Wednesday's Washington Post contains a detail-rich review of Alberto Gonzales and his role in drafting the "torture and interrogation technique memos" we have all come to know so well.
Along with many interesting tidbits of information, R. Jeffrey Smith and Dan Eggen (the reporters) describe highly unusual "ghostwriting" practices employed in the drafting of the torture memos. Smith and Eggen's sources note that Vice President Cheney's legal counsel, David S. Addington, may have actually been the author of at least one controversial memo--a memo that Addington signed with Gonzales's name and with Gonzales's knowledge.
Here's the link-
Gonzales Helped Set the Course for Detainees
Someone please tell me Gonzales isn't going to use this as some sort of defense in an attempt to distance himself from the memos. Well, I guess it wouldn't be the first time a member of the Bush administration tried something like this.