WASHINGTON, Sept. 30, 2005

Times Reporter Testifies On Leak

Judith Miller Appears Before Grand Jury After 85 Days In Jail

  • Video Judith Miller Out Of Jail

    After three months in jail, journalist Judith Miller agreed to testify in the 'Plamegate' investigation. Bill Plante reports that now the pressure is on the independent prosecutor.

    • New York Times reporter Judith Miller talks to reporters outside U. S. District Court in Washington after testifying to the grand jury.

      New York Times reporter Judith Miller talks to reporters outside U. S. District Court in Washington after testifying to the grand jury.  (AP)

    • "I concluded from this that my source genuinely wanted me to testify," Judith Miller said.  (CBS)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Interactive The Leak

    People and events surrounding the leak of a CIA officer's name.

  • Interactive History Of Press Freedom

    Follow the evolving struggles over press freedom in the United States.

(CBS/AP)  New York Times reporter Judith Miller testified before a grand jury Friday, ending her silence in the investigation into whether White House officials leaked the name of a covert CIA operative, Valerie Plame.

Miller, free after 85 days in jail, said she was "happy to be free and finally able to talk to all of you." (video)

Escorted by her lawyers and New York Times Publisher Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr., Miller met with reporters for several minutes after spending more than four hours inside the courthouse, most of it behind closed doors with a grand jury.

Miller said she agreed to meet with the grand jury after hearing "directly from my source" by telephone and in a letter that she should cooperate with the investigation by Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald.

"I concluded from this that my source genuinely wanted me to testify," she told reporters.

"I served 85 days in jail because of my belief in the importance of upholding the confidential relationship journalists have with their sources," Miller said. "Believe me, I did not want to be in jail. But I would have stayed even longer."

Miller's testimony has been characterized by Fitzgerald as key to his investigation into the White House role in the disclosure of Plame's identity.

Although Miller declined to identify her source, The New York Times identified him as Lewis I. "Scooter" Libby, chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney.

But Libby's lawyer said Friday he and his client had released Miller long ago to testify, and were surprised when Miller's lawyers again asked for a release in the last few weeks.

"We had signed a waiver more than a year ago," Attorney Joseph Tate said. "We didn't think this had anything to do with Scooter. I was under the impression from talking to (Miller attorney Floyd) Abrams that she was protecting a number of other sources."

Tate said Miller's lawyers called recently and said there was "a misunderstanding and Judy wanted to hear it straight from the horse's mouth" that Libby was releasing her to talk to the grand jury about their conversation.

Tate said his client did not know or hear about Plame's identity until it appeared in a newspaper column by Robert Novak. "Scooter did not know the name until he saw it in the Novak article," he said.

Until a few months ago, the White House had maintained for nearly two years that Libby and presidential adviser Karl Rove had no role in leaking the identity of Plame, whose husband had publicly suggested that the Bush administration twisted intelligence in the runup to the war in Iraq.

On Friday, the White House again refused additional comment on Libby and Rove's involvement. Spokesman Scott McClellan said he won't comment on an "ongoing investigation." He again said the president wants the investigation to come to a "successful conclusion."

CBS News correspondent Peter Maer reports McClellan would not directly respond when asked if he felt "burned" because he previously told reporters "Those individuals (Libby and Rove) have assured me they were not involved in this."

Continued



© MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. Kennedy: Bishop Barred Me From Communion

    (337 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: