[This story reeks of alcohol. The reason hit and run cases are dealt
with so sternly is that fleeing and submitting later, if at all, implies
that the perpetrator was drunk or drinking at the time. Cheney got the
local police to agree not to interview him until 8 AM the following day,
and did not report what had happened himself for days, only agreeing to
have the host report it to the local paper after he had failed to do
so. If this escapes without consequences to Cheney, it's another example
of the serious trouble we're all in under this regime.    rj]

The New York Times
February 16, 2006
Silence Broken as Cheney Points Only to Himself
By DAVID E. SANGER
and ANNE E. KORNBLUT

WASHINGTON, Feb. 15 —Vice President Dick Cheney broke a four-day silence
on Wednesday about his accidental shooting of a hunting partner, saying
he took full responsibility for the incident while vigorously defending
his decision to delay releasing news about it until the next day.

"Ultimately, I'm the guy who pulled the trigger that fired the round
that hit Harry," Mr. Cheney said, appearing a bit shaken in a hastily
arranged interview on Fox News to provide his version of events in a
just-the-facts monotone.

Mr. Cheney's decision to submit to an interview was an effort to contain
the political fallout and to try to end an episode that has knocked the
entire White House off stride.

But it did not obscure the tensions that have riven the administration
since the accident on Saturday, and in a sign of disagreement at the
very top, the White House signaled that President Bush wished that Mr.
Cheney had made the news public more quickly.

Answering questions from Brit Hume, Mr. Cheney said that he consumed "a
beer at lunch" on Saturday under an old oak tree, but that the accident
occurred hours later, and "nobody was under the influence" of alcohol.
He said no one had intended to blame the hunting partner, Harry M.
Whittington, for being in the line of fire after coming up unannounced
about 30 yards from Mr. Cheney.

Mr. Whittington was described as being in stable condition after a minor
heart attack on Tuesday in Corpus Christi, Tex.

Mr. Cheney turned from a tone of regret — "It was one of the worst days
of my life" — to one of defiance when questioned about the way he chose
to disclose the shooting.

Mr. Cheney said that he delayed making the news public because "this was
a complicated story" and that he would do so again. It was more
important to contact members of Mr. Whittington's family, he said, than
to get the story out to the public immediately.

Hours before Mr. Cheney taped the interview, the White House spokesman,
Scott McClellan, suggested to reporters on Air Force One that Mr. Bush
believed that the matter should have been handled differently. Mr.
McClellan said that when he said, as he first did on Monday, that "you
can always look back at these issues and work to do better," he was
"speaking on behalf of the White House and the president."

It was a rare hint of a split between the president, who prizes loyalty
and discretion, and the vice president, who has always tried to exert
his considerable influence behind the scenes. Mr. Cheney arranged to be
interviewed by Mr. Hume, a journalist with whom the vice president has
long felt comfortable. His approach to the interview was to deal with
the accident as he might deal with a policy decision that turned out
badly and to accept responsibility as a way of moving on.

"You can talk about all of the other conditions that existed at the
time, but that's the bottom line, and there's no — it's not Harry's
fault," Mr. Cheney said under polite but persistent questioning. "You
can't blame anybody else. I'm the guy who pulled the trigger and shot my
friend."

Asked why the White House had made no announcement of the incident, even
though it maintains instant communications with Mr. Cheney's entourage
and has a multi-million dollar press operation, Mr. Cheney said that he
had "no press person" with him. So he agreed that the ranch owner should
put out the story, figuring that wire services would pick it up and
disseminate it.

He suggested that the outcry about his failure to release the news, and
then just to a local newspaper, reflected the unhappiness of the White
House press corps that they were left out of the first reports.

"They didn't like the idea that we called The Corpus Christi
Caller-Times instead of The New York Times," Mr. Cheney said. "But it
strikes me that The Corpus Christi Caller-Times is just as valid a news
outlet as The New York Times is, especially for covering a major story
in south Texas."

By Mr. Cheney's account, he realized that Mr. Whittington was standing
off to the side and in the line of fire just as he squeezed the trigger.
A bird was flushed out of the brush, Mr. Cheney said, and he recalled
swinging to his right to follow it.

"I turned and shot at the bird and at that second saw Harry standing
there," Mr. Cheney said. "I didn't know he was there."

"You had pulled the trigger and you saw him?" Mr. Hume asked.

"Well, I saw him fall, basically," Mr. Cheney said. "It had happened so
fast."

Asked to explain how the accident occurred, the vice president said Mr.
Whittington, dressed in orange hunting gear and wearing protective
glasses, had been standing in a slight gully with the setting sun
directly behind him. "That affected the vision, too, I'm sure," Mr.
Cheney said.

After Mr. Whittington fell, Mr. Cheney rushed over and found him on his
back, conscious but bleeding and stunned, with one eye open.

"I said, 'Harry, I had no idea you were there,' " Mr. Cheney recalled.
"He didn't respond. The image of him falling is something I'll never be
able to get out of my mind. I fired, and there's Harry falling."

When asked whether anyone in the group had been drinking, Mr. Cheney
said: "No, you don't hunt with people who drink. That's not a good idea."

A few moments later, he said that at a lunch barbecue several hours
before the accident he had a beer. He did not say whether his partners
also consumed alcohol. Hunting resume at 3 p.m. he said.

"The five of us who were in that party were together all afternoon," he
added. "Nobody was drinking. Nobody was under the influence."

"Shooting Safety Rules" of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department warn,
"Don't drink alcohol or take drugs before or while handling firearms or
bow and arrows."

They do not specify how much time should pass before handling arms, but
note that "alcohol and drugs impair normal physical and mental body
functions and must not be used before or while handling firearms or
archery equipment."

In agreeing to the interview, Mr. Cheney clearly sought to end days of
turmoil surrounding the shooting. Even Republicans had been critical of
him. Torie Clark, a Pentagon spokeswoman in Mr. Bush's first term, said
on CNN, "Letting your friend alert the local Texas newspaper as to what
happened does not suffice, in terms of getting out the bad news."

Mr. Cheney suggested in the interview that he had been advised by Mr.
McClellan and Dan Bartlett, Mr. Bush's counselor and longtime
communications adviser, to disclose what had happened more broadly and
more quickly.

"I've got nothing but good things to say about Scott McClellan and Dan
Bartlett," Mr. Cheney said, after days in which Mr. McClellan was
pummeled by the press corps. "They urged us to get the story out. The
decision about how it got out, basically, was my responsibility."

Until Mr. Cheney acknowledged having had a beer at lunch, members of the
hunting party had been adamant that no alcohol was involved. Katharine
Armstrong, whose family owns the ranch, had said in interviews that Dr
Pepper was served at lunch and that no one was drinking. In interviews
with The Times and other papers, Ms. Armstrong heavily implied that no
alcohol was served at all.

"No, zero, zippo, and I don't drink at all," she said in an interview
published on Monday in The Corpus Christi Caller-Times, the paper she
initially called. "No one was drinking."

The administration faced more questions about why the White House
Situation Room, when told of the accident by a member of Mr. Cheney's
entourage on Saturday evening, was not told that Mr. Cheney fired the
shot. The report was passed to Andrew H. Card Jr., the White House chief
of staff, and he called Mr. Bush, Mr. McClellan has said.

The White House declined to respond to repeated requests on Wednesday to
speak to Mr. Card about what he was initially told, and how decisions
about releasing the news were made.

* Copyright 2006The New York Times Company


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