The ongoing criminal investigation of the Bush White House (Plame Game) took an important turn this morning when the Supreme Court rejected appeals from Matt Cooper and Judith Miller.
The Supreme Court rejected appeals Monday from two journalists who have refused to testify before a grand jury about the leak of an undercover CIA officer’s identity.
The cases asked the court to revisit an issue that it last dealt with more than 30 years ago — whether reporters can be jailed or fined for refusing to identify their sources.
The justices’ intervention had been sought by 34 states and many news groups, all arguing that confidentiality is important in news gathering.
“Important information will be lost to the public if journalists cannot reliably promise anonymity to sources,” news organizations including The Association Press told justices in court papers.
Time magazine’s Matthew Cooper and The New York Times’ Judith Miller, who filed the appeals, face up to 18 months in jail for refusing to reveal sources as part of an investigation into who divulged the name of CIA officer Valerie Plame…. A federal judge held the reporters in contempt last fall, and an appeals court rejected their argument that the First Amendment shielded them from revealing their sources in the federal criminal proceeding.
The question now becomes: what will Cooper and Miller do? They can talk to U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald and disclose what they know about the criminal leak of an undercover CIA agent, or they can go to jail.
Stay tuned.