
After Scooter Libby was disbarred, questions arise about presidential pardon
George Bush already commuted Scooter Libby's sentence. Now, in the wake of the mandatory disbarment of Scooter Libby, questions have arisen about a possible presidential pardon. On CNN.com, CREW's Melanie Sloan weighed in:
Unlike a presidential pardon which wipes a person's crimes off the books, Bush's commutation of Libby's sentence only means that he does not have to serve the prison sentence. He is still considered guilty of the crime he was convicted.
The president stopped short of an outright pardon, noting that "our entire system of justice relies on people telling the truth."
The clemency grant raised eyebrows among legal observers and prompted criticism from Democrats.
William Jeffress, one of the attorneys who helped defend Libby in the criminal trial, told CNN, "We are not surprised by the appeals court decision, because clearly under the rules this is automatic."
Jeffress could not say whether Libby might apply for reinstatement if he is pardoned. He gave no indication such a pardon is anticipated.
Although the White House has declined to say whether Bush might go beyond his decision to commute Libby's jail time, both Bush and Cheney have expressed strong support for Libby.
Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, told CNN a presidential pardon could indeed open the door for Libby to try to regain his license to practice law.
"Whether it would be granted is another matter," she said, given ethics standards that a bar would normally consider.
Sloan's group is pursuing a civil suit on behalf of Plame Wilson, claiming damage from White House disclosures of her identity and connection to the CIA.
Although the suit has been rejected by a federal court, the group Friday will file a brief ahead of an appeals argument May 9.
On the night of Dec 24, 2008, The Chimperor will issue blanket
pardons to every member of his regime who has run afoul of the law, to the extent that the law is still operable by then, for every deed they ever did, or even considered. Prob'ly on Xmas day, he'll 'resign' and have Cheney pardon him.
Keeping Impeachment Proceedings On the Table
Impeachment proceedings, regardless the outcome of a Senate trial, would trump the President's pardon. The House is not obliged to follow the Senate's "precedent" for "not conducting a trial" on former US government officials. Nothing prevents the House from impeaching Libby.
All we are saying is "give impeachment a chance"
John Dean has addressed how focusing on the Impeachment of lower level officials in the Bush administration is the way to go. So that these criminals are unable to roll back into any future administrations.
More Pelosi Excuses To Enable GOP For Generations
Great idea. Where's the impeachment? Pelosi appears short sighted. It's in her interests, as a member of the DNC, to block GOP access to power, and remove GOP personnel from the political landscape. By refusing to impeach lower level employees, she's ensuring the political opposition remains intact. If only the Germans could have rolled back the clock to 1918 and reconsidered how the dealt with the Nazis.



Impeachment Inaction: Asserted Benefits Not Supported By Polls
Pelosi cannot argue that impeachment would split the DNC or affect the DNC's chances at securing a bigger hold in Congress or the White House. With numbers like these [link], there no excuse not to conduct an impeachment investigation now. Regardless the impeachment decisions of Pelosi, the DNC appears poised to break ranks and support the GOP. Seizing defeat out of the jaws of victory.