In today's Washington Post, Peter Slevin and Carol D.
Leonig let on to being fans of Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald in
their profile. But it's fan fiction.
Three days later, Libby put fingers to keyboard and
told New York Times reporter Judith Miller that she was freed from
her promise to protect his identity. He praised her mightily and
urged her to "come back to work -- and life." Satisfied, she quit
jail after 85 days, testified to Fitzgerald's grand jury and
surrendered details she had vowed never to reveal.
Either Slevin-Leonig are knowingly deceiving their readers or
they have a serious reading problem, since earlier in the letter,
Libby indicates that he had released Miller a full
year earlier. In fact, his surprise that it was an issue at all was
why he wrote the letter. This is also why the Times has
begun to distance itself from her, and why her comments in the New York Post only smack of
narcissism:
"I'm not mad, I'm sad," Judy told me from her home on
Long Island. "Isn't it sad that, after going to jail for 85 days
for a principle, it's come to this?"
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