The Talk Show American

THE TALK SHOW AMERICAN: NY TIMES: REPORTER CAN'T RECALL WHO GAVE HER 'FLAME' NAME

Saturday, October 15, 2005

NY TIMES: REPORTER CAN'T RECALL WHO GAVE HER 'FLAME' NAME

In a notebook belonging to Judith Miller, a reporter for The New York Times, amid notations about Iraq and nuclear weapons, appear two small words: "Valerie Flame."

Ms. Miller should have written Valerie Plame. That name is at the core of a federal grand jury investigation that has reached deep into the White House. At issue is whether Bush administration officials leaked the identity of Ms. Plame, an undercover C.I.A. operative, to reporters as part of an effort to blunt criticism of the president's justification for the war in Iraq.

Ms. Miller spent 85 days in jail for refusing to testify and reveal her confidential source, then relented. On Sept. 30, she told the grand jury that her source was I. Lewis Libby, the vice president's chief of staff. But she said he did not reveal Ms. Plame's name.

And when the prosecutor in the case asked her to explain how "Valerie Flame" appeared in the same notebook she used in interviewing Mr. Libby, Ms. Miller said she "didn't think" she heard it from him. "I said I believed the information came from another source, whom I could not recall," she wrote on Friday, recounting her testimony for an article that appears today.

Whether Ms. Miller's testimony will prove valuable to the prosecution remains unclear, as do its ramifications for press freedom. Yet an examination of Ms. Miller's decision not to testify, and then to do so, offers fresh information about her role in the investigation and how The New York Times turned her case into a cause.

The grand jury investigation centers on whether administration officials leaked the identity of Ms. Plame, whose husband, a former diplomat named Joseph C. Wilson IV, became a public critic of the Iraq war in July 2003. But Ms. Miller said Mr. Libby first raised questions about the diplomat in an interview with her that June, an account suggesting that Mr. Wilson was on the White House's radar before he went public with his criticisms.

1 comment:

MnMnM said...

Judy, Judy, Judy.

We are disappointed. Any profits from your book should go to pay the legal expenses incurred by your employer and to the Times reporters who were kept from doing stories on the biggest scandal this decade.

Valerie Flame. Yeah. Right. I would jot that name on a dfferent page also when taking notes from Libby. Laying the ground work for plausible deniability, a trick you learned from your cohorts at the WH. The Wilsons and Scott Ridder should get some royalties also, for the hits they took. The first amendment deserves a better martyr.

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