VP's Office Is Focus Of Leak Probe
Attention Shifts To Info Provided By Cheney's Chief Of Staff
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Play CBS Video Video Judith Miller Tells Her Side The New York Times published two accounts concerning New York Times reporter Judith Miller and the CIA leak case, but instead more questions about the probe are mounting. Joie Chen reports.
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Video Times Reporter Gives Details In a first-person account on the New York Times' Web site, Judith Miller recounts her recent grand jury testimony. Joie Chen reports that Miller's testimony contains lots of contradictions.
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Top vice presidential aide Lewis "Scooter" Libby leaves his McLean, Va., home last week. Libby was the focus of prosecutors' questions in two grand jury appearances by NY Times reporter Judith Miller. (GETTY IMAGES/Win McNamee)
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New York Times reporter Judith Miller, right, leaves U. S. District Court in Washington with her attorney Robert Bennett, left, Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2005. (AP)
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President Bush listens to a reporter's question on the investigation into the leak of a CIA operative's identity in the Oval Office, Monday, Oct. 17, 2005. (AP)
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Karl Rove, President Bush's top political adviser, leaves U.S. District Court in Washington after testifying for the fourth time before the grand jury in the CIA leak probe, Friday, Oct. 14, 2005. (AP)
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Interactive The Leak People and events surrounding the leak of a CIA officer's name.
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And with possible indictments coming as soon as this week, observers of the investigation say it is increasingly clear that Cheney and others in his office have been intricately involved in events surrounding the Plame affair from its outset, The Washington Post reports.
Miller's notes say I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby told her on July 8, 2003, that the wife of Bush administration critic Joseph Wilson worked for the CIA's Weapons Intelligence, Non-Proliferation and Arms Control unit.
Plame, Wilson's wife, never worked for WINPAC, which is on the overt side of the CIA. She worked on the CIA's secret side, the directorate of operations, according to three people familiar with her work for the spy agency.
The three all spoke on condition of anonymity, citing Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's ongoing grand jury investigation into the leak of Plame's identity in 2003.
There were several developments as the end nears for the investigation into possible criminality by people in the Bush administration who leaked Plame's identity to reporters:
The incorrect information about where Plame worked in the CIA could be a significant lead for investigators. Accurate information presumably can come from any number of sources, while inaccurate information might more easily be traceable to a single document or a particular meeting, suggested Lance Cole, former Democratic counsel to the Senate Whitewater Committee and now a law professor at Pennsylvania State University's Dickinson School of Law.
Or, perhaps, the inaccurate information could suggest Libby thought Plame was not an undercover spy, and therefore didn't know her identity was classified. The incorrect piece of information could lead back to a source or sources who were engaging in a larger effort to undercut Wilson's credibility. Or, as former top FBI official Danny Coulson suggests, it could simply mean that Libby's information came from "dinner talk" involving people who were uninformed.
Presidential aides "had access to the official information and if they had used that, you would think they would have had the right stuff," said Coulson.
In her first-person account, published Sunday, recounting her meetings with Libby, Miller described her July 8, 2003, conversation with Libby and the point at which it turned to Plame.
"My notes contain a phrase inside parentheses: 'Wife works at Winpac.' Mr. Fitzgerald asked what that meant," Miller wrote.
"I told the grand jury that I believed that this was the first time I had heard that Mr. Wilson's wife worked for Winpac," she wrote. "In fact, I told the grand jury that when Mr. Libby indicated that Ms. Plame worked for Winpac, I assumed that she worked as an analyst, not as an undercover operative."
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




