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Judith Miller Released

Daisy

New Member
Originally posted by carpro:
He did.

A year ago.
Citation? You're saying he called her a year ago and convinced her then that his waiver was sincere and uncoerced?

Is that too difficult for you to grasp?
The idea that Miller chose to go to jail convinced that her source did not wish to remain undisclosed? Yes.

If she was concerned about coersion, she could have called him anytime.
What makes you think that she did not contact him by phone or other private means?

But, now, all of a sudden a phone conversation is OK when a written statement isn't?
Of course. The written statement was given under duress - everyone in the office who wished to remain in the office had to sign one under threat of being fired. You seem to have difficulty grasping this concept, that a forced waiver is not acceptable.

Fine. If she's stupid enough to go to jail when all she had to do was pick up the phone and verify his written statement anytime in the last twelve months, then she needs more help that anyone realized.
Again, you don't know that she didn't. You don't know that he would have consented if she had or that he did not refuse if she did.

I haven't heard that Judith Miller was stupid from anyone but you so far.

My question is, why now?
Because now she has his uncoerced consent.

How many times are you going to ask the same question only to ignore the same answer?

I know you don't have the answer, Daisy.
Except the one she gave and that I've given you several times. The real question is why Libby has given his free consent only now. I suspect it is because it was disclosed to Fitzgerald by other people and there was no reason for him to hold Miller to secrecy any longer - but time will tell.

You can't seem to get past the sarcastic comment stage with a real honest to God reasonably thought out answer.
I can't get over your inability to grasp that some people don't use technicalities to get out of what they perceive as their moral and professional obligations.

No wonder you're a liberal. I hope you're past your mantra stage next time you reply. :rolleyes:
Your posts and your inability to resist making personal insults say all that needs saying about you.
 

carpro

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I guess all that means is you don't have an answer to my question. Why didn't you just say so in the first place?

A phone call is not a technicality. If she wanted to make sure his written statement was uncoerced, all she had to do was place one in the last 12 months.

Instead she went to jail...for nothing.

Maybe she was trying to make some kind of point, but it was for her own reasons and had nothing to do with Libby.

From my viewpoint, all she did was make herself look dumb as a box of rocks. Everyone with half a brain knows how to use a phone.
laugh.gif
 

Daisy

New Member
Originally posted by carpro:
I guess all that means is you don't have an answer to my question. Why didn't you just say so in the first place?
Persistent bluff and bluster.
A phone call is not a technicality.
Right, the technicality is the forced written waiver. Technically, it is a waiver; morally and realistically, it is not. The phone call was the opposite of a technicality, ie. the real thing.

If she wanted to make sure his written statement was uncoerced, all she had to do was place one in the last 12 months.
Once more with feeling: how do you know she did not? How do you know that Libby did not refuse to give one, eh?

Instead she went to jail...for nothing.
Some people do not consider professional integrity and moral obligations "nothing"; others, apparently, are not so fastidious.

Maybe she was trying to make some kind of point, but it was for her own reasons and had nothing to do with Libby.
Evidence?

Miller said that Libby now has waived confidentiality. Where is your evidence that it was, or would have been, waived - uncoerced - a year ago? If you have none, then that assertion has no value whatsoever.

From my viewpoint, all she did was make herself look dumb as a box of rocks. Everyone with half a brain knows how to use a phone.
laugh.gif
And the smirky contention that a first string reporter from one of the most prestigious newspapers in the world with access to good legal counsel is simply "too dumb" to make a phone call is, at best, unlikely. Belief in such an unlikely, unevidenced contention seems more akin to twisted political bias than to any genuine insight.
 

carpro

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by Daisy:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by carpro:
I guess all that means is you don't have an answer to my question. Why didn't you just say so in the first place. If she wanted to make sure his written statement was uncoerced, all she had to do was place one in the last 12 months.
Once more with feeling: how do you know she did not? How do you know that Libby did not refuse to give one, eh?


Maybe she was trying to make some kind of point, but it was for her own reasons and had nothing to do with Libby.
Evidence?

Miller said that Libby now has waived confidentiality. Where is your evidence that it was, or would have been, waived - uncoerced - a year ago? If you have none, then that assertion has no value whatsoever.

</font>[/QUOTE]Presto!
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/09/30/cia.leak/

After news broke Thursday of Miller's release from prison, Tate said Libby signed a waiver of confidentiality more than a year ago and that Tate followed up with a phone call to Abrams assuring him Libby's waiver was voluntary.

But Tate said Miller's attorney, Bob Bennett, told him over the Labor Day weekend that Miller did not accept that waiver because "it came from lawyers."

Tate said he wondered "why didn't someone call us 80 days ago" -- before Miller entered prison.


That's what I'm wondering.
 

Daisy

New Member
Finally, something other than your opinion, thank you.

Who is Abrams?

Miller: Once I got a personal voluntary waiver, my lawyer, Mr. [Bob] Bennett, approached the special counsel to see if my grand jury testimony could be limited to the communications with the source from whom I had received that personal and voluntary waiver. The special counsel agreed to this, and that was very important to me.

&lt;snip&gt;

Miller: I was a journalist doing my job. Protecting my source until my source freed me to perform my civic duty to testify.

BOB FRANKEN, CNN: Question, Scooter Libby's lawyer, your source's lawyer ... I suspect you're not going to tell us if that's correct [that Libby was your source].

MILLER: I am not going to tell you if that's correct.

FRANKEN: Scooter's lawyer has said that, had you asked, you wouldn't have had to spend any time in jail. He would have been more than willing to give you the explicit waiver you say you now accepted.

MILLER: I was not a party to those discussions. I'm going to let you refer those questions to my lawyer. I can only tell you that as soon as I received a personal assurance from the source that I was able to talk to him and talk to the source about my testimony, it was only then and as a result of the special prosecutors' agreement to narrow the focus of the inquiry, to focus on that source, that I was able to testify.

I testified as soon as I could. And I will ask you to please address the questions to which I was not a party to my lawyers.

UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: But Judy, a conversation you were a party to, on the steps of this courthouse, when you and Matt [Time reporter Matthew Cooper] faced contempt of court charges, you said out here when Matt was asked the same question, your answer was different. You said no waiver would be acceptable.

MILLER: No, I said I had not received a personal explicit voluntary waiver from my source, what I considered that. That was my position, and I said it many times. I said it before I went to jail. I said it when I was in jail.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/09/30/miller.statement/index.html
Miller said she wanted a "personal, voluntary" waiver. I can only guess that she considered a conversation between lawyers and at which she was not present, not to be personal.

She said she'd say more after she testified before Fitzgerald.
 

Daisy

New Member
MMMMMMMmmmmmmmmmmaybe.

Or maybe she's a fine journalist of extraordinary integrity. I don't know of her except for this.

Who is Abrams?
 

Pastor Larry

<b>Moderator</b>
Site Supporter
I don't know of her except for this.
Maybe that's why she went to jail.

It has been long known that the confidentiality was waived over a year ago. Furthermore, even if it had not been waived, she knew the consequences of contempt of court, and chose to go through with it. She can blame only herself. The "confidentiality" was not binding on anyone. It is a gentlemen's agreement. It has no force in a court of law, nor should it have.
 
Originally posted by Daisy:
Who is Abrams?
Since Carpro is evidently too lazy and rude to answer your question. I believe he is referring to a news anchor who works, I think, for MSNBC.

BTW, it is good to see someone explain something they actually understand, unlike Carpro or Pastor Larry.
 

carpro

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by Terry_Herrington:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Daisy:
Who is Abrams?
Since Carpro is evidently too lazy and rude to answer your question. I believe he is referring to a news anchor who works, I think, for MSNBC.

BTW, it is good to see someone explain something they actually understand, unlike Carpro or Pastor Larry.
</font>[/QUOTE]Stick to your knitting, Terry.

You're in way over your head.
laugh.gif
 

Pastor Larry

<b>Moderator</b>
Site Supporter
BTW, it is good to see someone explain something they actually understand, unlike Carpro or Pastor Larry.
Thanks for your kind words, Terry. I thought you had sworn this kind of stuff off? Has that changed now?

And what did I explain that I didn't actually understand? I think all I did was make a general comment about commonly known information.
 

carpro

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by carpro:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Terry_Herrington:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Daisy:
Who is Abrams?
Since Carpro is evidently too lazy and rude to answer your question. I believe he is referring to a news anchor who works, I think, for MSNBC.

BTW, it is good to see someone explain something they actually understand, unlike Carpro or Pastor Larry.
</font>[/QUOTE]Stick to your knitting, Terry.

You're in way over your head.
laugh.gif
</font>[/QUOTE]NYT attorney Floyd Abrams.
 

Daisy

New Member
Originally posted by Pastor Larry:
Maybe that's why she went to jail.
Yes, that is certainly possible. It's also possible that she is an idealist.

It has been long known that the confidentiality was waived over a year ago.
It has also long been known that the waivers were not exactly voluntary.
Furthermore, even if it had not been waived, she knew the consequences of contempt of court, and chose to go through with it. She can blame only herself.
I haven't heard her blame anyone.

The "confidentiality" was not binding on anyone. It is a gentlemen's agreement. It has no force in a court of law, nor should it have.
"Gentlemen" is an odd term for reporters....unless you're being ironic (can't tell). You are right that it has no force of law. I agree with you that it should not.

As I've mentioned to carpro, some people take moral and professional integrity seriously. Whether Miller is one such, a grandstander or a combo, time may tell.
 

Pastor Larry

<b>Moderator</b>
Site Supporter
I don't know that she is blaming anyone. She might be an idealist, but I find it hard to see how that applies here. I think much of "idealism" is misplaced, or spent on wrong-headed objectives.

One of the ideals of this country is that it is based on rule of law. It seems to me that when people take that law into their own hands, bad things happen.

"Gentlemen's agreement" is a figure of speech for an agreement that is not written out or legalized. There was nothing ironic intended ... though perhaps including reporters in the group of "gentlemen" might be ironic in itself.

I am not sure that Miller's actions were taking "moral and professional integrity seriously." Perhaps ... perhaps not.
 

LadyEagle

<b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>
3-page warning: This thread will be closed no sooner than 11:30 pm ET by one of the moderators.

Lady Eagle,
Moderator
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