Steel Cage Death Match: VandeHei vs. Shuster
By Jane Hamsher
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“The Shuster Theory
Goes something like this: In the days leading up to Libby’s indictment, Patrick Fitzgerald expressed extreme skepticism about Karl Rove’s series of explanations due to the fact that Rove could never provide an adequate excuse for why the Hadley email was not produced in response to the January 2004 subpoenas until October of 2004. Robert Luskin goes to Fitzgerald and says, in essence, "aha! I’ll tell you why. I was having cocktails with my good friend Viveca Novak of Time Magazine in May of 2004 and she told me that everyone at Time knew that my client was Matt Cooper’s source. I went to my client who was shocked, shocked I tell you to hear this because he had no recollection of talking to Matt Cooper. This sent me on a search through Karl’s emails, and voila! The Hadley email. Karl then goes before the Grand Jury once again in October, his memory has been restored and it all makes perfect sense."
So Fitzgerald tells Time Magazine he wants to have a little chat with Viveca about conversations she had with Luskin starting in May 2004. Except when Viveca testifies, she thinks it’s quite probably March or earlier that the conversations with Luskin took place. According to Shuster, Fitzgerald continues to be quite troubled by the seven month delay between the time Luskin was evidently tipped off by Viveca and the time Karl had his memory restored.
The VandeHei Theory
In VandeHei’s reporting, the alibi provided by Viveca Novak is altered dramatically. Once again, in order to stave off indictment, Robert Luskin walks in to Patrick Fitzgerald’s office and says "have I got an excuse for you." His client Karl Rove first testified before the grand jury in February, 2004, at which time he did not indicate he’d ever had a conversation with Matt Cooper. Nonetheless, he would not offer Cooper a waiver of confidentiality. Cooper quite nearly went to jail and it was only after the judge held him in contempt of court and Time Magazine agreed to turn over Cooper’s notes that Rover’s memory was restored to him. Bless be.
In the VandeHei theory, Luskin tells Fitzgerald he was knocking back highballs with Viveca Novak in January of 2004 when Viveca spills the beans. Luskin gets a hold of himself, recovers from his shock and tells his client that people at Time Magazine think he was Matt Cooper’s source. Rove says "nonsense," goes before the grand jury and claims no knowledge of ever talking with Matt Cooper — exactly what he had told the FBI in October of 2003. Luskin says to Fitzgerald, "see? He didn’t change his story just because he knew Cooper was going to talk — he’d heard that story before and STILL went in and told the grand jury he’d never spoken with Cooper." Or something.
Only same problem — Viveca Novak testifies that she thinks she told Luskin in March. Oops. “ cont…
http://www.firedoglake.com/2006/04/27/steel-cage-death-match-vandehei-vs-shuster/*shadow government*