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Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Destruction of Evidence is a Felony
posted by Wally
9:19 AM

We should start a pool: how many pardons will Bush have to make? Tie breaker goes to whoever can guess the most names of people he'll pardon. And the list is growing fast.

It appears that several high ranking officials in the White House were directly involved in making sure the CIA "torture" videos were destroyed, even after the courts ruled that the tapes were to be preserved.
At least four top White House lawyers took part in discussions with the Central Intelligence Agency between 2003 and 2005 about whether to destroy videotapes showing the secret interrogations of two operatives from Al Qaeda, according to current and former administration and intelligence officials.

The accounts indicate that the involvement of White House officials in the discussions before the destruction of the tapes in November 2005 was more extensive than Bush administration officials have acknowledged.

Those who took part, the officials said, included Alberto R. Gonzales, who served as White House counsel until early 2005; David S. Addington, who was the counsel to Vice President Dick Cheney and is now his chief of staff; John B. Bellinger III, who until January 2005 was the senior lawyer at the National Security Council; and Harriet E. Miers, who succeeded Mr. Gonzales as White House counsel.

One former senior intelligence official with direct knowledge of the matter said there had been "vigorous sentiment" among some top White House officials to destroy the tapes. The former official did not specify which White House officials took this position, but he said that some believed in 2005 that any disclosure of the tapes could have been particularly damaging after revelations a year earlier of abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
More cover ups. More crimes. More destruction of evidence sanctioned at the highest levels of government. It doesn't matter who you are, "spoilation of evidence" is a crime. Just ask Dick Nixon. So is Obstruction of Justice. Just ask Scooter Libby.

The rest of the people involved may get lucky if Dubya is feeling nice. Unfortunately for him, Bush can't pardon himself.

Arrest these men

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I'm pretty sure the Military Commissions Act already exonerates anyone above a certain level for actions taken on behalf of the "war on terror". If it doesn't already, they'll make this fit. First order of business last January should have been to repeal that thing.

posted by Anonymous Anonymous at 11:44 AM  

   
 

 

 

 

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