
Trail running dry in CIA leak case
THEIR LIPS ARE SEALED: A reporter is in jail, but the special counsel probing
the identification of a CIA operative has yet to indict anyone, despite access
to the most senior officials
AP, WASHINGTON
Saturday, Jul 09, 2005,Page 6
A prosecutor's hunt for Bush administration leakers of classified information
has produced no indictments after almost two years, and legal experts say it's
very possible the only person jailed will be a reporter who never wrote a
story.
In pursuit of the officials who revealed a CIA officer's identity to
reporters, special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald has gone to the highest reaches
of the White House, interviewing President George W. Bush and Vice President
Dick Cheney and their closest aides, including deputy White House chief of
staff Karl Rove.
Rove's name resurfaced in the past week, with his lawyer saying that Time
magazine reporter Matthew Cooper spoke to him in the days before the name of
CIA undercover operative Valerie Plame was first revealed by columnist Robert
Novak. The Bush White House has denied since the issue first came up in 2003
that Rove was involved.
The outcome of Fitzgerald's probe could depend on what Cooper tells
prosecutors, who already have the Time reporter's notes and e-mails
identifying a source.
Cooper's employer, Time Inc, handed the material to Fitzgerald last week. On
Wednesday, Cooper agreed to testify after saying his source had released him
from his promise to stay silent about the source's identity, while Judith
Miller of the New York Times was led away to jail when she refused.
The key to a criminal case, a number of former federal prosecutors say, would
seem to be Novak.
Novak refuses to say whether he is cooperating with Fitzgerald. Novak's
attorney, James Hamilton, also won't comment.
Novak identified Plame as a CIA operative eight days after her husband, former
US ambassador Joseph Wilson, wrote an opinion piece in the New York Times.
Wilson suggested the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to
exaggerate the Iraqi threat on weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to
the US invasion.
Even if Novak has given away his sources, Fitzgerald may feel that he needs
testimony from corroborating witnesses to make a prosecutable case, says
Zachary Carter, a former US attorney for the eastern district of New York.
The prosecutor may believe that "given the possibility of a credibility
contest between the accused and the reporter, that he would need more than one
reporter-witness to establish what was said and by whom," Carter said.
If Miller doesn't talk, she will be released in October when the grand jury
investigating the matter expires. She told her newspaper about her trip to
jail.
"They put shackles on my hands and my feet," the New York Times reported on
Thursday, quoting Miller after her first few hours in jail.
"They put you in the back of this car. I passed the Capitol and all the office
buildings I used to cover. And I thought, `My God, how did it come to this?'"
she said.
Miller said that the jail's staff were professional and courteous.
Assuming Miller never agrees to testify, "is Fitzgerald going to throw up his
hands? That seems unlikely," Carter said.
Fitzgerald would not be putting in all this effort if he thought it was
something that had no potential, said Jonathan Feld, a white-collar criminal
lawyer in Chicago, where Fitzgerald is US attorney.
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