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in other words, if the trial brings about new evidence - or Scooter flips - an existing grand jury will be used to hear evidence and continue the investigation, just as before.
I think your speed bump analogy is very appropriate. The reason Libby's in the dock is because he's preventing solid proof for more serious charges from being obtained; weak proof with so much smoke kicked up is just not enough for a federal prosecutor to be going after the Vice-President of the United States. Libby's obstruction is provable, so that's what's being taken to court. It also conveniently pits Libby against the administration and encourages lots of backstabbing. We've seen some of that already. How far it will go, I have no idea, and perhaps Fitz doesn't either, but it seems a mix of rolling the dice and guaranteeing (to the extent he can possibly predict anything that relies heavily on his own competence) that Libby's head, at least, goes on a pike.
He's done mob cases so, he knows the best approach. We'll see if his best is enough.
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