Canteloupe Eyes, Judy In Disguise
So, Judy actually met with an unnamed government official on July 8th, the same day Rove spoke with Novak? I don’t know what it means, but it sure sounds interesting. Rove to Miller to Novak to Rove? He’s known for using cut-outs.
But this, I think, is even more interesting:
In court papers filed earlier this month urging that Ms. Miller be jailed, Mr. Fitzgerald said that “the source in this case has waived confidentiality in writing.”
George Freeman, an assistant general counsel of The New York Times Company, said Ms. Miller would not say who that source was. “She has never received,” Mr. Freeman said, “what she considers an unambiguous, unequivocal and uncoerced waiver from anyone with whom she may have spoken.”
Mr. Freeman declined to say what efforts, if any, Ms. Miller and her lawyers have made to obtain a satisfactory waiver.
Presumably, like Cooper’s, Miller’s lawyers don’t feel it’s a good idea to be contacting her source, if they even know who it is.
This statement from Miller’s attorney strikes me as an explicit call for her source to give her an “unambiguous, unequivocal and uncoerced waiver.” Maybe Judy isn’t enjoying herself as much in jail as she thought she would.
So who’s going to ask Karl and Scooter to give Judy this unambiguous, unequivocal and uncoerced waiver? Surely they will be happy to do it, right? Neither of them have anything to hide.
In fact, every person who previously signed a waiver in the matter should be asked to sign this explicit one, even if they never talked to her, in order to give the guilty party some cover so that Judy can testify and the public won’t automatically know who she’s been protecting. That seems fair, doesn’t it?
Maybe Michael Isikoff could suggest this next time he’s on TV. It might focus his mind on who’s really responsible for Miller being in jail.
Oh and this business about the classified state department memo being the source is quite interesting. I wrote about this earlier in the week but there is a significant detail that’s been changed since the early reports about it. It was evidently written in June of 2003, just a month before Wilson’s op-ed — probably at the behest of someone who was reading Nicolas Kristoff’s columns about a trip to Africa by an unnamed ex-ambassador. (The story says it was written for Marc Grossman, under secretary of state for political affairs, but that may only mean he was the bureaucrat charged with getting a report.) All the original stories had it dated in 2002, which made me assume that it was the original state department report about Wilson’s trip, written in real time. It wasn’t. It was written a year and a half later based on the memory of a staffer who said he had been present at the meeting, a fact which the CIA disputed.
This memo being written just a month before the op-ed changes the equation. Who wrote it and who requested it? And did anyone in the White House see it before Wilson’s op-ed was published? If so, who?
Update: Maybe this is why Miller’s lawyers are starting to “ask” that her source give her a special waiver:
Lawyers in the CIA leaks investigation are concerned that special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald may seek criminal contempt charges against New York Times reporter Judith Miller, a rare move that could significantly lengthen her time in jail.
[…]
While media coverage in recent days has focused on conversations that White House senior adviser Karl Rove had with reporters, two sources say Miller spoke with Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, during the key period in July 2003 that is the focus of Fitzgerald’s investigation.
The two sources — one who is familiar with Libby’s version of events, and the other with Miller’s — said the previously undisclosed conversation occurred a few days before Plame’s name appeared in Robert Novak’s syndicated column on July 14, 2003. Miller and Libby discussed former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, Plame’s husband, who had recently alleged that the Bush administration had twisted intelligence in the run-up to the Iraq war, according to the source familiar with Libby’s version.
But, according to the source, the subject of Wilson’s wife did not come up.
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