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BY JARED TRENT STONESIFER

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Code Pink member Diane Santoriello was one of a dozen protesters upset with President Bush's handling of Lewis

Code Pink member Diane Santoriello was one of a dozen protesters upset with President Bush's handling of Lewis "Scooter" Libby's prison sentence.
Photo by Brian Kaldorf

Francine Porter thinks that President Bush's decision to keep former vice presidential aide Lewis "Scooter" Libby out of prison is worse than the Watergate scandal.

Porter, and about a dozen other protesters, stood outside of the William S. Moorehead Federal Building July 6 holding a large banner that simply said "Impeach." Richard Voelker, the self-proclaimed "anti-Bush button man from the North Side," held the other end of the banner while passing out bumper stickers and buttons to passersby. Voelker was adorned with buttons including those which read: "The only Bush I trust is my own" and "A village in Texas is missing its idiot."

"The average American citizen has his head up his ass," Voelker said. "Everyone should be on the streets protesting this criminal. I want [Bush] out of the White House so bad I can taste it."

Porter and Voelker are part of the Pittsburgh chapter of Code Pink, a nationwide women-led activist organization that strives for peace and social justice. Holding signs that read "Even Nixon knew when to leave" and "I Miss America," the group protested during the noon lunch hour under sunny skies. They sang songs to the tune of "God Bless America," with the lyrics altered to "I Miss America."

The group took to the street over President Bush's commutation of Libby's 30-month prison term. On March 6, a federal court convicted Libby on two counts of perjury, one count of obstruction of justice and one count of making false statements to federal officials during a grand-jury investigation the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity to reporters.

Bush commuted Libby's prison sentence, calling it too harsh. He did, however, leave intact the $250,000 fine and over 400 hours of community service.

"President Bush defies logic and decency," said one protester, Mount Lebanon lawyer Bob Abraham. "He signed scores of death warrants when he was governor of Texas, yet somehow 30 months for Scooter Libby is too harsh?"

Passing motorists honked at the small crowd at the intersection of Grant Street and Liberty Avenue. Two men in a Pittsburgh Public Works vehicle and a driver of a Port Authority bus were among those honking their support.

Code Pink originally set up directly in front of the entrance to the Federal Building, however, security guards moved them further down the sidewalk to the corner of Grant and Liberty.

Michael Finan stood in front of the Federal Building smoking a cigarette and watching the protest. Finan, from DuBois, said he leans toward the Republican Party and often supports Bush, but this situation is different from most.

"[Libby's] ass should be in jail," Finan, 26, said. "I believe in second chances if you get caught stealing a pack of cigarettes. But this guy blatantly put someone's life at risk. That's a completely different ballgame."

Most people passing by showed support for the group. Avowed supporters of the president were hard to come by, and didn't want their names published.

One federal employee refused to give his name as he spent the end of his lunch break sitting in the shade and watching the protest.

"There's better shit to protest, believe me," he said. "There's people dying by guns on American streets every day of the year, but no one's protesting that."

Others, like 26-year-old West Virginia native Tim Jonczak, were skeptical that such protests do any good at all.

"It doesn't do anything when these people leave here at the end of the day," he said. "I don't really care about Scooter Libby, and a lot of people don't. But politics, it's corrupt. If you aren't corrupt going in, you will be coming out."


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COMMENTS
4 comments posted for this article
PittRepublican, Brookline
 7/18/2007 - 7:25am
   Mr. Libby wasn't even the guy who leaked the information about Valerie Plame. Richard Armitage has admitted to being the one to first do it.
   
   Much like the Duke rape case, it seems to me that this was an overzealous prosecutor who just had to have someone to crucify at the end of the day and to put a new feather in his cap.
   
   Where was Code Pink when Bill Clinton was handing out the pardons for people who gave Hillary's brothers big wads of cash? Oh that's right, it's different when you're a Democrat. Hypocrites.
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Mary Hartman
 7/14/2007 - 10:27am
   I think it's right to pardon Libby becase he was used as a fall guy.
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sandylee945
 7/12/2007 - 5:52am
   Thank you code pink for continuing to bring issues to the people. The picture in the article is not Diane, it is Carole Weidmann.
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poropatichb
 7/12/2007 - 3:43am
   It was good to see that concern for ones country has not gone out of style. It was disappointing, however to see that only a dozen or so came out to protest. The comment is correct...most Americans have their head up their ass. They will go rabid over a Clinton impeachment for a blow-job but not for the likes of Bush, who has sent thousands of our young to their deaths in Iraq. Even worse, they get little pay, no benefits and grossly inadequate healthcare when they return.
   As for the two commenters dismissing the relevance of the protest, all I can say is that they more than likely do not vote and are apethetic to anyone else's problems but their own.
   Thank you, Francine, for doing your part as a true American.
   It was Thomas Jefferson who said...."Dissent is the highest form of patriotism!
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