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From
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}}}>Begin
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-
000086094oct29.story?coll=la%2Dnews%2Da%5Fsection
THE WORLD & NATION
In Lockup, Crime Writer Ponders Strange Plot Twist
Law: The scribe sits behind bars for not handing over notes on
society murder case.
By MIKE ANTON
TIMES STAFF WRITER
October 29 2001
HOUSTON --


Vanessa Leggett is a reporter who, until she was thrown
in jail, had never published a story, a writer of true-crime books
who has never finished one.
Yet, with each day she sits in an 8-by-10 cell at the Federal
Detention Center here for refusing to give a federal grand jury her
research into a notorious society murder, Leggett becomes more famous
as a journalism cause celebre, her case one for the record books--and
future legal textbooks.
"It's absolutely boring. I read. I write letters. Done a lot of thinking," said 
Leggett, 33, who has been in jail 100 days. "I am just a writer who has realized that 
there is something much larger at stake than herself. I
t's freedom of expression in America." Leggett's case has garnered widespread support 
from free press advocates. The Inter American Press Assn. has compared her to a Cuban 
journalist jailed by Fidel Castro. The Society of
 Professional Journalists is paying half her legal bill.
The grand jury ordered Leggett to turn over copies of all tape recordings and 
transcripts connected with the murder--a broad request that's rarely applied to 
journalists, experts say.
The legal issue in Leggett's case is clear: Does the 1st Amendment allow journalists 
to withhold information from a federal grand jury? Leggett is fighting an uphill 
battle, because courts have rarely, if ever, extended s
uch a privilege.
What muddies the story of Leggett's imprisonment is whether she is a journalist at 
all--and whether federal prosecutors, who maintain the aspiring author is not a 
journalist, would have taken on a reporter working for a n
ews organization with as much zeal. The last time the U.S. Justice Department had a 
reporter jailed was in 1991.
"I'm flabbergasted," said Lucy Dalglish, executive director for the Reporters 
Committee for Freedom of the Press, which has assisted Leggett. "I don't think 
[prosecutors] would do it this way if they were dealing with the
 New York Times, or even the Houston Chronicle."
Leggett's jail stint is just the latest twist in the 1997 murder of Doris Angleton, 
who was shot a dozen times in her River Oaks mansion. Her husband, Robert, an alleged 
bookie to the rich turned police informant, was acc
used of hiring his brother, Roger, to murder Doris because she sought a divorce. It 
was, Texas columnist Molly Ivins has written, "one of those high-profile, rich white 
trash cases for which Texas is famous."
Leggett was introduced to Roger Angleton by his attorney. She interviewed the murder 
suspect numerous times and tape recorded more than 40 hours of those conversations.
"This case was a gold mine for me," Leggett said. "I'm intrigued by murders that are 
committed by more than one person in a conspiracy style, and murders that involve 
family."
Before he came to trial, Roger Angleton killed himself in jail, leaving behind a note 
confessing to the murder and absolving his brother. State prosecutors subpoenaed 
copies of Leggett's tapes. She resisted, claiming a jo
urnalist's privilege, but after negotiating with authorities, she complied.
Her tapes were never used in the trial of Robert Angleton, who was found not guilty by 
a jury. "There was nothing in there that was earth-shattering," said assistant Dist. 
Atty. Lyn McClellan.
The FBI then began investigating Robert Angleton, reportedly for racketeering. Late 
last year, Leggett says, agents approached her about working as an informant. She 
refused and was called to testify before the federal gr
and jury.
"They came to me knowing that I was working on a book," Leggett said. "They wanted to 
use that to their advantage because I could go places where they couldn't. I had been 
places that they hadn't been and couldn't go beca
use Roger was dead."
In June, the grand jury subpoenaed her again. Leggett was ordered to hand over all her 
material, including interviews with 34 people, many of whom are law enforcement 
officials investigating Angleton, her lawyer says. Whe
n she didn't comply, a federal district judge had her jailed for contempt. That 
ruling, upheld by the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, could keep her in jail until 
Jan. 7, when the grand jury's term expires.
Leggett took an unconventional path to becoming an icon to free-press advocates. The 
Texas native worked as a paralegal, a licensed private investigator and a part-time 
instructor of English and criminal justice before tu
rning her attention to writing books. She put aside a project on another high-profile 
Texas murder case to take on the killing of Doris Angleton.
"She is an impressive individual . . . articulate and intelligent," said Rex White, 
director of the Criminal Justice Training Center at the University of 
Houston-Downtown, where Leggett taught Texas police recruits and, o
n two occasions, lectured veteran homicide investigators.
Homicide--especially murders committed within families--has long fascinated Leggett. 
She said she explored the dark side of human behavior by taking graduate courses in 
psychology and doctoral studies in "human evil" at a
 Houston seminary. She is self-taught on the subject, enough so that she was invited 
by the FBI in 1999 to present a research paper on children who murder their parents.
Her report became part of a book, "The Varieties of Homicide and its Research," which 
was published by the FBI and the Justice Department, the very agency that now contends 
Leggett isn't a journalist because she hasn't be
en published.
"They know how good she is at research, and they know how much she has," said Mike 
DeGeurin, a prominent Houston attorney who has employed Leggett as an investigator and 
represents her in this case. "It's a fishing expedi
tion by the government to use her as an investigative arm."
Leggett was invited to speak earlier this month at the Society of Professional 
Journalists' national convention in Washington state. DeGeurin spoke for her and 
received a standing ovation.
Not every journalist is enamored with Leggett's cause. The Houston Press, an 
alternative weekly, derided her as a "writer-without-portfolio."
Dalglish says she has heard some "not so flattering things" from other Houston 
journalists who saw Leggett as nothing more than a "court groupie."
"That has been quite disappointing to me. They do not seem to be grasping the point," 
she said. "It doesn't matter whether Vanessa is a journalist or a blacksmith. The fact 
is every journalist in Texas will have to live w
ith the [court's] decision in her case."
In September, Leggett got her first byline: an essay in Newsweek magazine about her 
case. Those who have seen Leggett's manuscript on the Angleton murder are impressed. 
Last summer, portions of it won an award at the Sant
a Barbara Writers' Conference.
"She's a talented writer who has a sharp eye for detail and a good narrative sense," 
said Leonard Tourney, a novelist and lecturer at UC Santa Barbara who judged the 
contest. "It's professional-quality work."
Leggett doesn't have a publisher for her unfinished tale, but being
behind bars has improved her prospects. The monotony of the past
three-plus months has been broken by a stream of queries from agents,
publishers and even Hollywood.
All of which, Leggett insists, makes her feel uncomfortable.
"I've had my writer friends say, 'Vanessa, you couldn't pay for this
kind of publicity. It's great!' " Leggett said. "Well, no, it's not.
This is not the type of publicity that I want. I want my book to be
appreciated on its merits and not because I became a media spectacle.
You can get on Jerry Springer and do that. That's not what I'm all
about."


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