If Scooter Libby is counting on a pardon to keep him out of jail, he’ll need Bush to act very quickly.
Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff, must go to prison while appealing his conviction for obstructing a CIA leak probe, a U.S. appeals court said.
Libby may be behind bars within weeks after a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit today denied his request for release. The decision will increase pressure on President George W. Bush to decide soon whether to pardon Libby, 56, as the former White House official’s supporters have urged.
Libby “has not shown that the appeal raises a substantial question” under federal law that would merit letting him remain free, the court said.
It apparently wasn’t too close a question for the appeals court panel — it was a unanimous decision dismissing the appeal with a one-paragraph order.
For those who keep track of such things, Bloomberg reported, “The three-judge appeals panel that issued today’s order included Judges David Sentelle, nominated by President Ronald Reagan; Karen LeCraft Henderson, nominated by President George H.W. Bush, and David Tatel, nominated by President Bill Clinton.”
For those keeping score, Libby was charged by a prosecutor appointed by a Republican administration, he was sentenced by a judge appointed by a Republican president, and his appeal was heard by two more judges appointed by Republican presidents. Naturally, this will lead Fox News and the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page to decry the “partisan” prosecution.
Is a pardon likely? Bloomberg spoke to P.S. Ruckman Jr., a political science professor and an expert on presidential pardons, who explored the options.
The focus on a Libby pardon is obscuring other options available to Bush, including conditional pardons, commutations, remissions of fines and amnesties, Ruckman said.
One possibility would be to issue a respite directive, which simply delays carrying out a sentence and lets passions cool, he said. George Washington first granted respites in June, 1795, delaying the executions of two men involved in the Whiskey Rebellion; they were later pardoned, Ruckman said.
“Bush can keep Libby out of jail without exercising a pardon,” Ruckman said.
As a rule, if you’re relying on a precedent from 1795, it’s a bit of a stretch.
Nevertheless, expect the pressure on the White House to get quite intense.