Traitorgate is "about an activity that probably wasn't even a crime." That may be correct, but it probably isn't because the CIA probably would not have referred the matter to the Justice Department if its lawyers had lacked probable cause of a crime. While it is unclear whether the outing of Plame herself was a crime, the outing of Brewster Jennings, which inevitably resulted from the outing of Plame, was.
Think of it this way. If a criminal shoots with the intention of killing a police officer, but hits and kills a neutral bystander instead, he or she is still probably guilty of and will likely be indicted for intentional homicide even if the bystander does not die until two months later provided the bystander dies as a result of the shooting. The Times needs to confer with an attorney before printing its political opinion.
As for the outing not having been intentional, see this article which explains the standard for knowledge, which is broader than the press seems to believe.
Element by Element Legal Analysis
The Intelligence Identities Protection Act and Why
Karl Rove
and Others Legitimately Face Prosecution Under It
by David G. Mills
www.dissidentvoice.org
July 22, 2005
In the last few weeks, the media and others have
been questioning whether Karl Rove and others have
committed a crime under the Intelligence Identities
Protection Act
, sometimes referred to as the
“outing” statute. Many reporters and Republican
partisan pundits claim that legal experts seem to
agree that the IIPA has not been violated. The IIPA’s
detractors claim that a case cannot be made for its
violation because the proof required of the individual
elements of the IIPA present a very high bar for the
prosecution. Even Democratic partisans seem to concede
that it is likely the IIPA has not been violated. This
writer wonders why so many people seem to have
summarily concluded the IIPA does not apply to what is
(many would say finally) becoming a national scandal.
Despite the national implications of the IIPA at this
moment, there so far has been no diligent or thorough
analysis by any legal scholar of the elements of this
crime or of the application of the known facts to the
elements of this crime. Most analyses to date have
been cursory and faulty. When the elements of this
federal crime are properly analyzed, the IIPA will
likely become a very serious hammer for the
prosecution. Rove and others and their lawyers better
beware.
The known facts of the case will be applied to each
element of the IIPA, and show why Rove and others need
to be genuinely concerned about having violated the
IIPA.
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/July05/Mills0722.htm