New York Times reporter completes testimony in CIA case (Reuters) Updated: 2005-10-13 11:38
Under pressure from prosecutors, a New York Times reporter testified on
Wednesday to a federal grand jury investigating the leak of a CIA operative's
identity about a previously undisclosed conversation with a top aide to Vice
President Dick Cheney.
In her second appearance before the grand jury, Times reporter Judith Miller
was questioned for more than an hour after turning over notes detailing her June
23, 2003, conversation with Cheney's chief of staff, Lewis Libby. An entry in
her notes referred to Joseph Wilson, covert CIA operative Valerie Plame's
diplomat husband.
Hours after Miller completed her testimony, a federal judge lifted the
contempt-of-court order that had sent her to jail for 85 days for refusing to
reveal her source, the Times said.
Miller's testimony about the June 2003 conversation could help federal
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald establish whether the White House started
targeting Wilson and possibly his wife in the weeks before Wilson publicly
accused the Bush administration of twisting intelligence on Iraq.
During that period, reports had surfaced of a CIA-funded trip Wilson took in
which he investigated administration charges that Iraq tried to buy nuclear
materials in Africa and found the allegations had little foundation.
The leak investigation has spotlighted freedom-of-press issues and the Bush
administration's aggressive efforts to defend its Iraq policy against critics.
President George W. Bush's top political adviser, Karl Rove, has also been
summoned to make a fourth appearance before the grand jury, most likely on
Friday, and prosecutors have told him they can make no guarantees he will not be
indicted.
After receiving what she called a personal and voluntary waiver of
confidentiality from Libby, Miller testified before the grand jury on September
30 about their two previously disclosed conversations -- on July 8 and July 12,
2003.
Libby had referred only to the July conversations when he wrote Miller last
month offering her the waiver. The limited reference raised questions about
whether he intended the waiver to apply to their conversation that June.
It was unclear how Fitzgerald learned of the June 23 conversation. Legal
sources close to Miller said she discovered the notes after she testified.
Miller was tight-lipped as she left the federal courthouse. On the eve of her
testimony, New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller warned that Miller was
"not yet clear of legal jeopardy."
Judge Thomas Hogan's decision to lift the contempt order appears to clear the
way for Miller to provide details about her testimony to the Times, which has
come under fire for withholding information about Miller's role in the case.
UNDISCLOSED CONVERSATION
Fitzgerald has not indicated whether he intends to bring indictments in his
nearly 2-year-old investigation into who leaked Plame's identity and whether any
laws were broken.
He could bring charges against officials for knowingly revealing the identity
of an undercover CIA operative, but some lawyers involved in the case say his
focus may have shifted to conspiracy, perjury and obstruction-of-justice
charges.
Two lawyers said Fitzgerald may be seeking to extend the investigation beyond
the grand jury's scheduled October 28 expiration because of the new information.
Libby's June 23, 2003, conversation with Miller could bolster a conspiracy or
perjury case because the conversation was not initially disclosed and suggests a
preemptive effort was made to discredit Wilson, lawyers said.
According to a National Journal report, in two appearances before the federal
grand jury, Libby did not disclose the June 23 conversation with Miller. Nor did
he disclose the conversation when he was twice interviewed by FBI agents.
Wilson asserts that administration officials outed his wife, damaging her
ability to work undercover, to discredit him for criticizing Bush's Iraq policy
in a New York Times opinion piece on July 6, 2003.
The newly disclosed conversation between Miller and Libby took place two
weeks earlier.
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