Word: truth
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Some observers wondered last week why a bright lawyer like Libby bothered with a cover story at all. The indictment offers scant evidence that Libby knew Plame was a covert officer, a key test in the 1982 law barring such disclosures. By that logic, Libby could have told the truth about everything he did and still avoided criminal exposure. But other lawyers pointed out that it's easy to forget that Fitzgerald hasn't made public everything he knows. The two senior officials who discussed Plame's employment with Libby may have testified that they warned Libby about the secret...
...raise the issue privately with Bush, signal the slightest flicker of frustration with the President in public? Will someone, somewhere hold up a sign that implies that Yanks prefer Diana to Camilla? Like all caricatures, the view of Charles as not quite connected with the world holds some truth. Yet it is also fair to say that within the cocoon of royalty, and despite the disorder that dominated his personal life during his marriage to Diana, he has created a role for himself of such scope that if he were a commoner, you would call it a remarkable and successful...
...about a year ago. Most of it was on the record, but part of it wasn't, and I wanted to see if I could get your permission to talk about the part that wasn't on the record." I told him that I would tell the truth about our conversation. Libby told me that he used to be a lawyer and that "to be safe" our attorneys should talk and if it was O.K. with them, it was O.K. with him. So the following week my attorney, Floyd Abrams, spoke with Libby's lawyer, Joseph Tate, and they hammered...
...remote places like Biliru, "the fight against HIV/AIDS is being fought in big cities, expensive hotels, huge jeeps and office buildings," Ishaya says matter-of-factly. "The people who desperately need help in rural areas are not getting anything. I can't stand it and will speak the truth...
...moment, Libby, a man who prefers to work behind the scenes, has been thrust squarely, singularly and uncomfortably into the spotlight. In that glare, prosecutors hope to find answers-and quickly. "As soon as we can get it done, we will," said Fitzgerald. "We need to know the truth."- With reporting by Matthew Cooper/ Washington