Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

Newser - Current News - Breaking Stories

CIA Leak Investigation track this thread

Started by S Goldstein; Last updated by N McMaster | View history

CIA Leak Investigation

Valerie Plame, Scooter Libby, and the tip-off that went wrong

In March 2007, a federal jury convicted former Cheney chief-of-staff Scooter Libby on four counts, including obstruction of justice, for his role in outing former CIA operative Valerie Plame. President Bush later commuted his 30-month, $250K sentence, saving Libby from jail time. But did the right man take the fall?

Stories

Stories 1 - 20 of 41

  • December 2008
    • Illinois' New Eliot Ness Bags Another Scalp

      Illinois' New Eliot Ness Bags Another Scalp

      (Newser) - With the arrest of Rod Blagojevich, federal prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald notched up his second indictment against an Illinois governor in five years. But it's just another scalp for the US attorney who's brought down everyone from World Trade Center bomber Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman to media mogul Conrad Black, not to mention Scooter Libby. "People see him as the only ally we have against political corruption," one activist told the New York Times . More »

  • October 2008
    • Judith Miller Heads to Fox

      Judith Miller Heads to Fox

      (Newser) - Judith Miller, the former New York Times reporter who spent 85 days in jail rather than reveal her sources in a CIA leak case, is Fox News’ newest on-air analyst, Editor & Publisher reports. “I get to spout my views, I will NOT be joining the news team,” said Miller, who left the paper in 2005 after 28 years. More »

  • August 2008
    • Court Tosses Lawsuit Over CIA Leak

      Court Tosses Lawsuit Over CIA Leak

      (Newser) - A federal appeals court today threw out former CIA spy Valerie Plame's lawsuit against Dick Cheney and a group of former Bush White House officials for leaking her identity to the public. The court ruled that Cheney, Karl Rove, Scooter Libby, and former State Department official Richard Armitage were acting within their official duties when they conspired to reveal Plame's identity to the press, Reuters reports. More »

  • July 2008
    • Victim in Novak Hit-and-Run 'Doing Fine'

      Victim in Novak Hit-and-Run 'Doing Fine'

      (Newser) - The pedestrian struck by Robert Novak's Corvette this week says that other than a dislocated shoulder, he’s “doing fine,” the Washington Post reports. In fact, Don Liljenquist seems more star-struck than car-struck: "Bob Novak is the one that hit me?" the homeless 86-year-old said in a radio interview. "He's a famous journalist! Well, I think that makes it a great story!" More »

    • 'Creative' Bush Order Shields Cheney from Plame Probe

      'Creative' Bush Order Shields Cheney from Plame Probe

      (Newser) - President Bush has invoked an unprecedented executive privilege claim to bar FBI interviews with Dick Cheney from a congressional committee probing the leak that exposed Valerie Plame as a CIA agent, Newsweek reports. The Bush order argues that turning over the records of Cheney's grilling concerning the scandal would violate the president's right to confidential communication with his advisers. More »

  • June 2008
    • Plame Cover-Up Continues, McClellan Says on Hill

      Plame Cover-Up Continues, McClellan Says on Hill

      (Newser) - Scott McClellan took to Capitol Hill today, and in what one Republican dismissed as “book-of-the-month club” meeting, took on the CIA leak case and the Iraq war, among other topics. The former White House press secretary said he didn’t know if a crime had been committed in the CIA outing, but “suspicion still remains” because Bush administration brass won't open up, Talking Points and AP report. More »

    • Cheney May Have Told Libby to Out Plame

      Cheney May Have Told Libby to Out Plame

      (Newser) - "Scooter” Libby told the FBI it was “possible” that Dick Cheney ordered him to out CIA agent Valerie Plame to the press, the Washington Post reports. The revelation appears in a redacted FBI report under examination by a House panel led by Henry Waxman. The panel now wants the FBI to turn over more files, including interviews with Cheney and President Bush. More »

    • Dems' Prints All Over McClellan's 'Bitter Retort'