"During a hearing Friday afternoon, Walton said Special Counsel
Patrick Fitzgerald can keep secret the other government official's
identity because that person has not been charged and has a right to
privacy."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-5646110,00.html

Identity of Official to Be Kept From Libby


Saturday February 25, 2006 1:46 AM

By TONI LOCY

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Former White House aide I. Lewis ``Scooter'' Libby,
charged with perjury in the CIA leak case, cannot be told the identity
of another government official who is said to have divulged a CIA
operative's identity to reporters, a federal judge ruled Friday.

At the same time, U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton said Libby
could have copies of notes he took during an 11-month period in 2003
and 2004 while serving as chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney.

The judge also set the stage for a showdown in late April over the
defense's plans to subpoena reporters and news organizations for notes
and other documents in the leak of Valerie Plame's identity.

During a hearing Friday afternoon, Walton said Special Counsel Patrick
Fitzgerald can keep secret the other government official's identity
because that person has not been charged and has a right to privacy.

The judge put off deciding whether Libby can have access to highly
classified presidential daily briefs, summaries of intelligence on
threats against the United States that Libby and Cheney received six
days a week from a CIA official.

Walton said he is concerned that Libby's request could ``sabotage''
the case because President Bush probably will invoke executive
privilege and refuse to turn over the classified reports.

``The vice president - his boss - said these are the family jewels,''
the judge said, referring to Cheney's past description of the daily
briefings. ``If the executive branch says, 'This is too important to
the welfare of the nation and we're not going to comply,' the criminal
prosecution goes away.''

Libby, 55, was indicted last year on charges that he lied about how he
learned Plame's identity and when he subsequently told reporters.
Libby's trial is set for January 2007.

The CIA operative's identity was published in July 2003 by syndicated
columnist Robert Novak after Plame's husband, former U.S. Ambassador
Joseph Wilson, accused the Bush administration of twisting
intelligence about Iraq's efforts to buy uranium in Niger. The year
before, the CIA had sent Wilson to Niger to determine the accuracy of
the uranium reports.

Libby's lawyers and Fitzgerald disagreed over whether the unidentified
government official - who does not work at the White House - was
referring to Plame or her husband when he said, ``Everyone knows,''
during a taped interview with investigators.

The defense said the official meant that most reporters knew that
Plame worked at the CIA, as Libby testified before a federal grand
jury. But Fitzgerald said the reference was to Wilson, who was not
identified in initial media reports about the trip to Niger.

Ted Wells, another Libby lawyer, said the judge shouldn't worry about
provoking the president, the CIA or the media and needs to take time
to make sure Libby gets the evidence he needs to defend himself.

``If it's done in a quick and dirty way, he's going to be convicted,''
Wells said.

Walton denied a defense request to stop Fitzgerald from filing
information that only the judge can review, such as strategy memos and
classified information that he wants withheld from Libby's legal team.
Walton said he needs to see what Fitzgerald is withholding from the
defense to ensure the prosecutor is making the correct call.

The defense was told that the White House had recently located and
turned over about 250 pages of e-mails from the vice president's
office. Fitzgerald, in a letter last month to the defense, had
cautioned Libby's lawyers that some e-mails might be missing because
the White House's archiving system had failed.

The 2-hour hearing not only kicked off the battle over how much
classified information a jury will hear when Libby's case goes to
trial, but also showed how cumbersome it is to deal with such secret
evidence.

When Wells tried to hand Walton a blue pouch - complete with a key -
containing classified documents, a court security officer called the
judge's clerk over and whispered instructions, presumably on its handling.

``I would not be a good safe-breaker,'' Walton joked as he fumbled
with the pouch's lock before opening it. 





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