal proceedings are serious.
ANNOUNCER: Suzanne Malveaux tonight on just how serious. Lewis Scooter Libby, described as second only to Karl Rove in the White House inner circle, resigned immediately and could face 30 years in prison. Gary Tuchman gets more on the man behind the controversy. President Bush's deputy chief of staff, Karl Rove, is off the hook, or is he?
PATRICK FITZGERALD, U.S. ATTORNEY: I will not end the investigation until I can look anyone in the eye and tell them that we have carried out our responsibility sufficiently.
ANNOUNCER: John King looks at the future of the president's top adviser. And, if Libby lied, there's this question: Why? David Ensor on the indictments and how the U.S. justified war with Saddam.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ANNOUNCER: This is NEWSNIGHT WITH AARON BROWN AND ANDERSON COOPER.
Live from the CNN Broadcast Center in New York, here's Aaron Brown.
BROWN: Good evening, again. As Larry said, Anderson is off tonight. The story of how we got from uranium in Africa to a reporter in jail, to a White House under siege, is only half-written tonight, at best. There are many more chapters to come, many questions to be answered, not the least of which is why, if true, did a smart and incredibly savvy White House insider lie so obviously to investigators? And did he do it, if he did it, to protect his boss, the vice president? There is that, and more. But, also, there is also this, the plain and powerful words of a federal prosecutor with a reputation for playing it straight. Laws were broken, he said, not technicalities, but laws. A full night on this tonight, a full house, CNN's Suzanne Malveaux at the White House, John King in Washington, David Ensor as well. And we begin with Ms. Malveaux -- Suzanne.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
SUZANNE MALVEAUX, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT
(voice-over):
The cloud that has been hanging over the Bush administration for nearly two years from the CIA leak investigation finally broke. Scooter Libby was a trusted member of Mr. Bush's most inner circle, but the five-count indictment of vice president Cheney's chief of staff is not the end of the probe.
KARL ROVE, SENIOR ADVISER TO PRESIDENT BUSH: I'm going to have a great Friday and a fantastic weekend. Hope you do, too.
MALVEAUX: Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, escaped indictment today, but his lawyer says he remains under investigation.
FITZGERALD: I will not end the investigation until I can look anyone in the eye and tell them that we have carried out our responsibility sufficiently.
MALVEAUX: A beleaguered Mr. Bush, departing for his Camp David retreat, tried to soften the blow.
BUSH: While we're all saddened by today's news, we remain focused on the many issues and opportunities facing this country. I've got a job to do; so do the people that work in the White House.
MALVEAUX: White House insiders say they are saddened by Libby's departure but are relieved that Rove seemed to have been spared. Cheney, who stuck to his schedule of fund-raising and rallying Georgia troops, said in a written statement he accepted his top lieutenant's resignation will deep regret: "Scooter Libby is one of the most capable and talented individuals I have ever known. He has given many years of his life to public service and has served our nation tirelessly and with great distinction."In a statement of his own, Libby said, "I'm confident that, at the end of this process, I will be completely and totally exonerated."
BUSH: I look forward to working with Congress on policies to keep this economy moving.
MALVEAUX: For President Bush, the strategy is to pivot towards his political agenda.
AMY WALTER, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: The question now is, can this White House get that famous first-term focus back? That is the real challenge.
KEN DUBERSTEIN,
REPUBLICAN CONSULTANT: Certainly, he needs some fresh blood. He needs to focus on big, bold things.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
MALVEAUX: And, Aaron, of course, one of those big things that he's talking about is picking his Supreme Court nominee.We're told by White House aides that could happen within days. Interesting enough, too, the strategy of the White House -- we saw two memos that went out to White House staffers late in the day, one from Chief of Staff Andy Card, saying, look, your job first and foremost is to serve the American people, the second one from White House counsel, which simply said that they should not reach out to Scooter Libby to discuss this case in any way, that it is still an ongoing investigation -- Aaron.
BROWN: Suzanne, thank you very much -- Suzanne Malveaux at the White House.
This all began, as I'm sure you know by now, with Ambassador Joe Wilson's trip to Niger back in February of 2002. He had nothing to say on camera when reached at his home today.
He did release a statement through his lawyer: "It is certainly not a day to celebrate," the statement reads.
It goes on to say: "When an indictment is delivered at the front door of the White House, the office of the president is defiled. No citizen can take pleasure from that."
Almost from the beginning, this story has been a story and a puzzle with three dimensions, policy and politics, and ,of course, the law. Before we get any further into all three, here are the charges facing Mr. Libby tonight, five of them, all felonies.
Count one, obstruction of justice. It alleges, Mr. Libby intentionally deceived the FBI and the grand jury about how he discovered Valerie Plame's status as a covert CIA officer.
Count two, false statement, lying to the FBI about whether Ms. Plame's status was well-known, saying, falsely, the indictment alleges, that NBC's Tim Russert told him that reporters were well aware of her identity.
Count three, false statement, lying to the FBI about the content of a conversation or conversations with "TIME" magazine's Matthew Cooper.
Counts four and five relate to the last two, but are classified as perjury, instead of simply making false statements, because the statements in question were made under oath to a federal grand jury.
If convicted of all five counts, Mr. Libby could receive as much as 30 years in prison. How much of this is intended to loosen up his tongue, we simply do not know. Only the prosecutor does. And he's not saying. Patrick Fitzgerald met the press this afternoon, after two years of virtual silence. The questions must have seemed like opening a trip valve on Hoover Dam. As for his answers, he said very little about the inner workings of the investigation. Instead, what made the moment so remarkable was how plainly and how passionately he stated the case.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN (voice-over): In trying to explain how the disclosure of a CIA agent's name evolved into an investigation that ensnared one of Washington's most powerful men, Patrick Fitzgerald put it in terms he felt most comfortable using, the language of baseball. What would the punishment be, he asked, if a pitcher intentionally threw at the head of a batter?
FITZGERALD: And then you would make a decision as to whether this person should be banned from baseball, whether they should be suspended, whether you should do nothing at all and just say, "Hey, the person threw a bad pitch. Get over it."In this case, it's a lot more serious than baseball. And the damage wasn't to one person. It wasn't just Valerie Wilson. It was done to all of us. BROWN: What he decided, he said, was this.
FITZGERALD: This is a very serious matter and compromising national security information is a very serious matter. But the need to get to the bottom of what happened and whether national security was compromised by inadvertence, by recklessness, by maliciousness is extremely important.
BROWN: And this is why.
FITZGERALD: We need to know the truth. And anyone who would go into a grand jury and lie, obstruct and impede the investigation has committed a serious crime. But if what we allege in the indictment is true, then what is charged is a very, very serious crime that will vindicate the public interest in finding out what happened here.
BROWN: And about forcing Judith Miller of "The New York Times" to jail.
FITZGERALD: No one wanted to have a dispute with "The New York Times" or anyone else. I would have wished nothing better that, when the subpoenas were issued in August 2004, witnesses testified then, and we would have been here in October 2004 instead of October 2005. No one would have went to jail. I didn't have a vested interest in litigating it. I was not looking for a First Amendment showdown. We didn't bluff people. And what we decided to do was to make sure before we subpoenaed any reporter that we really needed that testimony.
BROWN: Testimony, he said today, that was vital to his case.
FITZGERALD: At the end of the day what appears is that Mr. Libby's story that he was at the tail end of a chain of phone calls, passing on from one reporter what he heard from another, was not true. It was false. He was at the beginning of the chain of phone calls, the first official to disclose this information outside the government to a reporter. And then he lied about it afterwards, under oath and repeatedly.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: The allegations. If Mr. Fitzgerald has said little until now, the political establishment tonight is saying even less. Democratic lawmakers, by and large, are staying away from the microphones, by and large. So did a lot of Republicans. We did manage to get some reaction from Howard Dean, who is the chairman of the Democratic Party.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
HOWARD DEAN (D), DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN: This is about what happens when you send people to foreign countries to fight without telling America the truth. This whole thing came about because the president wasn't truthful about why we went to Iraq.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: As for the Republican side, we spoke at some length late this afternoon with John Sununu, the senator from New Hampshire.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Why do you think it -- people at the vice president's right hand -- and whether this was criminal or not will be for a jury to decide -- apparently engaged in this effort to -- this is my words, certainly, not yours -- trash Ambassador Wilson?
SEN. JOHN SUNUNU (R), NEW HAMPSHIRE: Well, I think they felt that Ambassador Wilson was a partisan -- and he certainly was, politically speaking, a partisan -- that he may have had specific motives and goals in mind that were certainly -- was certainly counterbalanced by other evidence and other sources of intelligence- gathering at the time. And they felt that there needed to be some sort of a balance out there. That doesn't justify the specific way that they approached it, but I think that was their concern at the time.
BROWN: Do you think the vice president, given that an important aide to the vice president, often referred to as his right-hand man, a national security adviser, that the vice president needs to answer some questions here?
SUNUNU: I don't have access to the material that was presented to the grand jury. And -- and I think the defense teams and the prosecution are perfectly capable of deciding who needs to provide information in order to fairly try the case.
BROWN: Respectfully, that's a very narrow legal answer to something, whether he needs to testify.And, actually, if I may try the question again, I'm interested in whether you believe there are questions that the vice president needs to answer.
SUNUNU: I think you need to be specific. What kind of a -- what kind of a question? I think everyone knows what Vice President Cheney's position was on -- on intelligence, on prosecuting the war. Certainly, people understand and know his relationship to Scooter Libby, who served him very well, very capably. So, look, if there's a specific question that you want to pose to the vice president, that the media wants to pose to him, yes, you should ask those questions.
BROWN: Well, let me try one then.
SUNUNU: Sure.
BROWN: Would you like to know if the vice president was in any way involved in discussions that led to the outing of Ms. Plame?
SUNUNU: I think that question has been largely answered in the release of the notes of the conversation that he and Scooter Libby had, that, apparently, by what's been reported and what's been presented in the way of information from the grand jury -- I guess this was one of the -- the leaks prior to the indictment -- there was a conversation between the two of them that did involve the fact that Joe Wilson's wife was an employee at the CIA.
BROWN: My question was, was he involved a decision to out her? Was he in any way involved in discussions? Did she say, yes, Scooter, that's a heck of an idea, or, don't you dare do that, or, what are you taking? Don't you want to know that?
SUNUNU: I think that's less important than whether the laws involving the disclose were violated. And I think the prosecutor has pursued that question fairly effectively and, of course, whether people have been forthcoming on the questions of perjury and cooperating with investigators.And, on that issue, he's been very clear that he believes a law was violated, and that's why he's handed down the indictments.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Republican Senator John Sununu. You would have a hard time knowing that there is other news to report tonight. And we have more on the indictments coming up. But here are some of the other stories we are following at this moment.
Forty-five police officers in New Orleans were fired today. They were let go for allegedly abandoning their posts, either before or after Katrina hit. Fifteen other officers have resigned.
In California, the mother of a teen accused of killing the wife of a prominent defense attorney has been released from jail. Esther Fielding was charged as an accessory to murder after the fact. But, today, police decided to drop the charges. Her son, who is 16, will be tried as an adult.
Today, the United Nations Security Council condemned recent comments by Iran's president that Israel should be wiped off the map. The Israeli government says Iran's membership in the U.N. should be revoked because of the harsh words.
And a fitting remembrance for Rosa Parks -- the mother of the civil rights movement, who died earlier in the week, will lie in honor Sunday and Monday in the Capitol Rotunda of the United States of America. Congress has authorized that right only 29 times in our country's history. And Ms. parks is the first woman to ever receive the tribute.
Back to the Libby indictment next -- this is a story, as we said at the top, with many dimensions and complications. It is still , by and large, a mystery.
Ahead tonight, we look more closely at the parts and the pieces and how they fit, and more on Scooter Libby himself, closer to the vice president, perhaps, than anyone but the president himself, and a closer look at where the case may go from here. We will talk with -- "Official A."
What next?
A break first. This is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
COLIN POWELL, SECRETARY OF STATE: Leaving Saddam Hussein in possession of weapons of mass destruction for a few more months and years is not an option, not in a post-September 11 world.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, SEPTEMBER 2003)
BUSH: If there's a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is. And if the person has violated law, that person will be taken care of.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: Innocent until proven guilty is a sacred American ideal. But if America's first impression of you comes from the mouth of a special prosecutor, you're probably -- probably already behind in the battle for public opinion. It may have been some comfort for Scooter Libby to hear the president and the vice president praise him for the work he's done for his country, but the stakes for him are now enormous. He could face up to 30 years in prison. So, who is Scooter Libby? Here's CNN's Gary Tuchman.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)GARY TUCHMAN, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Just as George W. Bush relies on Dick Cheney, Dick Cheney has relied on Scooter Libby.
THOMAS MANN, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: Scooter Libby, in my view, is the second most powerful staff member in the White House, second only to Karl Rove.
TUCHMAN: You may not have heard of Libby until the midst of this scandal, but he's been at the center of the power in the Bush White House. Libby, who is on crutches because of an injured foot, was educated at Yale and has been in and out of government for decades. He's a lawyer, and, ironically, considering what he's going through, was quite skilled at getting people out of legal trouble. Libby and the vice president got acquainted when Cheney was the defense secretary under the first President Bush. By 2000, Libby was one of Cheney's top advisers and followed him to the White House. Libby was with Cheney on September 11, 2001, and in the days after, when the vice president was moved into secure locations in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Libby has a well-established reputation as an administration hawk.
MANN: Scooter Libby is a formidable figure in this administration who's been involved in virtually every critical national security decision, including the war in Iraq.
TUCHMAN: Libby prepared a document that argued the case for going to war against Iraq, a document that reportedly became the basis for Secretary of State Colin Powell's presentation to the United Nations. But there's a very different side to Libby. He authored a novel called "The Apprentice," a story of romance and intrigue set in 1903 Japan. It was a book that won praise from literary critics. Libby told a "New York Times" interviewer, when the paperback came out, that he occasionally dreams -- quote -- "of just becoming a novelist and sitting on Crete and drinking odd-named wines."He's got a lot more on his mind now. Gary Tuchman, CNN, New York.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Coming up tonight, a look at the man who was not indicted today, Karl Rove. Was it just a temporary reprieve or is he off the hook? Also, this is going to sting a little. We will tell you some flu shots that weren't. We will also take a break first. From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: A quick look now at some of the other stories making news tonight.We go to Atlanta and Erica Hill. Good evening, Ms. Hill.
ERICA HILL, HEADLINE NEWS CORRESPONDENT: Good evening to you, Aaron, on this Friday.
Unfortunately, I have to tell you about another storm, Tropical Storm Beta, causing concern in the western Caribbean tonight. It plowed into the tiny Caribbean island of Providencia today and has its sights set on Nicaragua. Forecasters say the storm could build hurricane strength at any moment. Now, a hurricane warning is in effect for the east coast of Nicaragua. And some coastal residents of villages -- some residents of coastal villages, that is, are being evacuated. Meantime, fake flu shots.
The FBI says 1,000 ExxonMobil workers in Texas were injected with fake flu vaccine. The owner of the health company hired to administer the shots has been arrested and officially charged with Medicare fraud. Investigators say he gave similar shots to 14 residents of a Texas senior citizens home the next day. Preliminary tests indicate the syringes were filled with purified water. A nurse who helped give the shots blew the whistle. So far, no ill effects have been reported.
And a record number of births to unmarried women, one-and-a-half million last year -- that's according to a new federal study. More than 80 percent, we should point out, 80 percent of teen mothers, are unmarried. But, actually, the number of teen mothers is falling. The biggest increase came among women in their 20s, because many of them are unmarried, but living with their partners, so, of course, still count as unwed mothers.
And Second City, no more -- thousands turned out in Chicago today to celebrate the White Sox's victory in the World Series. This is the team's first world championship since 1917, so, plenty to celebrate. Many fans say they still can't believe it. Some people in Boston probably still can't believe it from last year.
And, Aaron, I think I checked the correct paper online. I think.
BROWN: Yes. HILL: And I believe that the weather today called for a celebration.
BROWN: It did, indeed. And -- and there was one. And if you go back and look at the tape from -- I don't know -- last February or March, you will see that I actually predicted the White Sox would win the World Series.
HILL: I hope you had some money riding on it, my friend.
BROWN: I think I predicted that. I might not have.
(LAUGHTER)
HILL: We will find the tape.
(LAUGHTER)
BROWN: Thank you. Have a good weekend.
HILL: You, too.
BROWN: Thank you. On we go. The grand jury that indicted Scooter Libby today had nothing to say about Karl Rove. Does that mean the president's top political adviser is off the hook? Our chief national correspondent, John King, reports.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
JOHN KING, CNN CHIEF NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The day's first clue came in Karl Rove's driveway. ROVE: I'm going to have a great Friday and a fantastic weekend. I hope you do, too.
KING: The Bush White House in turmoil, but the president's right-hand man is still on the job, though not out of legal jeopardy.
FITZGERALD: We either charge someone or we don't talk about them.
KING: The prosecutor won't name names, but Rove remains under investigation -- his attorney voicing confidence, when the special counsel finishes his work, he will conclude that Mr. Rove has done nothing wrong. At issue is Rove's initial failure to disclose to leak investigators a conversation with reporter Matthew Cooper about CIA operative Valerie Plame. Rove contends it was an inadvertent oversight and that he brought it to the prosecutor's attention as soon as he found an e-mail reminding him. Rove friend and former top White House aide Nick Calio says, those who don't accept Rove's explanation don't understand the pressure of 18-hour-a-day White House jobs.
NICHOLAS CALIO, FORMER BUSH LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS DIRECTOR: There are a lot of things that I don't remember. I go through notes sometimes now and say, I don't even remember being in the meeting, let alone, you know, having said what I said.
KING: Rove has, from the beginning, insisted he broke no laws.
ROVE: I didn't know her name and didn't leak her name.
KING: What is no longer in dispute, though, is that Rove took part in a hardball White House political campaign to discredit Plame's husband, Ambassador Joe Wilson, when Wilson accused the White House of hyping the case for the war in Iraq.
CALIO: I think, you know, hardball comes with politics, but hardball doesn't mean being not fair and it doesn't mean doing anything illegal.
KING: Some Democrats are more than skeptical and note, the investigation isn't over.
REP. TIM RYAN (D), OHIO: It is going to be interesting over the course of the next few weeks and the next few months to find out exactly what Karl Rove did know.
KING: But, for now, Rove is on the job and deeply involved in everything, including the urgent new search for a Supreme Court nominee.
HELGI WALKER, FORMER COUNSEL TO PRESIDENT BUSH: Well, Karl, as everybody knows, is an excellent adviser to the president, and has interests in a docket that's extremely broad.
KING: That portfolio in the past few weeks has included managing his own campaign to avoid indictment and quietly orchestrating a strategy to get his version of events out of the grand jury room and into the public domain.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
KING: Now, Karl Rove is not named in the indictment of Scooter Libby by name. But we do know from two sources familiar with the investigation tonight that Karl Rove is indeed the mysterious "Official A" named in this indictment. "Official A," the prosecutor says, is the senior administration official who told Scooter Libby, before Novak published the column that started all of this, that Novak about to write that column. That "Official A," again, we're told, is indeed Karl Rove -- prosecutors using that to debunk Scooter Libby's argument that he first learned about this from reporters.But, Aaron, tonight, sources close to Rove insist they just have a few more questions to answer. They believe the prosecutor will shut down this investigation within a matter of weeks, with no charges. But the investigation is still ongoing -- Rove's closest friends telling him, be very careful.
BROWN: Does the fact that we can now say that "Official A" is Karl Rove mean he is in any more legal jeopardy, any less legal jeopardy, or have we just put a little more frosting on a cake?
KING: It is a little more frosting on a cake. It's essentially cracking one of the mysteries of the indictment. Prosecutor Fitzgerald said today, if you can't charge them, we don't name them in this indictment. So, from the Rove perspective, they're saying, this is proof he did nothing wrong. Others say, don't rush to that judgments so quickly. The investigation is still open.
BROWN: John, thank you very much -- John King in Washington tonight. Coming up, back to the future, from what did the president know , to swapping arms for hostages to, "I did not have sex with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky," thumbnails of scandals of our lives, because this is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
ROVE: I didn't know her name and didn't leak her name. This is at the Justice Department. I'm confident that the U.S. attorney, the prosecutor who is involved in looking at this, is going to do a very thorough job of doing a very substantial and conclusive investigation.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: Think about this for a moment. If you are a certain age, there's a good chance that, once upon a time, you were taught to and did trust your government. Indeed, we would like to think that none of us has become so jaded that we never trust our government. But have been tested in that regard because, sometimes, our elected officials lie, cheat, steal or, shall we say, kiss inappropriately. Today's scandal is just another in a line.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
FITZGERALD: A few hours ago, a federal grand jury sitting in the District of Columbia returned a five-count indictment against I. Lewis Libby.
BROWN: Special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald today saying words no administration wants to hear, that one of its own has been indicted. No administration wants to hear it, but more than a few have. Some are about sex, others about money, power or just plain politics. In 1921, it was Teapot Dome, named for a Wyoming town that was home to U.S. oil reserves. Back then, James B. Fall, the secretary of the interior under President Harding, was indicted for accepting bribes from two oil operators. In return, he leased them oil reserves, oil reserved for the Navy. Fall spent a year in prison, paid a $100,000 fine.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RICHARD NIXON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I'm not a crook.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: Fast forward to 1972. Nixon was president, Watergate the scandal. It started with what the president's press secretary called a third-rate burglary, five men arrested for breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate. You know the rest. "Washington Post" reporters Woodward and Bernstein kept digging around, uncovered a series of crimes and cover-ups that reached all the way to the White House. In the end, the burglars and two former White House employees, E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, were convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping. Three former White House aides were convicted of hindering the investigation.The president himself was named as a co-conspirator. And, on August 9, 1974, Richard Nixon resigned, just ahead of an impeachment trial.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RONALD REAGAN, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: In the mid-'80s, there was Iran-Contra, the Reagan administration selling arms, anti-tank missiles, to be precise, to Iran, in hopes of winning the release for Americans held hostage by Iranian-backed terrorists. Money from the sale was used to fund the Sandinista rebels in Nicaragua. And both actions contradicted U.S. policy. There were congressional hearings, indictments against National Security Adviser John Poindexter and one of his aides, Colonel Oliver North. Neither ended up in prison.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
WILLIAM J. CLINTON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I did not have sexual relations with that woman.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: And then, the mid-'90s, there was Monica. President Bill Clinton denied an affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, denied it to a national television audience, and, unfortunately for him, denied it under oath. He was charged with perjury and obstruction, and he was impeached.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ROWN: People can debate how big a deal today's indictment is, but consider this. Not since 1875 and President Ulysses Grant has a sitting White House official been indicted. You don't remember Oliver Babcock, of course, but he shares company tonight with Lewis Scooter Libby. So, what is it like to work at a White House in the scandal crisis mode? David Gergen has advised both Republican and Democratic presidents, as we say to same all the time. John Podesta advised Bill Clinton. And Jeff Greenfield often advises me, but that's not why he's here tonight.
(LAUGHTER)
BROWN: Gentlemen, let me begin by rolling a piece of tape, or having the control room roll one. This is the president this afternoon. Kind of look at his face. I'm not sure we have seen him look quite like this or had a day quite like this. John, what would you guess the president was going through today?
JOHN PODESTA, FORMER CLINTON WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF: Well, this was a tough day, Aaron, I think for the president.But he looked like he intended to just tough it out. He didn't like a guy who intended to change course, to clean house. I think he looked like he was just going to kind of hunker down and try to tough -- tough -- tough things out at this point.
BROWN: And, David, the importance of looking like you're just -- you're going to tough it out to a president, which they all, honestly, try and do -- they want to get back to the people's business, they always tell us -- is what?
DAVID GERGEN, FORMER PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER: Well, let me just say, first of all, I knew Oliver Babcock. I worked with Oliver Babcock.
(LAUGHTER)
GERGEN: And Scooter Libby is no Oliver Babcock.
(LAUGHTER)
GERGEN: The...
BROWN: Thank you, David.
GERGEN: OK. The -- I think, on a day like this, -- the importance of the president coming out and toughing it out is exactly what John Podesta said. And that is, he does look like he's being very introspective, that he's really taken it aboard. In fact, I think there's a certain defiance in this White House. They don't think they have done much wrong. They don't think they made a mistake on Harriet Miers, as far as I can tell. They think she was done in by politics. They don't really think they made much a mistake here. And, so, what that suggests is, you are not going to see much course correction, which I think is quite necessary, in fact, for them to recover.
BROWN: Let me come back to that, but let me draw Jeff in. One of the things I have heard a lot today is, they have lost control of the agenda. Do you think that the president has lost control of the agenda
J
EFF
GREEN
FIELD, CNN SENIOR ANALYST: We're going to find out if he tries to restart his domestic agenda. And I think the one break that they have is that this is an odd- numbered year. Imagine this happening in late October of '04 or next year, late October of '06, as people prepare to vote. You know, I actually do think that we live in a time, partly because of us, the people process this stuff so -- so quickly, that it's entirely possible that, by next spring, he will be rolling out something. The question is, with everybody telling him he's got to change course -- you know, crisis has a 1,000 kibitzers...
(LAUGHTER)
GREENFIELD: Is he -- is he...
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Oliver Babcock said that.
GREENFIELD: Is he of a mind to do that?Or, as the -- or, as John and David described, are they saying, you know what, we got here; we got reelected, we got most of our agenda passed in the first years; just give us a little time; we have got our conservative back...
BROWN: Yes.
GREENFIELD: ... because we Lanced the Harriet Miers problem?So, I'm not sure they have lost control. BROWN: John, people have said a lot, the president -- one way to get the agenda back, if, in fact, he's lost it, is that you launch big, bold ideas. He launched a big, bold idea in Social Security, probably the biggest, boldest idea in American politics, in a sense, given how many people it affects. And fell flat. So, what are the big, bold domestic ideas in a country that seems to have growing doubts over the president himself?
PODESTA: Well, look, Social Security completely crashed and burned. And, you know, when he says, I want to get back and do my job, I want to get back and -- and do the work of the people, it reminds me of what President Clinton said. But it's important to remember, when President Clinton was saying that, he had a 65 percent job approval. Right now, George Bush has a 38 percent job approval.
So, when people hear that, that he's going to just go back and do the same thing, I think they say to themselves, oh, no, you know, what is he talking about? I think that, you know, he hasn't done much about energy. He hasn't done anything to really deal with the middle- class squeeze in this country. He's got a real problem in Iraq. So, he's got his hands full.
And, you know, I think, at this point, he's got a team that, if -- if nothing else, has their credibility in shreds. You know, the one thing we know that is unassailable is that Karl Rove went out, told Scott McClellan to say he had nothing to do with it. We know that was not true.And I think he would be well-advised to clean house. But I don't think he's going to do it.
BROWN: David, on the -- the whole house-cleaning thing, I mean, to me, it -- it almost cuts two ways. I -- I -- gather there's some advantage in bringing new blood in. And people are tired. It is exhausting work. On the other hand, it feels or it can play as desperate.
GERGEN: It can. But, in this case, I think the country would welcome someone like a Fred Thompson, the former senator, coming in, someone of stature, of the kind of person that Howard Baker came in with Ronald Reagan.
But here -- on the substantive side, Aaron, I think he has this problem, that, you know, when Reagan was there, and he was looking for new initiatives after Iran-Contra, he had Gorbachev as a partner. And they went -- engaged in summits and they got an arms control treaty. And that really helped as a part of the substantive recovery.
With George W. Bush, you know, the next big decision he's got to make is on the Supreme Court. And every indication is that he is going to choose a fight, that he's going to go to someone who's -- you know, who's a strong conservative, who may well alienate and arouse the center and the left in the Congress. And he will have a huge fight on his hands. If he were to do that, if he can't find a -- sort of a John Roberts Jr...
BROWN: Yes.
GERGEN: And maybe McConnell would be that kind of -- Michael McConnell of Denver would be that kind of candidate.If he can't find that kind of person and he gets a fight, then I think his capacity to reach out and heal and -- and -- and build bridges is -- is -- is going really to be destroyed for a long time to come.
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Jeff, let me give you the last word here. Is this a moment -- I don't think the president will call you and ask you for advice, but if he's watching tonight, is this a moment to fight or switch, as the old ad went?
GREENFIELD: It may be a moment, if I might quote Patrick Fitzgerald, to take a deep breath.
(LAUGHTER)
GREENFIELD: Because there's one great advantage that George W. Bush has, which is the other party. One pretty influential Republican said to me this week, you know, the wheels are coming off. We are in trouble. He says, if the Democrats weren't brain-dead, we would really be in trouble.
BROWN: Yes.
GREENFIELD: So..
BROWN: Jeff, it's good to see you. David and John, thank you for your time tonight.
PODESTA: Nice to be with you.
BROWN: Appreciate it very much.
GERGEN: Thank you.
BROWN: Coming up, Karl Rove, he is off the hook, at least for now. Is he out of the woods? Our legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin joins us to talk about that and some of the other unknowns in all of this, things we would like to know.We will take a break first. From New York and around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JUDITH MILLER, SENIOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER, "THE NEW YORK TIMES": I served 85 days in jail because of my belief in the importance of upholding the confidential relationship journalists have with their sources.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
FITZGERALD: Any notion that anyone might have that there's a different standard for a high official, that this is somehow singling out obstruction of justice and perjury, is upside down. If we -- if these facts are true, if we were to walk away from this and not charge obstruction of justice and perjury, we might as well just hand in our jobs.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: And that's Scooter -- Scooter Libby arriving at his home -- these pictures just in -- being driven to his home in McLean, Virginia, on what is, as he put it, a very sad day for him and his family. He issued a statement saying he expects to be exonerated, but he's no doubt got a long and difficult year ahead. His name is James McCord Jr. And for those of you who are Watergate history buffs old enough to remember, he was the Watergate burglar who first broke. Facing a long prison term and a tough-as- nails judge, Mr. McCord spilled the beans, as they say in the B- movies. But will Scooter Libby? Are there even more beans to spill? Here to take us through some of the knowns and unknowns in the indictment today and the investigation, our senior legal analyst, Jeffrey Toobin. Do you think that they will try and deal with Mr. Libby or is he a high enough fish or a high enough -- some animal?
(LAUGHTER)
JEFFREY TOOBIN, CNN SENIOR LEGAL ANALYST: No. I think this case will go to trial. I think, if there was a plea bargain to be made, it would have been made before indictment. He would have come in and plea. I think the chance -- the time for dealing was before.
BROWN: Yes.
TOOBIN: I think this case is going to trial.
BROWN: I -- I was in a conversation you may or may not heard with John Sununu, the senator earlier. And I said, you know, I would really like to hear from the vice president. There's a few questions of the vice president. Are there questions you wouldn't mind asking the vice president of the United States about his relationship to this and his right-hand man?
TOOBIN: Oh, it's astonishing. I mean, but, you know, President Bush answers questions all the time. I don't -- I mean, Vice President Cheney lives in a bubble, like no public official I have ever seen. Here he is involved in a very serious criminal case. He has never answered questions on this subject. He barely ever appears in public, except reading -- reading speeches. But, you know, he's been president for five -- vice president for five years. And he's been...
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Some will accuse you of a Freudian slip there.
TOOBIN: It could -- could be.
BROWN: What would you ask him, if you could ask him one good one?
TOOBIN: Describe your role in -- when did you know about Victoria -- Valerie Wilson...
(CROSSTALK)
TOOBIN: Valerie Plame.
BROWN: ... Valerie Plame, Valerie Plame Wilson's identity? And, describe all your conversations with Scooter Libby about that.
BROWN: We -- we think we sort of know that he calls George Tenet and gets this information. And I forget the date. But don't -- I think the thing I want to know is, did you say, let's go out and trash the guy? I mean, you probably say it more elegantly, but something like that.
TOOBIN: And that's -- and -- and that's what is interesting -- important about his role, his -- well, the -- the actions described in the indictment are not improper or illegal. And it's certainly -- certainly makes a certain amount of sense. He says, this guy Wilson surface in the -- in the press.
BROWN: Yes.
TOOBIN: He calls the CIA, says, who's this guy? What's the story?And then he tells his chief of staff about him. The question, though, is, what did he tell him to do about it? And what did Scooter Libby think about that?
BROWN: All right. I -- I almost want to apologize for this question, because I don't think it's knowable, but I am going to it anyway, because I want it on the table. Here you have got a guy, Mr. Libby, who is a lawyer, I think Yale-educated lawyer.
TOOBIN: Yes, indeed.
BROWN: Very smart.
TOOBIN: Columbia Law School.
BROWN: OK -- very smart guy, in any case. He's got to know that there are notes in these conversations. There are records of meetings. Why do you go in front of the grand jury and life?
TOOBIN: It -- it is unbelievable, isn't it? I -- I -- I -- but -- but in white-collar cases, that is almost always the defense, which is...
BROWN: What, I wouldn't be that stupid?
TOOBIN: Yes, he couldn't be that stupid. It was the defense in the Martha Stewart case. How could she be so stupid, this intelligent woman? You know what? People do stupid things all the time. And that -- that -- that's usually the prosecutor's response. And a lot of people get convicted. They hope they don't get caught.
BROWN: Thank you. You have had a long day.
TOOBIN: It's been a long day
BROWN: I know it has. Thank you very much. Coming up, from failed intelligence to indictments and the war in Iraq, how they all may tie together to lead us to this day and this program, which is NEWSNIGHT.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: We learned today that a Marine from Ohio was killed in Iraq on Thursday. Lance Corporal Robert Eckfield Jr. was 23 years old. As the war continues, so, of course, do the questions. Today, the presidential counsel Patrick Fitzgerald was asked if the indictment was a vindication that the Bush administration took the country to war on a false premise. This is how he answered.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
FITZGERALD: This indictment is not about the war. This indictment's not about the propriety of the war. And people who believe fervently in the war effort, people who oppose it, people who have mixed feelings about it should not look to this indictment for any resolution of how they feel or any vindication of how they feel.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: I don't think there was a more interesting person today, by the way, than Mr. Fitzgerald. Democrats disagree with him. They believe the indictment has everything to do with the war, how we got to war, partisan, yes, but it is part of the national debate. Our national security correspondent, David Ensor, has been doing an incredible amount of work, and good work, on the intelligence that led up to the war and how it came to be.And David joins us now. David, I think the -- people's perspective on this is, you know, of people who are opposed to the war, say that it wasn't just that the intelligence was wrong. It's that the intelligence was cooked.
DAVID ENSOR, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY CORRESPONDENT: Yes.
BROWN: Do we know? Can we answer that for them?
ENSOR: Cooked is probably a little too strong a word. You know, people in the intelligence community -- and I -- let's be honest. I also thought that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. They had used them on their own -- Saddam had used them on the people. He had used them against Iran. There were chemical weapons that were unaccounted for after the war. So, there was lots of good, logical reason to think there were weapons of mass destruction there. The amazing thing is, there were not. And, you know, I have tried to -- to find out why, how this could go so badly wrong, which is part of what, I guess, we're going to be -- be showing people in the next hour, this -- this -- this look at how this could go so badly wrong. But I was also today at the press conference that you just mentioned, Mr. Fitzgerald's press conference.And there were -- what was so striking there was, there were lots of questions about, well, isn't this really about Iraq? Isn't this really about the -- the WMD? And he -- he, of course, it is in his interests to be as narrow as possible, to say, no, it is just about lying. That's about all it is about. I don't want to go there.
BROWN: Well...
(CROSSTALK)
ENSOR: But, for most of the people in the country, whether they're for or against the war, that's what this is really about, in political terms
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Right. At some level, this is about Joe Wilson saying -- I'm not -- I'm not saying he's right about this -- I'm just saying what he said -- is that they took the country to war, when they knew the evidence was at least ambiguous and they never framed it in an ambiguous way.
BROWN: David, as you mentioned, we will take a deeper look at this in the hour ahead. We appreciate your spending a few minutes with us in -- in anticipation of that to sort of set the stage.
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Thank you very much.
ENSOR: My pleasure. BROWN: David Ensor tonight. We will take a break and we will continue in a moment.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: Well, good evening again.
In a moment, "CNN PRESENTS: Dead Wrong."First, here's what making news at this moment.
TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.com
There is just no one like Aaron Brown. He was never much good at pointing out mildew or mold but he sure could lead a nation in shock from a rooftop. Those are pictures that we'll never see again.
Lewis Scooter Libby Indicted in CIA Investigation;
Karl Rove Off the Hook?;
Inside an Intelligence Meltdown
Aired October 28, 2005 - 22:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
AARON BROWN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again, everyone. It began with 16 words uttered by the president about Iraq and nuclear weapons, only 16 words in a very long speech. It became a battle and a scandal, and now, perhaps, a crime.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
ANNOUNCER: Vice President Cheney's chief of staff is indicted. After two years of secretive digging, the special prosecutor sends shockwaves through the Bush White House.
GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Special counsel Fitzgerald's investigation and ongoing legal proceedings are serious.
ANNOUNCER: Suzanne Malveaux tonight on just how serious. Lewis Scooter Libby, described as second only to Karl Rove in the White House inner circle, resigned immediately and could face 30 years in prison. Gary Tuchman gets more on the man behind the controversy. President Bush's deputy chief of staff, Karl Rove, is off the hook, or is he?
PATRICK FITZGERALD, U.S. ATTORNEY: I will not end the investigation until I can look anyone in the eye and tell them that we have carried out our responsibility sufficiently.
ANNOUNCER: John King looks at the future of the president's top adviser. And, if Libby lied, there's this question: Why? David Ensor on the indictments and how the U.S. justified war with Saddam.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ANNOUNCER: This is NEWSNIGHT WITH AARON BROWN AND ANDERSON COOPER.
Live from the CNN Broadcast Center in New York, here's Aaron Brown.
BROWN: Good evening, again. As Larry said, Anderson is off tonight. The story of how we got from uranium in Africa to a reporter in jail, to a White House under siege, is only half-written tonight, at best. There are many more chapters to come, many questions to be answered, not the least of which is why, if true, did a smart and incredibly savvy White House insider lie so obviously to investigators? And did he do it, if he did it, to protect his boss, the vice president? There is that, and more. But, also, there is also this, the plain and powerful words of a federal prosecutor with a reputation for playing it straight. Laws were broken, he said, not technicalities, but laws. A full night on this tonight, a full house, CNN's Suzanne Malveaux at the White House, John King in Washington, David Ensor as well. And we begin with Ms. Malveaux -- Suzanne.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
SUZANNE MALVEAUX, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT
(voice-over):
The cloud that has been hanging over the Bush administration for nearly two years from the CIA leak investigation finally broke. Scooter Libby was a trusted member of Mr. Bush's most inner circle, but the five-count indictment of vice president Cheney's chief of staff is not the end of the probe.
KARL ROVE, SENIOR ADVISER TO PRESIDENT BUSH: I'm going to have a great Friday and a fantastic weekend. Hope you do, too.
MALVEAUX: Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, escaped indictment today, but his lawyer says he remains under investigation.
FITZGERALD: I will not end the investigation until I can look anyone in the eye and tell them that we have carried out our responsibility sufficiently.
MALVEAUX: A beleaguered Mr. Bush, departing for his Camp David retreat, tried to soften the blow.
BUSH: While we're all saddened by today's news, we remain focused on the many issues and opportunities facing this country. I've got a job to do; so do the people that work in the White House.
MALVEAUX: White House insiders say they are saddened by Libby's departure but are relieved that Rove seemed to have been spared. Cheney, who stuck to his schedule of fund-raising and rallying Georgia troops, said in a written statement he accepted his top lieutenant's resignation will deep regret: "Scooter Libby is one of the most capable and talented individuals I have ever known. He has given many years of his life to public service and has served our nation tirelessly and with great distinction."In a statement of his own, Libby said, "I'm confident that, at the end of this process, I will be completely and totally exonerated."
BUSH: I look forward to working with Congress on policies to keep this economy moving.
MALVEAUX: For President Bush, the strategy is to pivot towards his political agenda.
AMY WALTER, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: The question now is, can this White House get that famous first-term focus back? That is the real challenge.
KEN DUBERSTEIN,
REPUBLICAN CONSULTANT: Certainly, he needs some fresh blood. He needs to focus on big, bold things.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
MALVEAUX: And, Aaron, of course, one of those big things that he's talking about is picking his Supreme Court nominee.We're told by White House aides that could happen within days. Interesting enough, too, the strategy of the White House -- we saw two memos that went out to White House staffers late in the day, one from Chief of Staff Andy Card, saying, look, your job first and foremost is to serve the American people, the second one from White House counsel, which simply said that they should not reach out to Scooter Libby to discuss this case in any way, that it is still an ongoing investigation -- Aaron.
BROWN: Suzanne, thank you very much -- Suzanne Malveaux at the White House.
This all began, as I'm sure you know by now, with Ambassador Joe Wilson's trip to Niger back in February of 2002. He had nothing to say on camera when reached at his home today.
He did release a statement through his lawyer: "It is certainly not a day to celebrate," the statement reads.
It goes on to say: "When an indictment is delivered at the front door of the White House, the office of the president is defiled. No citizen can take pleasure from that."
Almost from the beginning, this story has been a story and a puzzle with three dimensions, policy and politics, and ,of course, the law. Before we get any further into all three, here are the charges facing Mr. Libby tonight, five of them, all felonies.
Count one, obstruction of justice. It alleges, Mr. Libby intentionally deceived the FBI and the grand jury about how he discovered Valerie Plame's status as a covert CIA officer.
Count two, false statement, lying to the FBI about whether Ms. Plame's status was well-known, saying, falsely, the indictment alleges, that NBC's Tim Russert told him that reporters were well aware of her identity.
Count three, false statement, lying to the FBI about the content of a conversation or conversations with "TIME" magazine's Matthew Cooper.
Counts four and five relate to the last two, but are classified as perjury, instead of simply making false statements, because the statements in question were made under oath to a federal grand jury.
If convicted of all five counts, Mr. Libby could receive as much as 30 years in prison. How much of this is intended to loosen up his tongue, we simply do not know. Only the prosecutor does. And he's not saying. Patrick Fitzgerald met the press this afternoon, after two years of virtual silence. The questions must have seemed like opening a trip valve on Hoover Dam. As for his answers, he said very little about the inner workings of the investigation. Instead, what made the moment so remarkable was how plainly and how passionately he stated the case.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN (voice-over): In trying to explain how the disclosure of a CIA agent's name evolved into an investigation that ensnared one of Washington's most powerful men, Patrick Fitzgerald put it in terms he felt most comfortable using, the language of baseball. What would the punishment be, he asked, if a pitcher intentionally threw at the head of a batter?
FITZGERALD: And then you would make a decision as to whether this person should be banned from baseball, whether they should be suspended, whether you should do nothing at all and just say, "Hey, the person threw a bad pitch. Get over it."In this case, it's a lot more serious than baseball. And the damage wasn't to one person. It wasn't just Valerie Wilson. It was done to all of us. BROWN: What he decided, he said, was this.
FITZGERALD: This is a very serious matter and compromising national security information is a very serious matter. But the need to get to the bottom of what happened and whether national security was compromised by inadvertence, by recklessness, by maliciousness is extremely important.
BROWN: And this is why.
FITZGERALD: We need to know the truth. And anyone who would go into a grand jury and lie, obstruct and impede the investigation has committed a serious crime. But if what we allege in the indictment is true, then what is charged is a very, very serious crime that will vindicate the public interest in finding out what happened here.
BROWN: And about forcing Judith Miller of "The New York Times" to jail.
FITZGERALD: No one wanted to have a dispute with "The New York Times" or anyone else. I would have wished nothing better that, when the subpoenas were issued in August 2004, witnesses testified then, and we would have been here in October 2004 instead of October 2005. No one would have went to jail. I didn't have a vested interest in litigating it. I was not looking for a First Amendment showdown. We didn't bluff people. And what we decided to do was to make sure before we subpoenaed any reporter that we really needed that testimony.
BROWN: Testimony, he said today, that was vital to his case.
FITZGERALD: At the end of the day what appears is that Mr. Libby's story that he was at the tail end of a chain of phone calls, passing on from one reporter what he heard from another, was not true. It was false. He was at the beginning of the chain of phone calls, the first official to disclose this information outside the government to a reporter. And then he lied about it afterwards, under oath and repeatedly.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: The allegations. If Mr. Fitzgerald has said little until now, the political establishment tonight is saying even less. Democratic lawmakers, by and large, are staying away from the microphones, by and large. So did a lot of Republicans. We did manage to get some reaction from Howard Dean, who is the chairman of the Democratic Party.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
HOWARD DEAN (D), DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN: This is about what happens when you send people to foreign countries to fight without telling America the truth. This whole thing came about because the president wasn't truthful about why we went to Iraq.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: As for the Republican side, we spoke at some length late this afternoon with John Sununu, the senator from New Hampshire.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Why do you think it -- people at the vice president's right hand -- and whether this was criminal or not will be for a jury to decide -- apparently engaged in this effort to -- this is my words, certainly, not yours -- trash Ambassador Wilson?
SEN. JOHN SUNUNU (R), NEW HAMPSHIRE: Well, I think they felt that Ambassador Wilson was a partisan -- and he certainly was, politically speaking, a partisan -- that he may have had specific motives and goals in mind that were certainly -- was certainly counterbalanced by other evidence and other sources of intelligence- gathering at the time. And they felt that there needed to be some sort of a balance out there. That doesn't justify the specific way that they approached it, but I think that was their concern at the time.
BROWN: Do you think the vice president, given that an important aide to the vice president, often referred to as his right-hand man, a national security adviser, that the vice president needs to answer some questions here?
SUNUNU: I don't have access to the material that was presented to the grand jury. And -- and I think the defense teams and the prosecution are perfectly capable of deciding who needs to provide information in order to fairly try the case.
BROWN: Respectfully, that's a very narrow legal answer to something, whether he needs to testify.And, actually, if I may try the question again, I'm interested in whether you believe there are questions that the vice president needs to answer.
SUNUNU: I think you need to be specific. What kind of a -- what kind of a question? I think everyone knows what Vice President Cheney's position was on -- on intelligence, on prosecuting the war. Certainly, people understand and know his relationship to Scooter Libby, who served him very well, very capably. So, look, if there's a specific question that you want to pose to the vice president, that the media wants to pose to him, yes, you should ask those questions.
BROWN: Well, let me try one then.
SUNUNU: Sure.
BROWN: Would you like to know if the vice president was in any way involved in discussions that led to the outing of Ms. Plame?
SUNUNU: I think that question has been largely answered in the release of the notes of the conversation that he and Scooter Libby had, that, apparently, by what's been reported and what's been presented in the way of information from the grand jury -- I guess this was one of the -- the leaks prior to the indictment -- there was a conversation between the two of them that did involve the fact that Joe Wilson's wife was an employee at the CIA.
BROWN: My question was, was he involved a decision to out her? Was he in any way involved in discussions? Did she say, yes, Scooter, that's a heck of an idea, or, don't you dare do that, or, what are you taking? Don't you want to know that?
SUNUNU: I think that's less important than whether the laws involving the disclose were violated. And I think the prosecutor has pursued that question fairly effectively and, of course, whether people have been forthcoming on the questions of perjury and cooperating with investigators.And, on that issue, he's been very clear that he believes a law was violated, and that's why he's handed down the indictments.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Republican Senator John Sununu. You would have a hard time knowing that there is other news to report tonight. And we have more on the indictments coming up. But here are some of the other stories we are following at this moment.
Forty-five police officers in New Orleans were fired today. They were let go for allegedly abandoning their posts, either before or after Katrina hit. Fifteen other officers have resigned.
In California, the mother of a teen accused of killing the wife of a prominent defense attorney has been released from jail. Esther Fielding was charged as an accessory to murder after the fact. But, today, police decided to drop the charges. Her son, who is 16, will be tried as an adult.
Today, the United Nations Security Council condemned recent comments by Iran's president that Israel should be wiped off the map. The Israeli government says Iran's membership in the U.N. should be revoked because of the harsh words.
And a fitting remembrance for Rosa Parks -- the mother of the civil rights movement, who died earlier in the week, will lie in honor Sunday and Monday in the Capitol Rotunda of the United States of America. Congress has authorized that right only 29 times in our country's history. And Ms. parks is the first woman to ever receive the tribute.
Back to the Libby indictment next -- this is a story, as we said at the top, with many dimensions and complications. It is still , by and large, a mystery.
Ahead tonight, we look more closely at the parts and the pieces and how they fit, and more on Scooter Libby himself, closer to the vice president, perhaps, than anyone but the president himself, and a closer look at where the case may go from here. We will talk with -- "Official A."
What next?
A break first. This is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
COLIN POWELL, SECRETARY OF STATE: Leaving Saddam Hussein in possession of weapons of mass destruction for a few more months and years is not an option, not in a post-September 11 world.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, SEPTEMBER 2003)
BUSH: If there's a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is. And if the person has violated law, that person will be taken care of.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: Innocent until proven guilty is a sacred American ideal. But if America's first impression of you comes from the mouth of a special prosecutor, you're probably -- probably already behind in the battle for public opinion. It may have been some comfort for Scooter Libby to hear the president and the vice president praise him for the work he's done for his country, but the stakes for him are now enormous. He could face up to 30 years in prison. So, who is Scooter Libby? Here's CNN's Gary Tuchman.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)GARY TUCHMAN, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Just as George W. Bush relies on Dick Cheney, Dick Cheney has relied on Scooter Libby.
THOMAS MANN, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: Scooter Libby, in my view, is the second most powerful staff member in the White House, second only to Karl Rove.
TUCHMAN: You may not have heard of Libby until the midst of this scandal, but he's been at the center of the power in the Bush White House. Libby, who is on crutches because of an injured foot, was educated at Yale and has been in and out of government for decades. He's a lawyer, and, ironically, considering what he's going through, was quite skilled at getting people out of legal trouble. Libby and the vice president got acquainted when Cheney was the defense secretary under the first President Bush. By 2000, Libby was one of Cheney's top advisers and followed him to the White House. Libby was with Cheney on September 11, 2001, and in the days after, when the vice president was moved into secure locations in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Libby has a well-established reputation as an administration hawk.
MANN: Scooter Libby is a formidable figure in this administration who's been involved in virtually every critical national security decision, including the war in Iraq.
TUCHMAN: Libby prepared a document that argued the case for going to war against Iraq, a document that reportedly became the basis for Secretary of State Colin Powell's presentation to the United Nations. But there's a very different side to Libby. He authored a novel called "The Apprentice," a story of romance and intrigue set in 1903 Japan. It was a book that won praise from literary critics. Libby told a "New York Times" interviewer, when the paperback came out, that he occasionally dreams -- quote -- "of just becoming a novelist and sitting on Crete and drinking odd-named wines."He's got a lot more on his mind now. Gary Tuchman, CNN, New York.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: Coming up tonight, a look at the man who was not indicted today, Karl Rove. Was it just a temporary reprieve or is he off the hook? Also, this is going to sting a little. We will tell you some flu shots that weren't. We will also take a break first. From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: A quick look now at some of the other stories making news tonight.We go to Atlanta and Erica Hill. Good evening, Ms. Hill.
ERICA HILL, HEADLINE NEWS CORRESPONDENT: Good evening to you, Aaron, on this Friday.
Unfortunately, I have to tell you about another storm, Tropical Storm Beta, causing concern in the western Caribbean tonight. It plowed into the tiny Caribbean island of Providencia today and has its sights set on Nicaragua. Forecasters say the storm could build hurricane strength at any moment. Now, a hurricane warning is in effect for the east coast of Nicaragua. And some coastal residents of villages -- some residents of coastal villages, that is, are being evacuated. Meantime, fake flu shots.
The FBI says 1,000 ExxonMobil workers in Texas were injected with fake flu vaccine. The owner of the health company hired to administer the shots has been arrested and officially charged with Medicare fraud. Investigators say he gave similar shots to 14 residents of a Texas senior citizens home the next day. Preliminary tests indicate the syringes were filled with purified water. A nurse who helped give the shots blew the whistle. So far, no ill effects have been reported.
And a record number of births to unmarried women, one-and-a-half million last year -- that's according to a new federal study. More than 80 percent, we should point out, 80 percent of teen mothers, are unmarried. But, actually, the number of teen mothers is falling. The biggest increase came among women in their 20s, because many of them are unmarried, but living with their partners, so, of course, still count as unwed mothers.
And Second City, no more -- thousands turned out in Chicago today to celebrate the White Sox's victory in the World Series. This is the team's first world championship since 1917, so, plenty to celebrate. Many fans say they still can't believe it. Some people in Boston probably still can't believe it from last year.
And, Aaron, I think I checked the correct paper online. I think.
BROWN: Yes. HILL: And I believe that the weather today called for a celebration.
BROWN: It did, indeed. And -- and there was one. And if you go back and look at the tape from -- I don't know -- last February or March, you will see that I actually predicted the White Sox would win the World Series.
HILL: I hope you had some money riding on it, my friend.
BROWN: I think I predicted that. I might not have.
(LAUGHTER)
HILL: We will find the tape.
(LAUGHTER)
BROWN: Thank you. Have a good weekend.
HILL: You, too.
BROWN: Thank you. On we go. The grand jury that indicted Scooter Libby today had nothing to say about Karl Rove. Does that mean the president's top political adviser is off the hook? Our chief national correspondent, John King, reports.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
JOHN KING, CNN CHIEF NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The day's first clue came in Karl Rove's driveway. ROVE: I'm going to have a great Friday and a fantastic weekend. I hope you do, too.
KING: The Bush White House in turmoil, but the president's right-hand man is still on the job, though not out of legal jeopardy.
FITZGERALD: We either charge someone or we don't talk about them.
KING: The prosecutor won't name names, but Rove remains under investigation -- his attorney voicing confidence, when the special counsel finishes his work, he will conclude that Mr. Rove has done nothing wrong. At issue is Rove's initial failure to disclose to leak investigators a conversation with reporter Matthew Cooper about CIA operative Valerie Plame. Rove contends it was an inadvertent oversight and that he brought it to the prosecutor's attention as soon as he found an e-mail reminding him. Rove friend and former top White House aide Nick Calio says, those who don't accept Rove's explanation don't understand the pressure of 18-hour-a-day White House jobs.
NICHOLAS CALIO, FORMER BUSH LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS DIRECTOR: There are a lot of things that I don't remember. I go through notes sometimes now and say, I don't even remember being in the meeting, let alone, you know, having said what I said.
KING: Rove has, from the beginning, insisted he broke no laws.
ROVE: I didn't know her name and didn't leak her name.
KING: What is no longer in dispute, though, is that Rove took part in a hardball White House political campaign to discredit Plame's husband, Ambassador Joe Wilson, when Wilson accused the White House of hyping the case for the war in Iraq.
CALIO: I think, you know, hardball comes with politics, but hardball doesn't mean being not fair and it doesn't mean doing anything illegal.
KING: Some Democrats are more than skeptical and note, the investigation isn't over.
REP. TIM RYAN (D), OHIO: It is going to be interesting over the course of the next few weeks and the next few months to find out exactly what Karl Rove did know.
KING: But, for now, Rove is on the job and deeply involved in everything, including the urgent new search for a Supreme Court nominee.
HELGI WALKER, FORMER COUNSEL TO PRESIDENT BUSH: Well, Karl, as everybody knows, is an excellent adviser to the president, and has interests in a docket that's extremely broad.
KING: That portfolio in the past few weeks has included managing his own campaign to avoid indictment and quietly orchestrating a strategy to get his version of events out of the grand jury room and into the public domain.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
KING: Now, Karl Rove is not named in the indictment of Scooter Libby by name. But we do know from two sources familiar with the investigation tonight that Karl Rove is indeed the mysterious "Official A" named in this indictment. "Official A," the prosecutor says, is the senior administration official who told Scooter Libby, before Novak published the column that started all of this, that Novak about to write that column. That "Official A," again, we're told, is indeed Karl Rove -- prosecutors using that to debunk Scooter Libby's argument that he first learned about this from reporters.But, Aaron, tonight, sources close to Rove insist they just have a few more questions to answer. They believe the prosecutor will shut down this investigation within a matter of weeks, with no charges. But the investigation is still ongoing -- Rove's closest friends telling him, be very careful.
BROWN: Does the fact that we can now say that "Official A" is Karl Rove mean he is in any more legal jeopardy, any less legal jeopardy, or have we just put a little more frosting on a cake?
KING: It is a little more frosting on a cake. It's essentially cracking one of the mysteries of the indictment. Prosecutor Fitzgerald said today, if you can't charge them, we don't name them in this indictment. So, from the Rove perspective, they're saying, this is proof he did nothing wrong. Others say, don't rush to that judgments so quickly. The investigation is still open.
BROWN: John, thank you very much -- John King in Washington tonight. Coming up, back to the future, from what did the president know , to swapping arms for hostages to, "I did not have sex with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky," thumbnails of scandals of our lives, because this is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
ROVE: I didn't know her name and didn't leak her name. This is at the Justice Department. I'm confident that the U.S. attorney, the prosecutor who is involved in looking at this, is going to do a very thorough job of doing a very substantial and conclusive investigation.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: Think about this for a moment. If you are a certain age, there's a good chance that, once upon a time, you were taught to and did trust your government. Indeed, we would like to think that none of us has become so jaded that we never trust our government. But have been tested in that regard because, sometimes, our elected officials lie, cheat, steal or, shall we say, kiss inappropriately. Today's scandal is just another in a line.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
FITZGERALD: A few hours ago, a federal grand jury sitting in the District of Columbia returned a five-count indictment against I. Lewis Libby.
BROWN: Special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald today saying words no administration wants to hear, that one of its own has been indicted. No administration wants to hear it, but more than a few have. Some are about sex, others about money, power or just plain politics. In 1921, it was Teapot Dome, named for a Wyoming town that was home to U.S. oil reserves. Back then, James B. Fall, the secretary of the interior under President Harding, was indicted for accepting bribes from two oil operators. In return, he leased them oil reserves, oil reserved for the Navy. Fall spent a year in prison, paid a $100,000 fine.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RICHARD NIXON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I'm not a crook.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: Fast forward to 1972. Nixon was president, Watergate the scandal. It started with what the president's press secretary called a third-rate burglary, five men arrested for breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate. You know the rest. "Washington Post" reporters Woodward and Bernstein kept digging around, uncovered a series of crimes and cover-ups that reached all the way to the White House. In the end, the burglars and two former White House employees, E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, were convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping. Three former White House aides were convicted of hindering the investigation.The president himself was named as a co-conspirator. And, on August 9, 1974, Richard Nixon resigned, just ahead of an impeachment trial.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RONALD REAGAN, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: In the mid-'80s, there was Iran-Contra, the Reagan administration selling arms, anti-tank missiles, to be precise, to Iran, in hopes of winning the release for Americans held hostage by Iranian-backed terrorists. Money from the sale was used to fund the Sandinista rebels in Nicaragua. And both actions contradicted U.S. policy. There were congressional hearings, indictments against National Security Adviser John Poindexter and one of his aides, Colonel Oliver North. Neither ended up in prison.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
WILLIAM J. CLINTON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I did not have sexual relations with that woman.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: And then, the mid-'90s, there was Monica. President Bill Clinton denied an affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, denied it to a national television audience, and, unfortunately for him, denied it under oath. He was charged with perjury and obstruction, and he was impeached.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ROWN: People can debate how big a deal today's indictment is, but consider this. Not since 1875 and President Ulysses Grant has a sitting White House official been indicted. You don't remember Oliver Babcock, of course, but he shares company tonight with Lewis Scooter Libby. So, what is it like to work at a White House in the scandal crisis mode? David Gergen has advised both Republican and Democratic presidents, as we say to same all the time. John Podesta advised Bill Clinton. And Jeff Greenfield often advises me, but that's not why he's here tonight.
(LAUGHTER)
BROWN: Gentlemen, let me begin by rolling a piece of tape, or having the control room roll one. This is the president this afternoon. Kind of look at his face. I'm not sure we have seen him look quite like this or had a day quite like this. John, what would you guess the president was going through today?
JOHN PODESTA, FORMER CLINTON WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF: Well, this was a tough day, Aaron, I think for the president.But he looked like he intended to just tough it out. He didn't like a guy who intended to change course, to clean house. I think he looked like he was just going to kind of hunker down and try to tough -- tough -- tough things out at this point.
BROWN: And, David, the importance of looking like you're just -- you're going to tough it out to a president, which they all, honestly, try and do -- they want to get back to the people's business, they always tell us -- is what?
DAVID GERGEN, FORMER PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER: Well, let me just say, first of all, I knew Oliver Babcock. I worked with Oliver Babcock.
(LAUGHTER)
GERGEN: And Scooter Libby is no Oliver Babcock.
(LAUGHTER)
GERGEN: The...
BROWN: Thank you, David.
GERGEN: OK. The -- I think, on a day like this, -- the importance of the president coming out and toughing it out is exactly what John Podesta said. And that is, he does look like he's being very introspective, that he's really taken it aboard. In fact, I think there's a certain defiance in this White House. They don't think they have done much wrong. They don't think they made a mistake on Harriet Miers, as far as I can tell. They think she was done in by politics. They don't really think they made much a mistake here. And, so, what that suggests is, you are not going to see much course correction, which I think is quite necessary, in fact, for them to recover.
BROWN: Let me come back to that, but let me draw Jeff in. One of the things I have heard a lot today is, they have lost control of the agenda. Do you think that the president has lost control of the agenda
J
EFF
GREEN
FIELD, CNN SENIOR ANALYST: We're going to find out if he tries to restart his domestic agenda. And I think the one break that they have is that this is an odd- numbered year. Imagine this happening in late October of '04 or next year, late October of '06, as people prepare to vote. You know, I actually do think that we live in a time, partly because of us, the people process this stuff so -- so quickly, that it's entirely possible that, by next spring, he will be rolling out something. The question is, with everybody telling him he's got to change course -- you know, crisis has a 1,000 kibitzers...
(LAUGHTER)
GREENFIELD: Is he -- is he...
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Oliver Babcock said that.
GREENFIELD: Is he of a mind to do that?Or, as the -- or, as John and David described, are they saying, you know what, we got here; we got reelected, we got most of our agenda passed in the first years; just give us a little time; we have got our conservative back...
BROWN: Yes.
GREENFIELD: ... because we Lanced the Harriet Miers problem?So, I'm not sure they have lost control. BROWN: John, people have said a lot, the president -- one way to get the agenda back, if, in fact, he's lost it, is that you launch big, bold ideas. He launched a big, bold idea in Social Security, probably the biggest, boldest idea in American politics, in a sense, given how many people it affects. And fell flat. So, what are the big, bold domestic ideas in a country that seems to have growing doubts over the president himself?
PODESTA: Well, look, Social Security completely crashed and burned. And, you know, when he says, I want to get back and do my job, I want to get back and -- and do the work of the people, it reminds me of what President Clinton said. But it's important to remember, when President Clinton was saying that, he had a 65 percent job approval. Right now, George Bush has a 38 percent job approval.
So, when people hear that, that he's going to just go back and do the same thing, I think they say to themselves, oh, no, you know, what is he talking about? I think that, you know, he hasn't done much about energy. He hasn't done anything to really deal with the middle- class squeeze in this country. He's got a real problem in Iraq. So, he's got his hands full.
And, you know, I think, at this point, he's got a team that, if -- if nothing else, has their credibility in shreds. You know, the one thing we know that is unassailable is that Karl Rove went out, told Scott McClellan to say he had nothing to do with it. We know that was not true.And I think he would be well-advised to clean house. But I don't think he's going to do it.
BROWN: David, on the -- the whole house-cleaning thing, I mean, to me, it -- it almost cuts two ways. I -- I -- gather there's some advantage in bringing new blood in. And people are tired. It is exhausting work. On the other hand, it feels or it can play as desperate.
GERGEN: It can. But, in this case, I think the country would welcome someone like a Fred Thompson, the former senator, coming in, someone of stature, of the kind of person that Howard Baker came in with Ronald Reagan.
But here -- on the substantive side, Aaron, I think he has this problem, that, you know, when Reagan was there, and he was looking for new initiatives after Iran-Contra, he had Gorbachev as a partner. And they went -- engaged in summits and they got an arms control treaty. And that really helped as a part of the substantive recovery.
With George W. Bush, you know, the next big decision he's got to make is on the Supreme Court. And every indication is that he is going to choose a fight, that he's going to go to someone who's -- you know, who's a strong conservative, who may well alienate and arouse the center and the left in the Congress. And he will have a huge fight on his hands. If he were to do that, if he can't find a -- sort of a John Roberts Jr...
BROWN: Yes.
GERGEN: And maybe McConnell would be that kind of -- Michael McConnell of Denver would be that kind of candidate.If he can't find that kind of person and he gets a fight, then I think his capacity to reach out and heal and -- and -- and build bridges is -- is -- is going really to be destroyed for a long time to come.
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Jeff, let me give you the last word here. Is this a moment -- I don't think the president will call you and ask you for advice, but if he's watching tonight, is this a moment to fight or switch, as the old ad went?
GREENFIELD: It may be a moment, if I might quote Patrick Fitzgerald, to take a deep breath.
(LAUGHTER)
GREENFIELD: Because there's one great advantage that George W. Bush has, which is the other party. One pretty influential Republican said to me this week, you know, the wheels are coming off. We are in trouble. He says, if the Democrats weren't brain-dead, we would really be in trouble.
BROWN: Yes.
GREENFIELD: So..
BROWN: Jeff, it's good to see you. David and John, thank you for your time tonight.
PODESTA: Nice to be with you.
BROWN: Appreciate it very much.
GERGEN: Thank you.
BROWN: Coming up, Karl Rove, he is off the hook, at least for now. Is he out of the woods? Our legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin joins us to talk about that and some of the other unknowns in all of this, things we would like to know.We will take a break first. From New York and around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JUDITH MILLER, SENIOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER, "THE NEW YORK TIMES": I served 85 days in jail because of my belief in the importance of upholding the confidential relationship journalists have with their sources.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
FITZGERALD: Any notion that anyone might have that there's a different standard for a high official, that this is somehow singling out obstruction of justice and perjury, is upside down. If we -- if these facts are true, if we were to walk away from this and not charge obstruction of justice and perjury, we might as well just hand in our jobs.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: And that's Scooter -- Scooter Libby arriving at his home -- these pictures just in -- being driven to his home in McLean, Virginia, on what is, as he put it, a very sad day for him and his family. He issued a statement saying he expects to be exonerated, but he's no doubt got a long and difficult year ahead. His name is James McCord Jr. And for those of you who are Watergate history buffs old enough to remember, he was the Watergate burglar who first broke. Facing a long prison term and a tough-as- nails judge, Mr. McCord spilled the beans, as they say in the B- movies. But will Scooter Libby? Are there even more beans to spill? Here to take us through some of the knowns and unknowns in the indictment today and the investigation, our senior legal analyst, Jeffrey Toobin. Do you think that they will try and deal with Mr. Libby or is he a high enough fish or a high enough -- some animal?
(LAUGHTER)
JEFFREY TOOBIN, CNN SENIOR LEGAL ANALYST: No. I think this case will go to trial. I think, if there was a plea bargain to be made, it would have been made before indictment. He would have come in and plea. I think the chance -- the time for dealing was before.
BROWN: Yes.
TOOBIN: I think this case is going to trial.
BROWN: I -- I was in a conversation you may or may not heard with John Sununu, the senator earlier. And I said, you know, I would really like to hear from the vice president. There's a few questions of the vice president. Are there questions you wouldn't mind asking the vice president of the United States about his relationship to this and his right-hand man?
TOOBIN: Oh, it's astonishing. I mean, but, you know, President Bush answers questions all the time. I don't -- I mean, Vice President Cheney lives in a bubble, like no public official I have ever seen. Here he is involved in a very serious criminal case. He has never answered questions on this subject. He barely ever appears in public, except reading -- reading speeches. But, you know, he's been president for five -- vice president for five years. And he's been...
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Some will accuse you of a Freudian slip there.
TOOBIN: It could -- could be.
BROWN: What would you ask him, if you could ask him one good one?
TOOBIN: Describe your role in -- when did you know about Victoria -- Valerie Wilson...
(CROSSTALK)
TOOBIN: Valerie Plame.
BROWN: ... Valerie Plame, Valerie Plame Wilson's identity? And, describe all your conversations with Scooter Libby about that.
BROWN: We -- we think we sort of know that he calls George Tenet and gets this information. And I forget the date. But don't -- I think the thing I want to know is, did you say, let's go out and trash the guy? I mean, you probably say it more elegantly, but something like that.
TOOBIN: And that's -- and -- and that's what is interesting -- important about his role, his -- well, the -- the actions described in the indictment are not improper or illegal. And it's certainly -- certainly makes a certain amount of sense. He says, this guy Wilson surface in the -- in the press.
BROWN: Yes.
TOOBIN: He calls the CIA, says, who's this guy? What's the story?And then he tells his chief of staff about him. The question, though, is, what did he tell him to do about it? And what did Scooter Libby think about that?
BROWN: All right. I -- I almost want to apologize for this question, because I don't think it's knowable, but I am going to it anyway, because I want it on the table. Here you have got a guy, Mr. Libby, who is a lawyer, I think Yale-educated lawyer.
TOOBIN: Yes, indeed.
BROWN: Very smart.
TOOBIN: Columbia Law School.
BROWN: OK -- very smart guy, in any case. He's got to know that there are notes in these conversations. There are records of meetings. Why do you go in front of the grand jury and life?
TOOBIN: It -- it is unbelievable, isn't it? I -- I -- I -- but -- but in white-collar cases, that is almost always the defense, which is...
BROWN: What, I wouldn't be that stupid?
TOOBIN: Yes, he couldn't be that stupid. It was the defense in the Martha Stewart case. How could she be so stupid, this intelligent woman? You know what? People do stupid things all the time. And that -- that -- that's usually the prosecutor's response. And a lot of people get convicted. They hope they don't get caught.
BROWN: Thank you. You have had a long day.
TOOBIN: It's been a long day
BROWN: I know it has. Thank you very much. Coming up, from failed intelligence to indictments and the war in Iraq, how they all may tie together to lead us to this day and this program, which is NEWSNIGHT.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: We learned today that a Marine from Ohio was killed in Iraq on Thursday. Lance Corporal Robert Eckfield Jr. was 23 years old. As the war continues, so, of course, do the questions. Today, the presidential counsel Patrick Fitzgerald was asked if the indictment was a vindication that the Bush administration took the country to war on a false premise. This is how he answered.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
FITZGERALD: This indictment is not about the war. This indictment's not about the propriety of the war. And people who believe fervently in the war effort, people who oppose it, people who have mixed feelings about it should not look to this indictment for any resolution of how they feel or any vindication of how they feel.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BROWN: I don't think there was a more interesting person today, by the way, than Mr. Fitzgerald. Democrats disagree with him. They believe the indictment has everything to do with the war, how we got to war, partisan, yes, but it is part of the national debate. Our national security correspondent, David Ensor, has been doing an incredible amount of work, and good work, on the intelligence that led up to the war and how it came to be.And David joins us now. David, I think the -- people's perspective on this is, you know, of people who are opposed to the war, say that it wasn't just that the intelligence was wrong. It's that the intelligence was cooked.
DAVID ENSOR, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY CORRESPONDENT: Yes.
BROWN: Do we know? Can we answer that for them?
ENSOR: Cooked is probably a little too strong a word. You know, people in the intelligence community -- and I -- let's be honest. I also thought that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. They had used them on their own -- Saddam had used them on the people. He had used them against Iran. There were chemical weapons that were unaccounted for after the war. So, there was lots of good, logical reason to think there were weapons of mass destruction there. The amazing thing is, there were not. And, you know, I have tried to -- to find out why, how this could go so badly wrong, which is part of what, I guess, we're going to be -- be showing people in the next hour, this -- this -- this look at how this could go so badly wrong. But I was also today at the press conference that you just mentioned, Mr. Fitzgerald's press conference.And there were -- what was so striking there was, there were lots of questions about, well, isn't this really about Iraq? Isn't this really about the -- the WMD? And he -- he, of course, it is in his interests to be as narrow as possible, to say, no, it is just about lying. That's about all it is about. I don't want to go there.
BROWN: Well...
(CROSSTALK)
ENSOR: But, for most of the people in the country, whether they're for or against the war, that's what this is really about, in political terms
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Right. At some level, this is about Joe Wilson saying -- I'm not -- I'm not saying he's right about this -- I'm just saying what he said -- is that they took the country to war, when they knew the evidence was at least ambiguous and they never framed it in an ambiguous way.
BROWN: David, as you mentioned, we will take a deeper look at this in the hour ahead. We appreciate your spending a few minutes with us in -- in anticipation of that to sort of set the stage.
(CROSSTALK)
BROWN: Thank you very much.
ENSOR: My pleasure. BROWN: David Ensor tonight. We will take a break and we will continue in a moment.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BROWN: Well, good evening again.
In a moment, "CNN PRESENTS: Dead Wrong."First, here's what making news at this moment.
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