Judith Miller Controversy

30 September 2005

A Timeline in Reporters' Contempt Case

A timeline in the case of Judith Miller, a New York times reporter jailed for 85 days after refusing to divulge her sources to a prosecutor investigating the Bush administration's role in leaking a CIA officer's identity: February 2002: Former Ambassador Joseph Wilson is asked by the Bush administration to travel to Niger to check out an intelligence report that Niger sold yellowcake uranium to...

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30 September 2005

Q&A: CIA leak case

A grand jury in the US is investigating the source of a leak that led to the public unmasking of a CIA agent in 2003. The leak formed part of the wide-ranging controversy about the US administration's justification for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. It sparked a major political row in 2003 that has refused to subside. The BBC News website looks at key issues in the case. What is the grand jury...

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30 September 2005

CPJ troubled by U.S. message in Miller case

New York, September 30, 2005–The Committee to Protect Journalists is relieved that New York Times reporter Judith Miller has been freed after spending 85 days in a U.S. prison for refusing to disclose a confidential source. But CPJ is deeply troubled by the long-term damage that the federal prosecutor’s investigation has had on the free flow of information, and the message sent worldwide by...

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30 September 2005

Freed at the expense of confidentiality of sources

Reporters Without Borders today hailed the release yesterday of New York Times reporter Judith Miller, who had been in prison since 6 July for refusing to reveal a source, but the organisation regretted that, in order to obtain her freedom, she has been forced to violate the principle that journalists’ sources are confidential. "Miller’s release is obviously good news in itself, but she recovered...

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30 September 2005

NYT reporter reaches deal with prosecutor in CIA probe

Judith Miller, the New York Times reporter jailed since July 6 for refusing to testify in the CIA leak case, was released from a Virginia detention centre on Thursday after she and her lawyers reached an agreement with a federal prosecutor to testify before a grand jury investigating the matter. Miller was freed after spending more than 12 weeks in jail, during which she refused to cooperate with...

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19 September 2005

Threat to Reporter's Privilege Is 'Severe'

The government threat to journalistic privilege is now as great as it has been since the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press began its annual Homefront Confidential report six years ago. The report, which studies how the war on terrorism has affected access to information, rates several categories according to a scale that mimics the color-coded threat level of the Department of Homeland...

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18 August 2005

Miller's Imprisonment: Justice for Yellow Journalism?

Judith Miller of the New York Times first came to my attention through her book - God has ninety nine names. I did not like it. In it she displayed her pro-Israeli, pro-Phalangist (a fascist Lebanese organization) bias against the uprooted Palestinians. She disregarded facts, and preferred quoting endless talks to justify the marauding activities of the Israeli apartheid government and the U.S...

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17 August 2005

Cracks in the Fortress?

When George Freeman, assistant general counsel for the New York Times, makes his way to his office at the Times' Manhattan headquarters, his colleagues usually raise the same topic of conversation: Judy Miller. As one of the attorneys working on Miller's behalf, Freeman says his co-workers are never-ending in their curiosity about the case. "People ask me about it every day, on the elevator...

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3 August 2005

Writers Group Won't Give Miller 'Conscience in Media' Award

NEW YORK The board of The American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA) has voted unanimously to not endorse an earlier decision to give a Conscience in Media award to jailed New York Times reporter Judith Miller, E&P has learned. The group's First Amendment committee had narrowly voted to give Miller the prize for her dedication to protecting sources, but the full board has now voted to not...

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29 July 2005

How Media Split Under Pressure in the Leak Probe

In May, 500 members of the media elite rose to their feet to applaud a First Amendment award the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press gave to lawyer Floyd Abrams. Jointly presenting the award at a gala dinner in Manhattan were Matthew Cooper of Time magazine and Judith Miller of the New York Times. For a year, Mr. Abrams had worked to fend off a special prosecutor seeking testimony about...

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