Last week, Cooper said he finally agreed to testify because he had consent that was more certain than the waiver that had been orchestrated between the FBI and the WH. This article defines that "consent" from his source (Rove) as being a remark made by Luskin in a WSJ article- Luskin was emphatic that Cooper wasn't protecting Rove. hmmm...
Now: what did Cooper do to gain consent from Libby as a source when Cooper went before the grand jury last summer?:
Mr. Cooper's statements on Wednesday echoed his rationale for testifying last summer. "Mr. Libby," a statement issued by the magazine at the time said, "gave a personal waiver of confidentiality for Mr. Cooper to testify."
....
Mr. Cooper was one of four reporters who testified in the investigation last summer. All of them said they were satisfied that Mr. Libby had given them earnest and uncoerced permission to talk.
"I personally called Libby about a waiver," Mr. Cooper said, "and he said that if it was O.K. with his lawyer it was O.K. with him."http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/11/politics/11time.html?pagewanted=2&ei=5090&en=0409937f47d06652&ex=1278734400&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss(Libby's lawyer throws some sand at this recounting of events, but put that aside for a moment)
Can it be concluded that this might have been Cooper's custom? -to reach out to the source for assurance that the waiver was actual permission?
Would he have called Rove in the same way? Suppose he did. Suppose he called to make sure that the signed waiver was sincere. And Rove said
NO -maybe even challenging Cooper on journalistic principles. (just suppose)
Then how pissed/goaded/frustrated/chumped/mocked would Cooper feel to read Luskin in the WSJ?:
"If Matt Cooper is going to jail to protect a source," Mr. Luskin told The Journal, "it's not Karl he's protecting."It's even accurate! He wasn't protecting Rove, but his own
journalistic principles.That's just really fun speculation, :evilgrin:, but I still think it's significant that Cooper was unambiguously specific in how he obtained permission from Libby.
Here's the link
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/11/politics/11time.html?ei=5090&en=0409937f47d06652&ex=1278734400&adxnnl=1&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&adxnnlx=1121093620-IjhIRaITX/0Quueibv48OgSomething else I'd missed before this article- although I remember a report that Ken Starr was representing the NYT during one phase of this case...
Time and Mr. Cooper replaced Mr. Abrams with a team led by Theodore B. Olson, a former United States solicitor general in the Bush administration who is now with Gibson Dunn & Crutcher.