Valerie Plame

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  • Questions for Rove? Nope, none here

    You'd think the White House press corps might want to ask the president's press secretary about Karl Rove's role in the Valerie Plame case. Apparently, you'd be wrong.
  • More questions about Rove and Plame

    The Washington Post says special prosector Patrick Fitzgerald "still appears to want more answers about Rove's role" in the case.
  • All eyes on Turd Blossom

    Beltway insiders are consumed by one question: Did Karl Rove do it?
  • Miller goes to jail

    As the New York Times reporter was led away, many in the courtroom feared that the real victim was a free press.
  • Novak: Sources say Rehnquist is next

    As Judith Miller begins her time in jail, the man who outed Valerie Plame is predicting that the chief justice will retire "before the week is over."
  • Cooper to testify; Miller to jail

    The Time reporter says his source has given him the OK to talk to the federal prosecutor investigating the Valerie Plame case.
  • Snark attack

    The special prosecutor in the Valerie Plame case gets down and dirty with the New York Times' Judith Miller.
  • Rove: No questions, please

    The president's chief political advisor has lunch with the Washington Post but refuses to discuss the Valerie Plame case.
  • Jail for journalists? What about Rove?

    Matthew Cooper and Judith Miller may learn their fate Wednesday. In the meantime, Rep. John Conyers wants some answers from Bush's political advisor.
  • The question of Karl Rove

    Did Bush's political advisor out Valerie Plame? Maybe, but the case hasn't been made quite yet.
  • Was it Karl Rove?

    MSNBC political analyst says Rove leaked Valerie Plame's identity to Time reporter Matthew Cooper.
  • The Times cuts Time some slack

    After lashing into the magazine for agreeing to hand over its reporters notes in the Valerie Plame case, the Times offers up a more sympathetic view today.
  • Time blinks

    The magazine will turn over Matthew Cooper's notes to a federal prosecutor. The New York Times does not approve.
  • A bitter defeat for the press

    The Supreme Court's refusal to hear the Cooper-Miller case will do more than hurt two reporters -- it will erode the press's ability to cover sensitive stories.
  • No Watergate nostalgia here

    The Supreme Court declines to hear appeals from the reporters facing jail time in the Valerie Plame case.
  • Coming to a close on the Plame case?

    The special counsel says his investigation is almost complete. Will a government official face charges for giving false statements to prosecutors?
  • Killing the messenger

    Porter Goss' purge at the CIA will ensure the agency is full of Bush yes men -- but it will seriously damage U.S. intelligence.
  • The operative

    White House water-carrier Robert Novak, infamous for exposing Valerie Plame, has been flacking for the Swift Boat Veterans book -- not bothering to disclose his close personal ties with the publisher.
  • Right Hook

    Robert Novak insists Bush will cut and run from Iraq. Fox News reporter lies about Kerry speech. Limbaugh declares hurricanes crueler than U.S. casualties -- and endorses himself for president.
  • Risky business

    The legal maneuvering to determine which Bush administration officials leaked the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame to Bob Novak, Matthew Cooper and other reporters has just begun.
  • The strange cases of the Berger memoranda and the Wilson mission

    Smashmouth Republican tactics try to change the subject on the eve of the unveiling of the 9/11 commission's report.
  • Joseph Wilson vs. the right-wing conspiracy

    Gleeful conservatives insist the Senate Intelligence Committee report impeached the former ambassador's claims about Iraq and uranium. But Wilson is firing back.
  • The Senate's bad intelligence

    Former Ambassador Joseph Wilson demands that Republican members of the Senate Intelligence Committee set the record straight.
  • Image fade

    As the administration scrambles to control the political damage from Iraq, a new poll shows that Americans view Kerry as more trustworthy than Bush.
  • Tenet's choice

    Was the CIA director pushed out by a White House looking for a scapegoat on Iraq and 9/11? Or did he flee before Bush could make him the fall guy?
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