The Miller Case: A Notebook, a Cause, a
Jail Cell and a Deal
NY Times
By Don Van Natta Jr., Adam Liptak and Clifford J. Levy
Published: October 16 2005
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.
Once Ms. Miller was issued a subpoena in August 2004 to testify about her
conversations with Mr. Libby, she and The Times vowed to fight it. Behind the
scenes, however, her lawyer made inquiries to see if Mr. Libby would release
her from their confidentiality agreement. Ms. Miller said she decided not to
testify in part because she thought that Mr. Libby's lawyer might be signaling
to keep her quiet unless she would exonerate his client. The lawyer denies
that, and Mr. Libby did not respond to requests for an interview.
As Ms. Miller, 57, remained resolute and moved closer to going to jail for
her silence, the leadership of The Times stood squarely behind her.
"She'd given her pledge of confidentiality," said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the
publisher. "She was prepared to honor that. We were going to support her."
But Mr. Sulzberger and the paper's executive editor, Bill Keller, knew few
details about Ms. Miller's conversations with her confidential source other
than his name. They did not review Ms. Miller's notes. Mr. Keller said he
learned about the "Valerie Flame" notation only this month. Mr. Sulzberger was
told about it by Times reporters on Thursday.
Interviews show that the paper's leaders, in taking what they considered to
be a principled stand, ultimately left the major decisions in the case up to
Ms. Miller, an intrepid reporter whom editors found hard to control.
"This car had her hand on the wheel because she was the one at risk," Mr.
Sulzberger said.
Once Ms. Miller was jailed, her lawyers were in open conflict about whether
she should stay there. She had refused to reopen communications with Mr. Libby
for a year, saying she did not want to pressure a source into waiving
confidentiality. But in the end, saying "I owed it to myself" after two months
of jail, she had her lawyer reach out to Mr. Libby. This time, hearing directly
from her source, she accepted his permission and was set free.
"We have everything to be proud of and nothing to apologize for," Ms. Miller
said in an interview Friday.
Neither The Times nor its cause has emerged unbruised. Three courts,
including the Supreme Court, declined to back Ms. Miller. Critics said The
Times was protecting not a whistle-blower but an administration campaign
intended to squelch dissent. The Times's coverage of itself was under assault:
While the editorial page had crusaded on Ms. Miller's behalf, the news
department had more than once been scooped on the paper's own story, even
including the news of Ms. Miller's release from jail.
Asked what she regretted about The Times's handling of the matter, Jill
Abramson, a managing editor, said: "The entire thing."
In the spring of 2003, Ms. Miller returned from covering the war in Iraq,
where she had been embedded with an American military team searching
unsuccessfully for evidence of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. Back
in the States, another battle was brewing.
Ms. Miller had written a string of articles before the war - often based on
the accounts of Bush administration officials and Iraqi defectors - strongly
suggesting that Saddam Hussein was developing these weapons of mass
destruction.
When no evidence of them was found, her reporting, along with that of some
other journalists, came under fire. She was accused of writing articles that
helped the Bush administration make its case for war.
"I told her there was unease, discomfort, unhappiness over some of the
coverage," said Roger Cohen, who was the foreign editor at the time. "There was
concern that she'd been convinced in an unwarranted way, a way that was not
holding up, of the possible existence of W.M.D."
It was a blow to the reputation of Ms. Miller, an investigative reporter who
has worked at The Times for three decades. Ms. Miller is known for her
expertise in intelligence and security issues and her ability to cultivate
relationships with influential sources in government. In 2002, she was part of
a team of Times reporters that won a Pulitzer Prize for articles on Al
Qaeda.
Inside the newsroom, she was a divisive figure. A few colleagues refused to
work with her.
"Judy is a very intelligent, very pushy reporter," said Stephen Engelberg,
who was Ms. Miller's editor at The Times for six years and is now a managing
editor at The Oregonian in Portland. "Like a lot of investigative reporters,
Judy benefits from having an editor who's very interested and involved with
what she's doing."
In the year after Mr. Engelberg left the paper in 2002, though, Ms. Miller
operated with a degree of autonomy rare at The Times.
Douglas Frantz, who succeeded Mr. Engelberg as the investigative editor,
said that Ms. Miller once called herself "Miss Run Amok."
"I said, 'What does that mean?' " said Mr. Frantz, who was recently
appointed managing editor at The Los Angeles Times. "And she said, 'I can do
whatever I want.' "
Ms. Miller said she remembered the remark only vaguely but must have meant
it as a joke, adding, "I have strong elbows, but I'm not a dope."
Ms. Miller said she was proud of her journalism career, including her work
on Al Qaeda, biological warfare and Islamic militancy. But she acknowledged
serious flaws in her articles on Iraqi weapons.
"W.M.D. - I got it totally wrong," she said. "The analysts, the experts and
the journalists who covered them - we were all wrong. If your sources are
wrong, you are wrong. I did the best job that I could."
In two interviews, Ms. Miller generally would not discuss her interactions
with editors, elaborate on the written account of her grand jury testimony or
allow reporters to review her notes.
On July 30, 2003, Mr. Keller became executive editor after his predecessor,
Howell Raines, was dismissed after a fabrication scandal involving a young
reporter named Jayson Blair.
Within a few weeks, in one of his first personnel moves, Mr. Keller told Ms.
Miller that she could no longer cover Iraq and weapons issues. Even so, Mr.
Keller said, "she kept kind of drifting on her own back into the national
security realm."
Although criticism of Ms. Miller's Iraq coverage mounted, Mr. Keller waited
until May 26, 2004, to publish an editors' note that criticized some of the
paper's coverage of the run-up to the war.
The note said the paper's articles on unconventional weapons were credulous.
It did not name any reporters and said the failures were institutional. Five of
the six articles called into question were written or co-written by Ms.
Miller.
'A Good-Faith Source'
On June 23, 2003, Ms. Miller visited Mr. Libby at the Old Executive Office
Building in Washington. Mr. Libby was the vice president's top aide and had
played an important role in shaping the argument for going to war in Iraq. He
was "a good-faith source who was usually straight with me," Ms. Miller said in
an interview.
Her assignment was to write an article about the failure to find
unconventional weapons in Iraq. She said Mr. Libby wanted to talk about a
diplomat's fact-finding trip in 2002 to the African nation of Niger to
determine whether Iraq sought uranium there. The diplomat was Mr. Wilson, and
his wife worked for the C.I.A.
Mr. Wilson had already become known among Washington insiders as a fierce
Bush critic. He would go public the next month, accusing the White House in an
opinion article in The Times of twisting intelligence to exaggerate the Iraqi
threat.
But Mr. Libby was already defending Vice President Dick Cheney, saying his
boss knew nothing about Mr. Wilson or his findings. Ms. Miller said her notes
leave open the possibility that Mr. Libby told her Mr. Wilson's wife might work
at the agency.
On July 8, two days after Mr. Wilson's article appeared in The Times, the
reporter and her source met again, for breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel, near
the White House.
The notebook Ms. Miller used that day includes the reference to "Valerie
Flame." But she said the name did not appear in the same portion of her
notebook as the interview notes from Mr. Libby.
During the breakfast, Mr. Libby provided a detail about Ms. Wilson, saying
she worked in a C.I.A. unit known as Winpac; the name stands for weapons
intelligence, nonproliferation and arms control. Ms. Miller said she understood
this to mean that Ms. Wilson was an analyst rather than an undercover
operative.
Ms. Miller returned to the subject on July 12 in a phone call with Mr.
Libby. Another variant on Valerie Wilson's name - "Victoria Wilson" - appears
in the notes of that call. Ms. Miller had by then called other sources about
Mr. Wilson's wife. In an interview, she would not discuss her sources.
Two days later, on July 14, Robert D. Novak, the syndicated columnist, wrote
that Mr. Wilson's wife had suggested sending him to Niger, citing "two
administration sources." He went on to say, without attributing the
information, that Mr. Wilson's wife, "Valerie Plame, is an agency operative on
weapons of mass destruction."
Ms. Miller's article on the hunt for missing weapons was published on July
20, 2003. It acknowledged that the hunt could turn out to be fruitless but
focused largely on the obstacles the searchers faced.
Neither that article nor any in the following months by Ms. Miller discussed
Mr. Wilson or his wife.
It is not clear why. Ms. Miller said in an interview that she "made a strong
recommendation to my editor" that an article be pursued. "I was told no," she
said. She would not identify the editor.
Ms. Abramson, the Washington bureau chief at the time, said Ms. Miller never
made any such recommendation.
In the fall of 2003, after The Washington Post reported that "two top White
House officials disclosed Plame's identity to at least six Washington
journalists," Philip Taubman, Ms. Abramson's successor as Washington bureau
chief, asked Ms. Miller and other Times reporters whether they were among the
six. Ms. Miller denied it.
"The answer was generally no," Mr. Taubman said. Ms. Miller said the subject
of Mr. Wilson and his wife had come up in casual conversation with government
officials, Mr. Taubman said, but Ms. Miller said "she had not been at the
receiving end of a concerted effort, a deliberate organized effort to put out
information."
Enter a Special Prosecutor
The Novak column prompted a criminal investigation into whether government
officials had violated a 1982 law that makes it a crime in some circumstances
to disclose the identity of an undercover agent. At the end of December 2003,
the United States attorney in Chicago, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, was appointed
special prosecutor.
Around the same time, F.B.I. investigators working for Mr. Fitzgerald asked
officials in the White House, including Mr. Libby, to sign waivers instructing
reporters that they could disregard earlier promises of confidentiality and
reveal who their sources were.
When Ms. Miller was subpoenaed in the investigation in August 2004, The
Times immediately retained Floyd Abrams, who had often represented the paper
and is a noted First Amendment lawyer.
The Times said it believes that attempts by prosecutors to force reporters
to reveal confidential information must be resisted. Otherwise, it argues, the
public would be deprived of important information about the government and
other powerful institutions.
The fact that Ms. Miller's judgment had been questioned in the past did not
affect its stance. "The default position in a case like that is you support the
reporter," Mr. Keller said.
It was in these early days that Mr. Keller and Mr. Sulzberger learned Mr.
Libby's identity. Neither man asked Ms. Miller detailed questions about her
conversations with him.
Both said they viewed the case as a matter of principle, which made the
particulars less important. "I didn't interrogate her about the details of the
interview," Mr. Keller said. "I didn't ask to see her notes. And I really
didn't feel the need to do that."
Still, Mr. Keller said the case was not ideal: "I wish it had been a
clear-cut whistle-blower case. I wish it had been a reporter who came with less
public baggage."
Times lawyers warned company executives that they would have trouble
persuading a judge to excuse Ms. Miller from testifying. The Supreme Court
decided in 1972 that the First Amendment offers reporters no protection from
grand jury subpoenas.
Ms. Miller authorized Mr. Abrams to talk to Mr. Libby's lawyer, Joseph A.
Tate. The question was whether Mr. Libby really wanted her to testify. Mr.
Abrams passed the details of his conversation with Mr. Tate along to Ms. Miller
and to Times executives and lawyers, people involved in the internal discussion
said
People present at the meetings said that what they heard about the
preliminary negotiations was troubling.
Mr. Abrams told Ms. Miller and the group that Mr. Tate had said she was free
to testify. Mr. Abrams said Mr. Tate also passed along some information about
Mr. Libby's grand jury testimony: that he had not told Ms. Miller the name or
undercover status of Mr. Wilson's wife.
That raised a potential conflict for Ms. Miller. Did the references in her
notes to "Valerie Flame" and "Victoria Wilson" suggest that she would have to
contradict Mr. Libby's account of their conversations? Ms. Miller said in an
interview that she concluded that Mr. Tate was sending her a message that Mr.
Libby did not want her to testify.
According to Ms. Miller, this was what Mr. Abrams told her about his
conversation with Mr. Tate: "He was pressing about what you would say. When I
wouldn't give him an assurance that you would exonerate Libby, if you were to
cooperate, he then immediately gave me this, 'Don't go there, or, we don't want
you there.' "
Mr. Abrams said: "On more than one occasion, Mr. Tate asked me for a
recitation of what Ms. Miller would say. I did not provide one."
In an e-mail message Friday, Mr. Tate called Ms. Miller's interpretation
"outrageous."
"I never once suggested that she should not testify," Mr. Tate wrote. "It
was just the opposite. I told Mr. Abrams that the waiver was voluntary."
He added: " 'Don't go there' or 'We don't want you there' is not something I
said, would say, or ever implied or suggested."
Telling another witness about grand jury testimony is lawful as long as it
is not an attempt to influence the other witness's testimony.
"Judy believed Libby was afraid of her testimony," Mr. Keller said, noting
that he did not know the basis for the fear. "She thought Libby had reason to
be afraid of her testimony."
Ms. Miller and the paper decided at that point not to pursue additional
negotiations with Mr. Tate.
The two sides did not talk for a year.
Ms. Miller said in an interview that she was waiting for Mr. Libby to call
her, but he never did. "I interpreted the silence as, 'Don't testify,' " Ms.
Miller said.
She and her lawyers have also said it was inappropriate for them to hound a
source for permission to testify.
Mr. Tate, for his part, said the silence of the Miller side was
mystifying.
"You never told me," Mr. Tate wrote to Mr. Abrams recently, "that your
client did not accept my representation of voluntariness or that she wanted to
speak personally to my client." Mr. Abrams does not dispute that.
Talks between Ms. Miller's lawyer and the prosecutor, Mr. Fitzgerald, were
at a dead end, too.
Not long after breaking off communications with Mr. Tate, Mr. Abrams spoke
to Mr. Fitzgerald twice in September 2004. Mr. Abrams wanted to narrow the
scope of the questions Ms. Miller would be asked if she testified before the
grand jury.
Mr. Abrams said he wanted Mr. Fitzgerald to question Ms. Miller only on her
conversations with Mr. Libby about Ms. Wilson. And he wanted a promise that Mr.
Fitzgerald would not call her back for further questioning after she testified
once.
Mr. Fitzgerald said no. His spokesman declined to comment for this
article.
With negotiations at an impasse, Ms. Miller and The Times turned to the
courts but were rebuffed. In October 2004, Chief Judge Thomas F. Hogan of the
Federal District Court in Washington held Ms. Miller in contempt for not
testifying. She remained free while she pursued appeals.
A few weeks later on Capitol Hill, in November 2004, Ms. Miller bumped into
Robert S. Bennett, the prominent Washington criminal lawyer who represented
President Bill Clinton during the Monica Lewinsky scandal and who is known for
his blunt style and deal-making skills.
Ms. Miller recalled Mr. Bennett saying while he signed on to her case: "I
don't want to represent a principle. I want to represent Judy Miller."
After the Supreme Court declined to hear the case, Ms. Miller made a final
plea to Judge Hogan to stay out of jail: "My motive here is straightforward. A
promise of confidentiality once made must be respected, or the journalist will
lose all credibility and the public will, in the end, suffer."
Judge Hogan ordered her jailed at Alexandria Detention Center in Northern
Virginia until she agreed to testify or the grand jury's term expired on Oct.
28.
"She has the keys to release herself," the judge said. "She has a waiver she
chooses not to recognize."
Rising Tensions at Newspaper
While the paper's leaders were rallying around Ms. Miller's cause in public,
inside The Times tensions were growing.
Throughout this year, reporters at the paper spent weeks trying to determine
the identity of Ms. Miller's source. All the while, Mr. Keller knew it, but
declined to tell his own reporters.
Even after reporters learned it from outside sources, The Times did not
publish Mr. Libby's name, though other news organizations already had. The
Times did not tell its readers that Mr. Libby was Ms. Miller's source until
Sept. 30, in an article about Ms. Miller's release from jail.
Mr. Keller said that before Ms. Miller went to jail, Mr. Sulzberger, the
publisher, asked him to participate in meetings on legal strategy and public
statements. Mr. Keller said he then turned over the supervision of the
newspaper's coverage of the case to Ms. Abramson, though he said he did not
entirely step aside.
"It was just too awkward," Mr. Keller said, "to have me coming from meetings
where they were discussing the company's public posture, then overseeing
stories that were trying to deal with the company's public posture."
Ms. Abramson called The Times's coverage of the case "constrained." She said
that if Ms. Miller was willing to go to jail to protect her source, it would
have been "unconscionable then to out her source in the pages of the
paper."
Mr. Keller and Ms. Abramson said this created an almost impossible tension
between covering the case and the principle they believed to be at the heart of
it.
Some reporters said editors seemed reluctant to publish articles about other
aspects of the case as well, like how it was being investigated by Mr.
Fitzgerald. In July, Richard W. Stevenson and other reporters in the Washington
bureau wrote an article about the role of Mr. Cheney's senior aides, including
Mr. Libby, in the leak case. The article, which did not disclose that Mr. Libby
was Ms. Miller's source, was not published.
Mr. Stevenson said he was told by his editors that the article did not break
enough new ground. "It was taken pretty clearly among us as a signal that we
were cutting too close to the bone, that we were getting into an area that
could complicate Judy's situation," he said.
In August, Douglas Jehl and David Johnston, two other Washington reporters,
sent a memo to the Washington bureau chief, Mr. Taubman, listing ideas for
coverage of the case. Mr. Taubman said Mr. Keller did not want them pursued
because of the risk of provoking Mr. Fitzgerald or exposing Mr. Libby while Ms.
Miller was in jail.
Mr. Taubman said he felt bad for his reporters, but he added that he and
other senior editors felt that they had no choice. "No editor wants to be in
the position of keeping information out of the newspaper," Mr. Taubman
said.
Both Mr. Taubman and Ms. Abramson called the situation "excruciatingly
difficult."
One result was that other news organizations broke developments in the case
before The Times. Reporters found it especially frustrating when on the day
that Ms. Miller left jail, The Times had an article prepared at 2 p.m. but
delayed posting it on its Web site until after the news appeared on the Web
site of The Philadelphia Inquirer.
"We end up being late on our own story," Mr. Johnston said.
There were other awkward moments. On Oct. 7, shortly before Ms. Miller was
to conduct a telephone interview with two Times reporters, George Freeman, a
Times company lawyer, sent her a four-page memorandum.
Ms. Miller and her outside lawyer, Mr. Bennett, reacted furiously, calling
it a "script" and nearly canceling the interview. Mr. Freeman said later that
he had prepared and sent what he called a "narrative" of what happened to Ms.
Miller. Mr. Freeman said it had been written long before the interview with Ms.
Miller had even been contemplated.
"It was not meant to be a script," Mr. Freeman said.
The editorial page, which is run by Mr. Sulzberger and Gail Collins, the
editorial page editor, championed Ms. Miller's cause. The Times published more
than 15 editorials and called for Congress to pass a shield law that would make
it harder for federal prosecutors to compel reporters to testify.
Mr. Sulzberger said he did not personally write the editorials, but
regularly urged Ms. Collins to devote space to them. After Ms. Miller was
jailed, an editorial acknowledged that "this is far from an ideal case," before
saying, "If Ms. Miller testifies, it may be immeasurably harder in the future
to persuade a frightened government employee to talk about malfeasance in high
places."
Asked in the interview whether he had any regrets about the editorials,
given the outcome of the case, Mr. Sulzberger said no.
"I felt strongly that, one, Judy deserved the support of the paper in this
cause - and the editorial page is the right place for such support, not the
news pages," Mr. Sulzberger said. "And secondly, that this issue of a federal
shield law is really important to the nation."
Ms. Miller said the publisher's support was invaluable. "He galvanized the
editors, the senior editorial staff," she said. "He metaphorically and
literally put his arm around me."
More Thoughts of a Waiver
Inside her cell in the Alexandria Detention Center this summer, Ms. Miller
was able to peer through a narrow concrete slit to get an obstructed view of a
maple tree and a concrete highway barrier. She was losing weight and struggling
to sleep on two thin mats on a concrete slab.
Although she told friends that she was feeling isolated and frustrated, Ms.
Miller said she comforted herself with thousands of letters, the supportive
editorials in The Times and frequent 30-minute visits from more than 100
friends and colleagues. Among them were Mr. Sulzberger; Tom Brokaw, the former
anchor at NBC News; Richard A. Clarke, a former counterterrorism official; and
John R. Bolton, the United States ambassador to the United Nations.
Every day, she checked outdated copies of The Times for a news article about
her case. Most days she was disappointed.
She said she began thinking about whether she should reach out to Mr. Libby
for "a personal, voluntary waiver."
"The longer I was there, the more chance I had to think about it," Ms.
Miller said.
On July 20, William Safire, the former longtime columnist at The Times,
testified about a federal shield law on Capitol Hill. Ms. Miller read his
testimony and found it "inspiring."
While she mulled over her options, Mr. Bennett was urging her to allow him
to approach Mr. Tate, Mr. Libby's lawyer, to try to negotiate a deal that would
get her out of jail. Mr. Bennett wanted to revive the question of the waivers
that Mr. Libby and other administration officials signed the previous year
authorizing reporters to disclose their confidential discussions.
The other reporters subpoenaed in the case said such waivers were coerced.
They said administration officials signed them only because they feared
retribution from the prosecutor or the White House. Reporters for at least
three news organizations had then gone back to their sources and obtained
additional assurances that convinced them the waivers were genuine.
But Ms. Miller said she had not gotten an assurance that she felt would
allow her to testify. And she said she felt that if Mr. Libby had wanted her to
testify, he would have contacted her directly.
While Mr. Bennett urged Ms. Miller to test the waters, some of her other
lawyers were counseling caution. Mr. Freeman, The Times's company lawyer, and
Mr. Abrams worried that if Ms. Miller sought and received permission to testify
and was released from jail, people would say that she and the newspaper had
simply caved in.
"I was afraid that people would draw the wrong conclusions," Mr. Freeman
said.
Mr. Freeman advised Ms. Miller to remain in jail until Oct. 28, when the
term of the grand jury would expire and the investigation would presumably
end.
Mr. Bennett thought that was a bad strategy; he argued that Mr. Fitzgerald
would "almost certainly" empanel a new grand jury, which might mean Ms. Miller
would have to spend an additional 18 months behind bars.
Mr. Freeman said he thought Mr. Fitzgerald was bluffing. Mr. Abrams was less
sure. But he said Judge Hogan might release Ms. Miller if Mr. Fitzgerald tried
to take further action against her.
"At that point," Ms. Miller said, "I realized if and when he did that,
objectively things would change, and at that point, I might really be locked
in."
After much deliberation, Ms. Miller said, she finally told Mr. Bennett to
call Mr. Libby's lawyer. After two months in jail, Ms. Miller said, "I owed it
to myself to see whether or not Libby had had a change of heart, the special
prosecutor had had a change of heart."
Mr. Bennett called Mr. Tate on Aug. 31. Mr. Tate told Mr. Bennett that Mr.
Libby had given permission to Ms. Miller to testify a year earlier. "I called
Tate and this guy could not have been clearer - 'Bob, my client has given a
waiver,' " Mr. Bennett said.
Mr. Fitzgerald wrote to Mr. Tate on Sept. 12, saying he was concerned that
Ms. Miller was still in jail because of a "misunderstanding" between her and
Mr. Libby.
Three days later, Ms. Miller heard from Mr. Libby.
In a folksy, conversational two-page letter dated Sept. 15, Mr. Libby
assured Ms. Miller that he had wanted her to testify about their conversations
all along. "I believed a year ago, as now, that testimony by all will benefit
all," he wrote. And he noted that "the public report of every other reporter's
testimony makes clear that they did not discuss Ms. Plame's name or identity
with me."
When Ms. Miller testified before the grand jury, Mr. Fitzgerald asked her
about the letter. She said she responded that it could be perceived as an
effort by Mr. Libby "to suggest that I, too, would say that we had not
discussed Ms. Plame's identity." But she added that "my notes suggested that we
had discussed her job."
Ms. Miller, though, wanted more than Mr. Libby's letter to feel free to
testify. She told her lawyers that she still needed to hear from Mr. Libby in
person. When that could not be arranged, she settled for a 10-minute jailhouse
conference call on Sept. 19 with Mr. Libby, while two of her lawyers and one of
Mr. Libby's listened in.
Ms. Miller said she was persuaded. "I mean, it's like the tone of the
voice," she said. "When he talked to me about how unhappy he was that I was in
jail, that he hadn't fully understood that I might have been going to jail just
to protect him. He had thought there were other people whom I had been
protecting. And there was kind of like an expression of genuine concern and
sorrow."
Ms. Miller said she then "cross-examined" Mr. Libby. "When I pushed him
hard, I said: 'Do you really want me to testify? Are you sure you really want
me to testify?' He said something like: 'Absolutely. Believe it. I mean it.'
"
At 1 p.m. on Sept. 26, Ms. Miller convened her lawyers in the jailhouse law
library. All the lawyers agreed that Mr. Libby had released Ms. Miller from the
pledge of confidentiality.
The next day, Mr. Bennett called Mr. Fitzgerald. He informed the prosecutor
that Ms. Miller had a voluntary, personal waiver and asked Mr. Fitzgerald to
restrict his questions to her conversations with Mr. Libby.
Mr. Bennett, who by now had carefully reviewed Ms. Miller's extensive notes
taken from two interviews with Mr. Libby, assured Mr. Fitzgerald that Ms.
Miller had only one meaningful source. Mr. Fitzgerald agreed to limit his
questions to Mr. Libby and the Wilson matter.
Claudia Payne, a Times editor and a close friend of Ms. Miller, said that
once Ms. Miller realized that her jail term could be extended, "it changed
things a great deal. She said, 'I don't want to spend my life in here.' "
Ms. Payne added, "Her paramount concern was how her actions would be viewed
by her colleagues."
On Sept. 29, Ms. Miller was released from jail and whisked by Mr. Sulzberger
and Mr. Keller to the Ritz-Carlton Georgetown for a massage, a manicure, a
martini and a steak dinner. The next morning, she testified before the grand
jury for three hours. Afterward, Ms. Miller declared that her ordeal was a
victory for journalists and the public.
She testified before the grand jury for a second time on Wednesday about
notes from her first meeting with Mr. Libby.
Last week, Mr. Sulzberger said it was impossible to know whether Ms. Miller
could have struck a deal a year earlier, as at least four other journalists had
done.
"Maybe a deal was possible earlier," Mr. Sulzberger said. "And maybe, in
retrospect, looking back, you could say this was a moment you could have jumped
on. If so, shame on us. I tend to think not."
A Puzzling Outcome
On Oct. 3, four days after Ms. Miller left jail, she returned to the
headquarters of The New York Times on West 43rd Street.
Before entering the building, she called her friend Ms. Payne and asked her
to come downstairs and escort her in. "She very felt frightened," Ms. Payne
said. "She felt very vulnerable."
At a gathering in the newsroom, she made a speech claiming victories for
press freedom. Her colleagues responded with restrained applause, seemingly as
mystified by the outcome of her case as the public.
"You could see it in people's faces," Ms. Miller said later. "I'm a
reporter. People were confused and perplexed, and I realized then that The
Times and I hadn't done a very good job of making people understand what has
been accomplished."
In the days since, The Times has been consumed by discussions about how the
newspaper handled the case, how Times journalists covered the news of their own
paper - and about Ms. Miller herself.
"Everyone admires our paper's willingness to stand behind us and our work,
but most people I talk to have been troubled and puzzled by Judy's seeming
ability to operate outside of conventional reportorial channels and managerial
controls," said Todd S. Purdum, a Washington reporter for The Times. "Partly
because of that, many people have worried about whether this was the proper
fight to fight."
Diana B. Henriques, a business reporter, said she and others at the paper
took "great pride and comfort" in how The Times stood by Ms. Miller. But she
said the episode and speculation surrounding it "left a lot of people feeling
confused and anxious" about Ms. Miller's role in the investigation.
On Tuesday, Ms. Miller is to receive a First Amendment award from the
Society of Professional Journalists. She said she thought she would write a
book about her experiences in the leak case, although she added that she did
not yet have a book deal. She also plans on taking some time off but says she
hopes to return to the newsroom.
She said she hopes to cover "the same thing I've always covered - threats to
our country."
The Times incurred millions of dollars in legal fees in Ms. Miller's case.
It limited its own ability to cover aspects of one of the biggest scandals of
the day. Even as the paper asked for the public's support, it was unable to
answer its questions.
"It's too early to judge it, and it's probably for other people to judge,"
said Mr. Keller, the executive editor. "I hope that people will remember that
this institution stood behind a reporter, and the principle, when it wasn't
easy to do that, or popular to do that."
Janny Scott contributed reporting for this article.
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