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More photos of the story
WASHINGTON, July 6 (Xinhuanet) -- A US federal judge
on Wednesday jailed New York Times reporter Judith Miller for refusing to
divulge her source leaking the identity of a CIA agent nearly two years ago.
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| New York Times journalist Judith
Miller arrives at Federal Court in Washington July 6. (Photo:
Xinhua/AFP) | Miller will be held until the grand
jury investigating the leak ends its work in October. "There is still a
realistic possibility that confinement might cause her to testify," US District
Judge Thomas Hogan said.
Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper, who like
Miller had refused to testify, told Hogan that he would now cooperate because
his source allowed him to reveal the identity just hours before the sentencing
trial.
The investigation has been going on for nearly two
years over the disclosure of the identity of CIA officer Valerie Plame. Her name
was first published in a July 14, 2003 column by Robert Novak, who cited two
unidentified senior Bush administration officials as his sources.
Subsequently, Cooper wrote a story over Plame, and
Miller gathered material but never wrote an article. It is unclear whether Novak
has testified or been subpoenaed.
Hogan found Cooper and Miller in contempt of court last week for refusing to divulge their sources. Time magazine handed over Cooper's notebooks in the investigation Friday. Enditem
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