Blame it on the Wookiee
Posted on February 21st, 2007 by
Theodore V. Wells Jr., Libby’s attorney, didn’t use the Chewbacca defense, but maybe that would have been a better choice:
“This is a man with a wife and two children; he is a good person,” Mr. Wells told the jury in his final words. “He’s been under my protection for the last month. I give him to you. Give him back to me.”
With that, Mr. Wells teared up, sobbed audibly and sat down.
That sounds more like the “It Puts the Lotion in the Basket” or the “Bring out the Gimp!” defense.
OK, next time I engage an attorney, I am arranging for a fee rebate if he starts crying.
Serioulsy, how f-ed up does your case have to be to reduce your defense attorney to tears?
Hey, I only charge $200 an hour to cry.
I think it was actually a very subtle and perhaps brilliant argument.
You see, we’re in a war here, but despite needing to sign up criminals and neo-nazis to fill out the Army, we don’t let gays fight. Scooter’s lawyer is hinting there’s a love connection here, which clearly means that instead of going to prison Scooter should be dishonorably discharged.
Oh, wait
it’s a civilian court?
But it could have been truly brilliant.
From Firedoglake, it seems that Wells stayed like that, even when Fitz started going in a direction that should have prompted an objection; the younger defense attorney kind of looke dto Wells to object, but he kept his head down; eventually they asked for a conference with the judge.
If the defense attorney was clearly unable to perform his job, it’s a pretty easy leap to ask for a mistrial, isn’t it?
It seems obvious Scooter is playing for the pardon.
I am crying right now.
(Phwaw! Hhhhuh!…)
Each of you owe me $12.00.
(snert…)
boo-fucking-hoo-hoo
A pardon?! Psh! President Bush only grows stronger when he sees people sobbing over the fate of their loved ones!
He’s under the lawyer’s protection? What, did Darth Cheney invite him on a hunting trip?
I’d love for Bush to pardon Libby. Getting people talking about whether a pardon is appropriate will bring up obvious connections.
For perhaps the first time ever, I hope to hear the name Nixon very frequently in the weeks and months to come.
We gotta stop them from going into Iran. If impeachment is what it takes, that’s what it takes.
did john boenher rush in to give succor and comfort? there-there, there-there
Bush pardoning Libby would be the judicial equivalent of the Republicans nominating Tom Tancredo in the 2008 general election.
Hmm… which is a more eloquent plea for sympathy: Britney Spears with her head shaved, or a highly-paid defense lawyer in a high-profile criminal trial crying in front of the jury?
If the defense attorney was clearly unable to perform his job, it’s a pretty easy leap to ask for a mistrial, isn’t it?
Is this true? If so, reedikulus.
What a pansy. I’m betting Theodore V. Wells, Sr., is looking into changing his name. “I have no son!”
“This is a man with a wife and two children; he is a good person,� Mr. Wells told the jury in his final words. “He’s been under my protection for the last month. I give him to you. Give him back to me.�
With that, Mr. Wells teared up, sobbed audibly and sat down.
Then, to the surprise of all present, he leapt from his seat and made one last desperate plea to the jury members: “I’ll give you fish. I’ll give you candy. I’ll give everything I have in my hand.“
Don’t blame it on sunshine
Don’t blame it on moonlight
Don’t blame it on good times
Blame it on the wookie
– The Skywalker 5
After he finished having his cry Mr. Wells leaped up and yelled:
“Plus, Scooter can’t remember shit, so you must acquit!”
Don’t you just hate Little Memory Lapses? So pesky.
I’m confused. So Scooter is a slave? Is the jury going to put him in a cage with an aroused bear?!
Whoa! Scooter has a wife and kids? How could someone with a wife and kids do anything bad? NOT GUILTY!
The Next Hurrah:
Ah, the dreaded WATB Defense.
I suppose it was more substantial than Wells’ original idea: silently holding up a placard to the jury that reads “Cheney knows where you live” written in chicken blood.
If the defense attorney was clearly unable to perform his job, it’s a pretty easy leap to ask for a mistrial, isn’t it?
Crying in front of the jury in a high profile case like this may be stupid, but it’s not grounds for a mistrial. If he took out his pecker and played with it while crying, well…
Speaking of Chewbacca, have you heard the good news?
If he’ convicted, he’ll appeal, and by the time that’s finished it will be close enough to the end of Bush’s term that a pardon will do no harm to Bush (look for it in January 09).
Rather than merely crying, a competent attorney would threaten to tear the jurors’ arms out of their sockets when his client loses.
Something about it all reminds me of the “Sexual Chocolate!” scene from “Coming to America”.
There’s no word as to whether or not Wells dropped his microphone before he left the stage.
I think the tears were so Libby could move for a mistrial due to the ‘mental incapacity’ of his counsel.
It’d drag this thing out ’til 2008, just you watch.
so the lawyer is a waahmbulance chaser???
he just expressed himself, in his own unique way.
Poor widdle scooter…it’s no fair! (lieberman whine)
Ladies and gentlemen, Ted Wells, in an act… of desparation.
I wonder what his lawyer’s going rate is per tear and sob? $600? $700? For that kind of cash, I’d strap raw onions around my neck and let her rip.
Don’t there have to be grounds for appeal in trials?
Yes, but they’re generally procedural, not factual (i.e., no new evidence can be introduced at an appeal, though a claim that evidence was suppressed can be, and the court might then remand the case back to trial.)
Procedural grounds do not, SFAIK, include “my attorney cried,” unless they’re going for an appeal on the grounds of incompetent defense by reason of mental disability. But with Wells’ reputation, that’s going to be a tough one. Not to mention that it would screw him over professionally for the rest of his life – I don’t think he’ll end his own career to save Scooter.
What an embarrassing schtick.
We’re going to get a full-on guilty-on-all-counts verdict. Then we’ll learn something very important. Scooter will give up Cheney and Rove to get a suspended or seriously reduced sentence, or he will absorb the sentence knowing a pardon is coming, maybe not right away, but at least after the ’08 election. And the groovy thing is, we’ll know right away if the fix is in. I do NOT believe this cat will give ten years of his life at this point if he had an option. There are true believers, but that’s crazy….
mikey
I’ve been a juror- I’d like to think that the whole shtick would be transparent.
After all, you’re supposed to decide on the basis of the evidence, not the histrionics of the counsel.
btw, I read at FDL that the WATB Wells bills at $700 an hour. I’d guess the weeping is an extra service.
We’re going to get a full-on guilty-on-all-counts verdict. Then we’ll learn something very important. Scooter will give up Cheney and Rove to get a suspended or seriously reduced sentence, or he will absorb the sentence knowing a pardon is coming, maybe not right away, but at least after the ‘08 election. And the groovy thing is, we’ll know right away if the fix is in. I do NOT believe this cat will give ten years of his life at this point if he had an option. There are true believers, but that’s crazy….
That’s how Fitz did the Gambinos. Flipped a couple of the lower thugs, and worked his way up.
That’s what I’ve been holding out for, since the original GJ indictments focused on Scooter. Libby can turn on Rove and/or Cheney.
But I dunno, Cheney would make me freak the F out. If he told me he’d EAT my children, I wouldn’t rule it out.
Dude just turned 56 in august. I submit you lose your idealogue “take one for the team” hormones in your thirties. He’s got money, a family, an AWESOME book deal. Why, he’ll be asked over and over, should he suffer when EVERY FUCKING BODY ELSE is walking out clean? He’ll roll. If he doesn’t, I think it means he’s got a GOJF Card….
mikey
700 an hour will buy a lot of Visene
Yeah, I think you’ve got the basic dynamic mikey.
I think Bush and Cheney are evil enough that they wouldn’t particularly care if Libby went to jail for them; but they’ve gotta know that if he can count on a pardon, he might keep his trap shut.
Makes you wonder what might happen to him after, if he did turn.
Serioulsy, how f-ed up does your case have to be to reduce your defense attorney to tears?
And when Scooter realizes what a fine calibre of legal work the eight million bucks he collected from his Wingnut Welfare Wurlitzer buddies has bought him… do we get to see Irving break down in tears, also?
If I had been in the courtroom when the wuss started crying I would have laughed so loud that a mistrial would have been declared. Do you think that was the plan?
Apparently it is Wells’ shtick. Although in this case, he was put on the defensive by the Prosecution summation, and didn’t have the time to work up his more typical froth of outrage, which puts the weeping more in context- rage at the injustice done to “this fine man’ and weeping at the possibility that he may have to suffer for something that can’t possibly be a crime.
But his acting was rushed and forced, so it just seemed more of a farce. He also pissed off his co-counsel by taking some time away from him.
And then Fitz opened, mocking him by shouting “Madness! Madness! Madness!” but otherwise going into a terse, controlled rebuttal, fueled by apparent, and real, anger at the way Libby and his team has been trying to game the justice system. The appearance of this very real anger after the trumped up version Wells played would certainly be very apparent to most of the jury.
The appeals process will be dragged out over the next year and a half. Even if they can’t get a conviction overturned outright, the delays, continuations, appeals, and depositions will push things back so that Scooter doesn’t have to sit in jail for more than a couple months before his January 20th, 2009 pardon.
I’ll cry, but only if I get to sodomize him (Libby) with a three foot strap-on.
Karl, I thought that was a weekly occurrence when he was working.
You’re a legend, man.
I suppose it was more substantial than Wells’ original idea: silently holding up a placard to the jury that reads “Cheney knows where you live‚ written in chicken blood.
Well, you’re dead wrong there mister. If the defense team had taken my advice about taking our fight to our enemies in the jury box . . . well let me just say, it would have been a hell of a lot more effective than this ‘women and children’ pabulum.
You’re outta line!!11!.
There’s too much crying in public in general these days. I blame it all on retiring sports figures, who initally made it okay to blubber in a public forum that should demand stoicism. We’ve got BushCo admitting to weeping with dead soldiers’ families and his asshole father weeping in public over attacks on his idiot son. Next we’ll have a president crying over the trade gap. Bah.
He did it all for the wookiee.