Posted on 01/31/2007 5:55:25 AM PST by Quilla
A pattern is emerging at the Lewis Libby trial, now in the middle of its third week in the federal courthouse in Washington. The pattern is this: A witness called by prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald delivers testimony that seems clearly damaging to Libby, strongly suggesting that Libby lied when he testified before prosecutor Patrick Fitzgeralds grand jury in the CIA-leak affair. And then Libbys lawyers take over, suggesting that the witnesss memory is so selective, or so flawed, or so sketchy as to render his or her testimony useless.
Each day, most news reports from the trial focus on the damage done to Libbys case; there are lots of headlines like Ex-Aide Contradicts Libby and Reporters Account Hurts Libbys Defense. But each day, the question is not what headline writers are taking from events in the courtroom but what jurors are making of it. Are they seeing an overwhelming case for Libbys guilt? Or are they seeing a case in which everyone involved seems to have forgotten something and no one is truly credible? We just dont know.
The latest witness to contradict Libby and then find her credibility seriously challenged is Judith Miller, the former New York Times reporter who went to jail for 85 days in an effort to avoid testifying in the case. Miller told the jury that she interviewed Libby three times in the course of three weeks in the summer of 2003, on June 23, July 8, and July 12. Each time, she said, Libby mentioned former ambassador Joseph Wilson, his trip to Niger, his attacks on the Bush administration and his wife.
Much of Millers testimony focused on her first meeting with Libby, a June 23, 2003 interview that took place in the Old Executive Office Building next to the White House. Questioned by prosecutor Fitzgerald, Miller offered a vivid description of Libbys state of mind. Mr. Libby appeared to me to be agitated and frustrated and angry, she testified. He is a very low key and controlled guy, but he seemed annoyed.
Did he indicate what he was annoyed at? Fitzgerald asked.
He was concerned that the CIA was beginning to backpedal to try to distance itself from the unequivocal intelligence estimates it had provided before the war, Miller said. She told the jurors that Libby had called the CIAs action a perverted war of leaks.
And then, Miller said, Libby brought up the subject of Joseph Wilsons trip to Africa. At the time, Wilson was still criticizing the administration anonymously, and no one in the general public knew who he was. Miller testified that Libby at first referred to Wilson as the clandestine guy and only later began to call him by name. He said the vice president did not know that Mr. Wilson had been sent on this trip, Miller testified. She said Libby assured her that Dick Cheney did not know of Wilson and did not get a readout on Wilsons findings. As an aside, Miller said, Libby mentioned that Wilsons wife worked in the bureau. At first, Miller recalled, she was confused What bureau? The FBI? but later it became clear that he was referring to the CIA.
Miller told the jury that Libby did not treat Wilsons role, or the fact that his wife worked for the CIA, as a big deal. He said that people were beginning to focus on Mr. Wilson, but that Mr. Wilson was a ruse thats the word he used an irrelevancy, Miller testified. By that, Libby apparently meant that Wilson was just one small part of a much bigger story, which was the intensifying war between the CIA and the White House over Iraq intelligence. Mr. Libby seemed really unhappy and irritated, Miller said. He accused the CIA of leaking information that would attempt to distance the agency from its earlier estimates. He said that nobody had ever come to the White House from the CIA and said, Mr. President, this is not right. He felt that if the CIA had had such doubts, they should have shared them with the president.
In all, Miller drew a fascinating picture of her talk with Libby. He was controlled. He was angry. He was engaging in back-and-forth battles with the CIA. Millers portrait of Libby stuck in the mind for a few minutes, at least, until defense lawyer William Jeffress rose to cross-examine her.
You did not always remember that June 23 meeting so well, Jeffress said to Miller. In fact, he continued, Miller, after resisting a subpoena, after going to jail, and after thinking at great length about her contacts with Libby, failed to mention the June 23 meeting at all when she first appeared before prosecutor Fitzgeralds grand jury.
That conversation on June 23 in the Old Executive Office Building, Jeffress said. When you first appeared before the grand jury, you didnt remember that at all?
Nothing about it, Miller answered.
And today youve described that meeting in great detail.
Thats correct, Miller said. Quickly thinking better of her answer, she added, No, not in great detail. The highlights of it.
But Miller knew at the time about all the controversy over the CIA leak, didnt she? Yes, she said. She remembered the Robert Novak column, didnt she? Yes. She remembered that a criminal investigation was opened into the matter? Yes. She remembered writing a column defending her conduct in the affair? Yes. She remembered talking to executives at the Times about the whole thing? Yes. So why didnt she remember her first meeting with Libby about the matter?
You got subpoenaed? Jeffress asked.
Yes.
And you retained counsel .Did you have an occasion to think about gee, if they ask me questions, what am I going to have to say?
Yes. I was concerned.
So at that time did you remember your meeting with Mr. Libby on June 23, 2003?
I dont know, sir, because I wasnt asked about it, Miller answered. I discussed my meetings with Mr. Libby within my newspaper.
Did you discuss the June 23 meetings within your newspaper?
I discussed a series of meetings
Did you discuss the June 23 meeting?
I dont recall.
Jeffress asked whether Miller asked herself What conversations did I have with Mr. Libby?
No sir, not before I received the subpoena.
OK, Jeffress said. So you received a subpoena in the Spring of 2004. When you got the subpoena, did you think, If I have to testify, what am I going to say? Did you try to think about, When did I talk to Mr. Libby?
Of course I tried to think about it, Miller said, growing a bit defensive.
But isnt it true, Jeffress continued, that you didnt remember that meeting of June 23 at any time between the time you received a subpoena in this investigation and the time you were held in contempt?
Miller said she hadnt seen any notes from the meeting, that she had been asked to review her notes from the period, but she hadnt found any from the June 23 session.
Put aside notes, Jeffress responded. Did you remember any meeting?
I had a vague memory that I knew of Ms. Plame prior to my July 8 meeting, and it bothered me, Miller said.
So is the answer to my question yes? Jeffress asked. Did you remember the meeting with Mr. Libby on June 23?
I dont believe I did, Miller said.
Jeffress moved on to Millers 85 days in jail. She had a lot of time to think about things, he said but not her first, critical, meeting with Libby. You did not remember the meeting when you were in jail?
I did not remember the meeting when I was in jail.
The day after Miller got out of jail, she testified before the grand jury. You were asked, do you recall if you had met with Mr. Libby in late June, Jeffress said.
I dont recall, Miller answered.
Jeffress went to the transcript of Millers grand jury testimony. So were you asked the following question, he said, beginning to read. And do you recall that if a few weeks earlier, you had met with Mr. Libby in late June? Answer: I dont know if I met with him.
Jeffress let that answer hang in the air for a brief moment. And then he asked, You didnt go into the grand jury to lie?
No, Miller said.
You tried to be honest?
Yes.
But the meeting of June 23 was not memorable to you at the time.
I did not remember that it even occurred.
So today, Jeffress said, you have testified to Mr. Libbys demeanor, that he was agitated. You have testified to things that he said. You said his wife works in the bureau. Do you distinctly remember that?
Miller said her notes brought her memory back. She explained that, after her first grand jury testimony, she discovered a shopping bag full of notebooks under her desk in her New York office. One of those notebooks covered the June 23 interview.
How did your notes reflect that Mr. Libby was irritated? Jeffress asked. Did they say, anywhere, irritated?
No, Miller answered. I was able to read them, and that brought a memory of the meeting that day.
Do you have a good memory?
Of some things.
Do you remember appearing on a television show with Jim Goodale, a show called Digital Age, in 2006? Jeffress asked. Do you remember saying that it was easy to forget details of a story youre not writing about? Didnt you tell him that you didnt have a good memory of this because it wasnt important to you?
I dont remember saying that, Miller answered.
Alright, Jeffress said, lets watch a tape of the program. Millers image appeared on a screen in the courtroom. People say, How could she have forgotten? Miller said on the tape. Its really easy to forget details on a story youre not writing. I had not written about uranium in Niger. I had not written about Niger. I had not written about uranium. It didnt mean anything to me.
The tape ended. That was you? Jeffress asked dryly.
Yes, Miller answered. Finally, exasperated, she looked at Jeffress and said, Counselor, Ive already said it. I didnt remember that meeting. I just didnt remember it.
But that wasnt the end of it. Jeffress then moved in on Millers notes. She relied on them extensively, Jeffress said. Do you remember saying [to the grand jury] I dont have an independent memory of much of this?
Generally, I am note-driven, Miller said. And notes bring to mind a memory, or they dont. Sometimes they did, sometimes they didnt.
By that point, Miller was clearly nervous, clearly defensive, and clearly upset by Jeffresss constant challenges. But Jeffress would not let up. Trying to suggest that Miller might have heard about Joseph Wilson and his wife from someone other than Lewis Libby, Jeffress pressed.
You had in your notes the name Joe Wilson, Jeffress said. You had his phone number. You had his extension. So who did you talk to about Joe Wilson?
I dont remember who I talked to about Joe Wilson.
Do you remember talking to Joe Wilson?
I dont believe I did.
Did you tell the grand jury that you remember Joe Wilson was in your notes before that, and so somebody may have told me, but I dont remember Is that your testimony?
Yes.
And on it went. By the end of the day, Jeffress had planted an entire fields worth of seeds of doubt. Millers memory was faulty. She gave conflicting accounts of events. She had talked to other people about Joseph Wilson and his wife, but she couldnt remember anything about it.
And that was just one meeting, June 23. There was also testimony about Millers July 8 and 12 conversations with Libby, as well as the inner workings of the Times. And by the end of the day, in an echo of earlier litigation in this case, the lawyers were arguing intensely over whether Miller could be asked to reveal the names of people she talked to about Wilson. And the fighting would go on; when Judge Reggie Walton adjourned for the night, Libbys defense was clearly not finished with Miller. In this trial, just one man faces charges for his testimony. But everyone is under suspicion.
Biased reporting????
Alert the Media!!!
Oh, that won't work, will it?
Riiiiiiiiiight.......
Everyone is allowed to forget except Libby.
question;
what do these subversive scu&bags have to gain with their shadowy activities?
ping
Yes, when the investigations started, I thought 'I hope all the conservatives use the Hillary! defense.....I don't recall.....anything'.
I wonder if the defense is using this tactic to set the stage for Libby's testimony that he didn't remember certain aspects of his meetings which led to the perjury charges. The defense was not allowed by the judge to bring in an expert on memory recall so the lawyers are just setting about to prove that everyones memory is fallible. That notion will be firmly fixed in the jury members minds.
I haven't been following the details very closely here. Am I to understand that after her first grand jury testimony (and after she was jailed?) Miller then discovers a shopping bag full of notebooks under her desk?
It does seem to be a common thread running through Byron's reporting of the Libby Trial.
Other relevant stories by Byron:
The Libby Trial: Does Everybody Have a Bad Memory? 01/30
The Libby Trial: Whose Memory Problems? 01/25
The Libby Trial Reveals a White House at War with Itself 01/24
The Real Issue in the Libby Trial 01/23
Judith Miller's failure of memory of the June 23 meeting is far more spectacular and inexplicable than Libby's. And yet it is a linchpin of the effort to put Libby in prison.
Every single prosecution witness except Ari Fleischer has Recovered Memory Syndrome, where, under prodding by Fitz, they recover detailed and nuanced memories of things they had previously completely forgotten.
This case is such a crock it's unbelievable.
You had in your notes the name Joe Wilson, Jeffress said. You had his phone number. You had his extension. So who did you talk to about Joe Wilson?
I dont remember who I talked to about Joe Wilson.
Do you remember talking to Joe Wilson?
I dont believe I did.
Did you tell the grand jury that you remember Joe Wilson was in your notes before that, and so somebody may have told me, but I dont remember
Is that your testimony?
Yes.
Yep .. they just happened to show up and found them AFTER getting out of jail
"Every single prosecution witness except Ari Fleischer has Recovered Memory Syndrome"
Maybe even Ari is having memory problems
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1776128/posts?page=4#4
Okay, let me understand this.
She goes to jail. While she's in jail for what? 85 days? a SHOPPING BAG FULL OF NOTES just sits under her desk?
Barbara Striesand.
Yep, that's it
A brilliant cross-examination.....
Sure. Kind of like Rose law firm billing records or FBI files.
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