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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: ManyMoose who wrote (130129)3/2/2001 10:35:37 PM
From: Patricia Trinchero  Read Replies (1) of 769667
 
Cheney Aide Helped Rich's Legal Case
_____Transcript_____

• House Hearing on Pardons 3/1/01




_____The Marc Rich File_____

• Letters to Bill Clinton: 21 prominent public figures beg pardon for the fugitive financier.
• Text: Rich Statement on Pardon




_____Clinton Accused_____

• Background: Pardons and Gifts





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By Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 2, 2001; Page A12

The person largely responsible for key legal arguments cited in Marc Rich's successful pardon application is not Jack Quinn, President Bill Clinton's former White House counsel. It's I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a longtime Rich lawyer who is now chief of staff for Vice President Cheney.

Since 1985, when he left the State Department and was recruited by former Nixon White House counsel Leonard Garment, Libby spent countless hours reviewing legal documents and interviewing witnesses in a search for cracks in the government's tax evasion indictment of Rich, according to sources. "He spent the next two years traveling around the world," said a person familiar with his work.

He traveled to England, New York, Texas and California, and met with Rich in Switzerland at least eight times to discuss the case, the sources said.

"He's the best lawyer of all the many lawyers who have worked with me or for me," Garment said. "On this case, he didn't give in to anything. He was constantly skeptical and helped me reach the conclusion that we had a meritorious case" to present to New York prosecutors in attempts to negotiate a settlement.

"Scooter really believed" that Rich was innocent of the charges, said a source familiar with his work. Libby was convinced Rich was a victim of an overzealous prosecution that inappropriately used a federal racketeering statute known by its initials, RICO, to squeeze him and his companies, sources said.

From 1989 to 1993, Libby served in the Pentagon when Cheney was secretary of defense. As soon as he went back into private practice, he resumed his role as the specialist in the Rich case.

In 1994, he approached prosecutors again in a bid to lessen the charges, but they balked, saying Rich would have to return to the United States before they would seriously discuss the matter.

Libby briefed Quinn about the legal intricacies of the case in 1999 and produced a document for the financier's legal team that October, attempting to justify why prosecutors should talk to Rich even though he was a fugitive.

He has said he declined to work on the effort to win a pardon because he was working for Cheney, sources said. But yesterday he was called as a witness in a congressional hearing on the Rich pardon, and Libby said he had called Rich to congratulate him when Clinton granted clemency.

Libby has declined repeated requests for interviews. But at the hearing, he said, "I did not represent Mr. Rich in conjunction with the pardon or pardon application."

Libby said that he began working on the case with Garment and that they had approached the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, seeking dismissal of the criminal charges. "Approaching the Southern District of New York, we were not seeking a pardon, but rather a negotiated settlement of the outstanding charges," Libby said. He said he received $2 million in fees for his work on the case.

Libby said that last fall he was asked by Rich attorney Michael Green about working on the pardon application but he said he was too busy working on a potential Bush transition effort. "I informed Mr. Green that I would not participate in a pardon application."

Staff writer James V. Grimaldi contributed to this report.

© 2001 The Washington Post Company
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