NY Times Reporter Breaks Silence in CIA Leak Case
By Adam Entous
Reuters
Friday 30 September 2005
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/093005Q.shtml
Washington - Ending her standoff with federal prosecutors after
nearly three months in jail, New York Times reporter Judith
Miller appeared before a federal grand jury on Friday
investigating who in the Bush administration leaked a covert CIA
operative's identity.
Miller agreed to break her silence and testify after receiving
what she described as a voluntary and personal waiver of
confidentiality from her source, identified as Vice President
Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis Libby.
Lawyers close to the case said Miller's testimony appeared to
clear the way for prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to wrap up his
2-year-old inquiry into who leaked CIA operative Valerie Plame's
identity and whether any laws were violated.
Plame's diplomat husband, Joseph Wilson, said the administration
had leaked her name, damaging her ability to work undercover, to
get back at him for criticising President George W. Bush's Iraq
policy.
With Miller's testimony, lawyers said, Fitzgerald could move
quickly to bring indictments in the case. Or he may conclude
that no crime was committed and end his investigation and
possibly issue a report on his findings.
The outcome could shake up the Bush White House, already reeling
from criticism over its response to Hurricane Katrina and
Wednesday's indictment of House Republican leader Tom DeLay.
The leak investigation has ensnarled Bush's top political
adviser, Karl Rove, as well as Libby. The White House had long
maintained that they had nothing to do with the leak.
Asked if he felt burnt by Rove and Libby when he earlier told
the press corps they were not involved, White House spokesman
Scott McClellan said: "It is an ongoing investigation and, as
such, our policy has been and continues to be not to comment."
He said Bush "wants to get to the bottom of it."
Miller, who was sent to jail on July 6 although she never wrote
an article about the Plame matter, had no comment before
entering the federal court house to begin her testimony.
Viewed by some as a martyr for press freedom, Miller has faced
criticism in the past for some of her pre-war news reports on
Iraq's alleged weapons programs. Critics say those reports
helped boost the administration's case that Iraq posed a threat.
No weapons of mass destruction were found.
Release
Miller was released on Thursday from the Alexandria Detention
Centre outside Washington after she and her lawyers reached
agreement with Fitzgerald about the scope of her testimony.
Cheney spokeswoman Lea Anne McBride said on behalf of Libby:
"It's an ongoing investigation and one in which we are fully
cooperating."
Rove's attorney, Robert Luskin, said: "This doesn't involve Karl
and he has not been contacted" by Fitzgerald.
Legal sources close to the case said Miller was under growing
pressure to testify because Fitzgerald could have sought to
impose a stiffer criminal sentence against her.
A spokesman for Fitzgerald declined to comment. Fitzgerald had
indicated earlier this year that he could wrap up his
investigation once he obtained the testimony of Miller, lawyers
involved in the case said.
Fitzgerald had already secured the cooperation of Time magazine
reporter Matthew Cooper, who agreed to testify after saying he
received the "express personal consent" of his source to reveal
his identity.
Cooper told the grand jury that Rove was the first person to
tell him about Plame, although Cooper said Rove did not disclose
her name. Cooper said he also discussed her and her husband with
Libby.
Syndicated newspaper columnist Robert Novak first revealed
Plame's identity in a column on July 14, 2003, citing two
administration officials, shortly after Wilson, on July 14,
published an opinion piece in The New York Times that accused
the administration of twisting intelligence on Iraq.
According to The Times, Miller met with Libby on July 8, 2003,
and talked with him by telephone later that week.
Plame's husband has long asserted the leak was meant in
retaliation for his criticism of Bush's Iraq policy in 2003
related to a CIA-funded trip to investigate whether Niger helped
supply nuclear materials to Baghdad.
Wilson said his report that he found no evidence of Iraq trying
to get nuclear materials from Niger was ignored by Bush, who
used such a charge as part of his justification for invading
Iraq.
After initially promising to fire anyone found to have leaked
information in the case, Bush in July offered a more qualified
pledge: "If someone committed a crime they will no longer work
in my administration."
Prominent Democrats have called on Bush to fire Rove, the
architect of his two presidential election victories and now his
deputy chief of staff, or block his access to classified
information.
Rove's attorneys said Rove did nothing wrong.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/093005Q.shtml
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