In other Plame news, it appears things might get tougher for Judith Miller:
Lawyers in the CIA leaks investigation are concerned that special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald may seek criminal contempt charges against New York Times reporter Judith Miller, a rare move that could significantly lengthen her time in jail.
Miller, now in her 10th day in the Alexandria jail, already faces as much as four months of incarceration for civil contempt after refusing to answer questions before a grand jury about confidential conversations she had in reporting a story in the summer of 2003. Fitzgerald and Chief U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan have both raised the possibility in open court that Miller could be charged with criminal contempt if she continues to defy Hogan’s order to cooperate in the investigation of who may have unlawfully leaked the name of undercover CIA operative Valerie Plame to the media.
The unusual threat in the case underscores the sensitivity of an investigation that has reached the highest levels of the White House and the prosecutor’s determination to extract information from reluctant journalists even though he has yet to charge anyone with a crime. What secrets Miller can unlock for Fitzgerald — and the reasons he has so doggedly pursued her — have been a subject of considerable mystery.
My position is slowly morphing from one in which I felt it was wrong regardless the situation that Miller be jailed to one in which I believe Miller should be forced to tell whatshe knows.