00001 01 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 02 FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 03 United States of America Docket No. CR 05-0394 RBW 04 Washington, D.C. 05 vs. Friday, February 24, 2006 06 2:30 p.m. 07 Lewis Libby 08 Defendant 09 Transcript of Status Conference 10 Before the Honorable Reggie B. Walton 11 United States District Judge 12 APPEARANCES: 13 For the Plaintiff: Mr. Patrick Fitzgerald, Esq. 14 Mr. Peter Zeidenberg, Esq. 15 For the Defendant: Theodore Wells, Esq. 16 Jonathan Jeffress, Esq. 17 John Cline, Esq. 18 Joseph A. Tate, Esq. 19 Reporter: WILLIAM D. MC ALLISTER, CVR-CM 20 Official Court Reporter 21 Room 4806-B 22 333 Constitution Avenue, N.W. 23 Washington, D.C. 20001-8306 24 (202) 371-6446 25 Reported by Voice Writing and transcribed using SpeechCAT 26 Pages 1 through 91 00002 01 PROCEEDINGS 02 (Defendant present.) 03 THE CLERK: This is the case in the matter of 04 Criminal Action Number 05-0394. United States of America 05 versus Lewis Libby. 06 Counsel, can you please identify yourself for the 07 record. 08 MR. FITZGERALD: Pat Fitzergerald and colleagues for 09 the United States. Thank you. 10 MR. WELLS: Ted Wells and colleagues on behalf of 11 Lewis Libby. 12 THE COURT: Good afternoon. There are some 13 housekeeping matters we need to deal with before we actually 14 proceed with the motions. There have been a number of matters 15 that have been filed under seal. Whenever matters are filed 16 under seal, I would ask counsel to specifically articulate why 17 it is appropriate to do so since I believe in an open 18 proceeding unless there is good course for the matter to be 19 under seal. I wouldn't do that. But we now have your redacted 20 affidavit from Mr. Fitzgerald. 21 Should that remain under seal? 22 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes, Your Honor. That disclosures, 23 in my view, grand jury material that a limited amount of which 24 has been shared with the defense pursuant to protective order 25 but it is material that would be governed by the protective 00003 01 order. 02 THE COURT: Any objection to that? 03 MR. WELLS: Yes, Your Honor. We have a different 04 perspective. There was a protective order entered into in this 05 case. That is fairly common type protective order. 06 What it states is that, to the extent the defense is 07 given grand jury materials, it will not use those materials 08 except in connection with preparing the defense. That is 09 fairly the standard. 10 It is also standard in my experience, Your Honor, 11 that when grand jury materials are referred to as part of the 12 normal court proceedings during the pretrial phase of an 13 indicted case or during the trial phase of an indicted case 14 that those materials become public. If that was not the case, 15 every time we referred in an open court proceeding to a piece 16 of discovered that Mr. Fitzgerald had given us that was, in 17 essence, covered by 6(e), we would have to clear the courtroom 18 and have a private closed-court session. 19 That is not normal I would submit. Just as the fact 20 that when I go out, let's say, talk to a reporter who is a 21 potential witness about grand jury materials I have been given 22 and show that to the reporter, just as that is appropriate, 23 once the grand jury materials are used as part of the normal 24 give and take in the public courtroom, in a discovery motion, 25 and the most classic example would be once the trial begins, 00004 01 we're not going to clear the courtroom because something is 02 grand jury material. Once it is used, it becomes part of the 03 public record. 04 It is our position than the redacted affidavit should 05 not a sealed because it is now, in essence, in play. It is out 06 in the public arena and it should not be sealed. Similarly, 07 Your Honor, I had to file a sealed affidavit in this case 08 because Mr. Fitzgerald had marked his February 2 discovery 09 letter as confidential. 10 If we continue to have the practice that we can't 11 talk in open court about discovery materials that we have 12 gotten, then we are going to continually be going to closed 13 session which I submit is not normal and I don't think 6(e) is 14 interpreted in general in that fashion. 15 So, for example, when we argue the reporters issued 16 today, in theory we could not refer in open court to my sealed 17 indictment. We would have to clear the courtroom and when you 18 talk about that aspect, it would have to be under seal. I 19 don't think again that that is the normal process. 20 THE COURT: Mr. Fitzgerald, what about this document, 21 now that it is in redacted form, necessitates it remaining 22 under seal? If you need to address that to me at the bench, we 23 can do that. 24 MR. FITZGERALD: No. I can refer the court and 25 counsel, for example, to page 9 and paragraph 22. There is a 00005 01 sentence indicating some documents we disclosed to the defense. 02 That frankly, if I knew that I would be revealing it to the 03 public, concerns about people not charged in a crime, I 04 wouldn't have shared it with the defense in the first place. 05 What we're trying to do and I appreciate -- 06 THE COURT: I would agree that in reference to that 07 particular paragraph where someone who may be totally innocent 08 is referenced that it would be unfair to that person to have 09 their name and the information about them disseminated in 10 public. I would agree with that. 11 MR. FITZGERALD: My concern being I've learned more 12 about open and closed courtrooms than I cared to know in the 13 last year and half and we're trying to do it the right way. At 14 the same time while we will disagree with the defense and, Your 15 Honor, will decide who is right and who is wrong on the 16 discovery obligation, we have in our mind given more than we 17 believe we're required to do so at times in an effort to move 18 things along. 19 But if we do that and every time we do that, it may 20 be attached to our letters, to a public filing, and it gets out 21 into the public domain, we will start battening down the 22 hatches and saying if we're not sure we're not going to turn it 23 over which I think is not my desire and not my interest and I 24 don't think it will aid the defense or the court. So I think 25 that we have to be careful that every time we discuss something 00006 01 or share it with counsel, if we are liberal in doing that, that 02 it doesn't then impinge upon the grand jury secrecy interest. 03 THE COURT: I mean obviously I don't disagree with, 04 you know, the essence of what you said but I'm sure you would 05 also agreed that the need for an open proceeding is also very 06 important, and the public and the press have a right to know 07 what's going within its court system, and to the extent that 08 information can be made public, I think it should be. 09 I would agree with you in reference to that paragraph 10 that that would be problematic and unfair to potentially 11 tarnish someone in the public by disseminating this 12 information. 13 But I think we probably need to rethink the entire 14 document. Maybe that portion ends up remaining under seal. 15 But clearly are there other portions of a similar nature that 16 have to be under seal? 17 MR. FITZGERALD: May I make a suggestion which I 18 think, Your Honor, is headed there any way but perhaps we could 19 submit next week a proposed redacted version that would become 20 public, that we tried to draw the line where the public could 21 see what's left of the redacted affidavit that doesn't 22 compromise grand jury interests the way we did in the appellate 23 opinion. We would serve a copy obviously with counsel for the 24 defense and the court. They could weigh in on whether they 25 thought there was anything else that needed to be removed or 00007 01 put back in. And we'll try to draw the lines the way we did 02 otherwise. 03 THE COURT: I think that would be acceptable. I 04 assume, Mr. Wells, as government counsel says, we don't want to 05 shut down the flow of information which conceivably happens if 06 we start to make everything public although I do agree that we 07 need to scrutinize very carefully exactly what remains under 08 seal. 09 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, under no event do I want to 10 shut down the flow of information, but at the same time, let's 11 take that paragraph 22. I am permitted now under the 12 protective order to take that information and use it to prepare 13 the defense. 14 That means since this case involves reporters, for 15 example, in theory I could go and have a conversation, attempt 16 to have a conversation with somebody say from NBC -- were you 17 aware of this information -- to try to forward my case. 18 I mean it seems to me that we are acting like there's 19 going to be a magical moment when the trial begins, that 20 suddenly okay none of this matters. I believe the magical 21 moment occurs when the indictment is returned. Once a 22 prosecutor returns an indict, it is implicit, inherent in the 23 system that the materials in the grand jury are going to come 24 our during the normal phases of the case and to the public. 25 THE COURT: I would agree with you if this was a 00008 01 closed investigation. My concern is that there is an open 02 investigation. We don't know exactly what's going to happen to 03 reference to that investigation. 04 It seems to me fundamentally unfair to start to 05 reveal the information about people who may be subject to a 06 case and their name is tarnished in the public for no good 07 reason. 08 So I would agree with you, if this were a closed 09 investigation and we knew that the case wasn't going anywhere 10 other than Mr. Libby, I would agree. But I guess I have a 11 problem because of the nature and the status of the 12 investigation at this point in buying full-heartedly on what 13 you suggest. 14 What I'm going to do at this point, because I want 15 there to be an open proceeding, is to require that an 16 additional redacted version for public dissemination be 17 proposed. To the extent that the government believes that the 18 information in the current redacted affidavit still needs to be 19 maintained under seal, counsel will need to articulate, as you 20 just did, why you believe that this true. Then I'll make the 21 call. 22 MR. WELLS: Fair enough. 23 THE COURT: Okay. I think we can start to proceed, 24 oh, yes, we have the other matter regarding some changed dates 25 that I understand counsel is requesting. The date we have now 00009 01 for an additional motion to compel is due on March 3rd. I 02 understand counsel wants to change that to March 20 and that 03 the reply would then be due on March 27. I hate to change 04 dates but if there's good reason for it. 05 MR. FITZGERALD: And the reason is on the 06 government's behalf. We learned in comparing notes with 07 defense counsel, when they asked about a particular document, 08 that one set of 260 pages but an important set of 260 pages had 09 not been produced that we thought had been produced. 10 Therefore, we are producing them today. 11 They are notes of Mr. Libby. So they are not just 12 260 pages out of a large number. They are very important. So 13 that in setting the dates for the Section 5 notice we had lead 14 the court to believe because we understand that the defense had 15 all those relevant notes and they don't and so we want the 16 court to be aware that it is something we inadvertently did not 17 produce initially and that's the cause for the delay. 18 MR. JEFFRESS: Actually Your Honor's question was not 19 about that. Your Honor's question was about the discovery 20 motion. 21 THE COURT: Right. 22 MR. JEFFRESS: And the reason that we are not in a 23 position to file that discovery motion at the moment is we did 24 make our further specific request to the government by letter 25 on the 15th. They, and there has been a lot to do and I'm not 00010 01 criticizing the government for this but they have not responded 02 to that letter as yet. I am told by Mr. Fitzgerald today that 03 they hope to have that early next week and we would ask for an 04 additional two weeks to file that. 05 That is certainly not going to affect the trial date. 06 We don't think that will affect things generally but it is 07 simply a matter that there's been a lot to do. 08 THE COURT: Very well. I will change that date and 09 the additional motion to compel can be filed on March 3rd, and 10 the response then would be due on March 20 with a reply due on 11 March 27. 12 MR. JEFFRESS: I'm sorry, Your Honor. 13 THE COURT: I'm sorry. I'm looking at the wrong 14 dates. The motion will be filed on March 17. The response 15 would be due on April 5th and the reply due on April 12th. 16 MR. JEFFRESS: That is fine. 17 THE COURT: We also have -- yes. 18 MR. JEFFRESS: I'm sorry. The other date, is that 19 what, Your Honor, was turning to? 20 THE COURT: Yes. 21 MR. JEFFRESS: The other date is the date on which at 22 the last hearing, Your Honor, had set March 8 as the date for 23 filing an additional CIPA notice. As Mr. Fitzgerald alluded 24 to, what happened is that apparently there were 250 pages of 25 Mr. Libby's notes which were stored in a different place from 00011 01 the other document, and when the special counsel produced to us 02 the documents from the OBP and told us that we had them all, 03 they had forgotten about documents. 04 These were located about two weeks ago. They have not 05 been produced us yet. I think we are expecting to get them 06 this afternoon. What's going to happen is because these are 07 Mr. Libby's notes, they are going to have to be read. They are 08 going to be translated. They are going to be analyzed. And we 09 anticipate some of them obviously would be included in a 10 further CIPA notice. 11 Experience teaches that when it comes to Mr. Libby's 12 notes that transliteration and review process takes a long 13 time. For that reason, we would ask that our further CIPA 14 notice be postponed three weeks, that is, until March 29 so 15 that we can incorporate this newly-produced material on that. 16 I may say we are also told that there are an 17 additional approximately 250 pages of documents that are emails 18 from the office of the vice president. Your Honor, may recall 19 that in earlier filings it was represented or alluded to that 20 certain e-mails had not been preserved in the White House. 21 That turns out not to be true. There were some e-mails that 22 weren't archived in the normal process but the office of the 23 vice president or the office of administration I guess it is 24 has been able to recover those e-mails. Gave those to special 25 counsel I think only on February 6 and those again are going to 00012 01 be produced to us. 02 We don't know what's in there. We've been led to 03 believe it's probably not anything startling in those e-mails 04 but again we need to review those and that also may be the 05 subject of a motion. 06 THE COURT: Based upon what you have indicated, I 07 think that's also good cause to change that date so that the 08 CIPA Section 5 notice would have to be filed by March 29. 09 MR. JEFFRESS: Very well, Your Honor. 10 THE COURT: I think that then is an appropriate 11 topic, to start with, although that wasn't the first matter on 12 my list, that is, Mr. Libby's notes. 13 Do you now have all of the notes for the relevant 14 time period that you have requested or are there still other 15 notes that you still haven't received? I think you've made a 16 request for notes from May 6, 2003, through March 24, 2004. 17 MR. WELLS: That is correct, Your Honor. We do not 18 have all those notes. The government objects to our request. 19 What the government produced to us is the following. Mr. 20 Libby's notes from May 6 through May 10, from June 1 through 21 July 25, July 28 and 29, September 27 through October 13. The 22 250 pages that we are going to get sometime today in the skiff 23 were part of that original, covering those dates. The 24 government just made a mistake and so we didn't get them 25 before. 00013 01 So nothing has changed. That 250 you heard about 02 today is just what they have promised to give us before we ever 03 had any discovery on this issue. 04 THE COURT: May 6th, 2003, as I understand, is the 05 date on which Ambassador Wilson's findings were first reported 06 in the press, is that right? 07 MR. WELLS: Yes. 08 THE COURT: Why is it felt that as of that date you 09 need his notes? 10 MR. WELLS: Because it is during that period, we do 11 have his notes as of that date for what it's worth. 12 THE COURT: Oh, you have them? 13 MR. WELLS: Yes. What the government did was they 14 made a cut of what the government thought might be relevant 15 during the grand jury investigation having no interaction with 16 us. This was a year ago. 17 THE COURT: Are there notes that you don't have that 18 would have covered the period between when Mr. Libby is first 19 to have spoken I guess it was to Mr. Russert until such time as 20 he last appeared before the grand jury? 21 MR. WELLS: Correct. Because what the government 22 did, if you see these are disjointed dates and we are asking 23 for them to fill in the notes. That is what is on the table 24 today. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Fitzgerald, it seems to me that, from 00014 01 what's been submitted to me at least in part, the defense 02 believes that they need those notes in order to help Mr. Libby 03 refresh his collection of what was occurring during that period 04 of time. I know you may take a different position as to what 05 part of that time is relevant. 06 But it seems to me arguably a position could be taken 07 that his activity during that entire period of time would be 08 relevant in assessing what his memory bank would have been 09 relating back to the time when he alleged had these discussions 10 with the reporters and also when he appear before the grand 11 jury and when he spoke to the FBI and even during that integral 12 period there would be, intervening period I mean, there would 13 be a question as to whether his activity at the time would have 14 conceivably had an affect on his ability to remember things 15 that had taken place earlier. 16 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, the period including the 17 notes we're turning over today, all the notes we have from Mr. 18 Libby are being given to him. We are not sitting on any notes 19 in counsel's office. They cover the period June 1 to July 25. 20 The conversations in issue that Mr. Christoff published on May 21 6. We have the notes from May 6 through the 10th. 22 THE COURT: So the other notes that you haven't 23 turned over, you are saying you don't have those in your 24 office. 25 MR. FITZGERALD: Right. Never had, never looked at 00015 01 them, never sought them. 02 THE COURT: I assume you can acquire them since you 03 were able to acquire the ones that you turned over. 04 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes, Your Honor. They obviously 05 involve classified information issues and involve issues of 06 executive privilege and confidentiality. But June 1 to July 07 25 -- 08 THE COURT: But no different than the ones that you 09 already have? 10 MR. FITZGERALD: But we would argue are much less 11 relevant in the sense that the period June and July when the 12 relevant conversations between Mr. Libby are June 23, July 8 13 and July 11. His conversation with Mr. Fleischer is the 14 morning of July 7. The conversation with Mr. Russert is July 15 10. The conversation with Mr. Cooper is July 12 I believe. 16 There's a compact week from July 6 to July 14 when most of it 17 takes place. 18 The focus of the charges is his conversation with Mr. 19 Russert and Mr. Cooper and Ms. Miller. We have blanketed June 20 1 until July 25 and then July 28 and 29. His first 21 conversations which are consistent with his later grand jury 22 testimony. His first statements to the FBI are I believe 23 October 10 or 13. We have covered September 27 when the 24 investigation is announced until October 13. 25 All that other time periods which is a vast amount of 00016 01 material, we say is not relevant since it concerns other 02 matters like the George case, a preoccupation issue, and to 03 know what he's working on to get it to the level of detail 04 that's required, I don't know that that is material because you 05 can know you are working on a nuclear bomb without getting into 06 the details of what you are doing on a particular day and 07 implicating both issues of privilege, classified information 08 and a lot of work to go through hundreds of pages and 09 transliterate and triggered those issues. 10 So our position is -- 11 THE COURT: Your position is that events that he 12 would have been engaged in after his last conversation with the 13 reporter until such time as he spoke to the FBI, that that 14 would not conceivably have an effect on his memory bank as it 15 relates to what he allegedly said to the reporters? 16 MR. FITZGERALD: If the word is "conceivably", 17 anything could conceivably have it. I am arguing that under 18 the law, where the materiality under even the case Marshal they 19 cite talks about a strong indication and making an important 20 difference. We were looking at classified information in the 21 case. Rezaq and Yunis talk about material that's helpful to 22 the defense. I think a rule of reason has to apply where if 23 you are blanketing the period when the relevant conversations 24 happened and the interview with the FBI, I don't think we 25 should go to an 11-months span. 00017 01 THE COURT: But as I understand the George opinion, 02 there were requests made in that case that encompassed times 03 beyond the time period that would have been covered related to 04 the alleged criminal activity. 05 I understand that that intervening time you are 06 saying that there was nothing taking place of an alleged 07 criminal nature but still it seems to me a question of what 08 would have occurred during that period of time could have an 09 affect on his ability to remember what he had done or what was 10 said to him on an early date. 11 MR. FITZGERALD: If I might suggest an alternative 12 which is we covered the period during which he had the 13 conversation with the reporters with weeks on either side and 14 we have covered the period of the interview. There are two 15 grand jury dates. We could cover a week around, my suggestion 16 would be to cover a 10-day period blanketing both grand jury 17 appearances but between then you know November, Thanksgiving 18 Day 2003, six weeks after the interview and three months before 19 the grand jury appearance it seems to me we are getting pretty 20 far a field when we are triggering issues of classified 21 information and privilege that may we suggest those two grand 22 jury dates I believe and we could blanket ten days around each 23 date. We would have the days around the interview and we would 24 have the days around the interaction with reporters. 25 THE COURT: Mr. Well. 00018 01 MR. WELLS: I strongly object, Your Honor. I have 02 made, on behalf of Mr. Libby, a very targeted and focused 03 request. I have asked for his personal notes from May 6 which 04 is a date the government even agrees with as the start date, 05 through his last grand jury appearance which is March 24. 06 What the government is saying, well, let's just give 07 you a week here and a week there and cut it off and that ought 08 to be enough. Neither myself nor Mr. Fitzgerald are memory 09 experts. Unlike George, these are very focused requests. 10 There's no burden on the government's part. 11 THE COURT: Do we know, based upon what your client 12 has told you, how many documents we may be talking about? 13 MR. WELLS: I do not, Your Honor. But I don't 14 believe it's a burden for the government to acquire them. I 15 just haven't run the numbers based on what the government 16 already collected. What the government kind of did was like 17 basically an arbitrary cut. They went, said let's look a week 18 here and a week there. 19 All we have asked for is from the time both sides 20 agree is the right starting date until his last grand jury 21 appearance. It is about a nine-month period. 22 The notes I understand are readily available. All of 23 these notes from day one have been designated as classified. 24 We can only read the notes in the skiff. I would ask, Your 25 Honor, what I would suggest has been a very reasonable request. 00019 01 We didn't ask for all his notes while he worked as national 02 security adviser to the vice president. All we asked for is 03 for a very tight and understandable time period. 04 THE COURT: I am kind of convinced that, I mean I 05 know it is to some degree a burden but we are talking about a 06 man being charged with a criminal offense and I kind of feel 07 that even though the time period we are talking about there 08 allegedly was no activity of a criminal nature taking place 09 that nonetheless that what would occur would have occurred 10 during that period of time could have an affect on his ability 11 to recall what had taken place earlier especially based upon 12 what is being suggested that he was dealing with issues of such 13 a magnitude that he would have put all of his focus on that 14 that conceivably it would have an affect on memory and recall 15 as it relates back to an earlier date. And since they are his 16 own notes, I guess I'm having some difficulty with saying that 17 those would not be provided to him. 18 MR. FITZGERALD: I'll make just two comments and 19 then I'll let, Your Honor, rule. The first is, if it is 20 something that so distracted Mr. Libby that it would affect his 21 memory, it seems hard to believe that something would be that 22 important that it so preoccupied him that he can't remember it 23 happen now. 24 If you look at the burden here, I think we probably 25 had about a portion of close to three months of notes that 00020 01 we've given because we have most of June and July. We have 02 September. Maybe it is two and a half months. Going to 11 03 months, maybe four times that amount. It sounds like the notes 04 from the portion we had were 500 pages and these are the 05 hieroglyphics. 06 THE COURT: Let me just ask. If he decides to 07 testify, are you saying that he would not be permitted to 08 testify about what he was doing during that period? 09 MR. FITZGERALD: I'm saying he should be able to 10 testify about that but at a level of detail that doesn't 11 implicate massive classified information issues. 12 THE COURT: I might agree with that. But in order to 13 be able, even given a general sense of what he was doing during 14 that period of time, it seems to me access to his notes and the 15 opportunity to review them would assist him in that regard. 16 MR. FITZGERALD: The only thing I will point out, 17 Judge, is, yes, I mean he has filed a preliminary Section 5 18 notice indicating the things he wants to discuss. Recognizing 19 that we're probably talking about now probably another 2000 20 pages, if it is four times the amount of what's been given over 21 so far, and the weeks it takes to transliterate and then it 22 goes to the agencies for classification review, and I think 23 five agencies. And then there are issues of privilege, and 24 particularly on the executive privilege and confidentiality 25 since these notes were focused on things other than the Wilson 00021 01 controversy, and the perjury case is focused on that, it gets 02 into issues where there are serious privilege issues. We may 03 be talking about matters of state that are extraneous to this 04 matter. 05 THE COURT: And we may have to deal with that as it 06 relates to what he's going to be able to testify to if he 07 decides to testify, what he is permitted to testify about. But 08 I do think that since they are his notes and since the issue of 09 his memory is going to be at issue, it would seem to me that 10 his ability to refresh his memory as to what was taking place 11 not only when he allegedly spoke to reporters but also what 12 took place between that point and when he ultimately spoke to 13 the FBI and went before the grand jury is, in fact, material 14 under Rule 16 and I would require that that information be made 15 available to him. 16 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, my only suggestion since 17 we will already be moving to move Section 5 dates way back by 18 months to allow is, that we focus on whether there is any way 19 we can narrow the eleven months. 20 I do want to say that I am aware that there was a 21 second interview of Mr. Libby which the FBI agent pointed out 22 so that I think it was in late November or early December so I 23 said before Thanksgiving would not be relevant. I think there 24 were two interviews and two grand jury appearances. But every 25 month we add -- 00022 01 THE COURT: Why don't we make an assessment as to how 02 many documents we were talking about. I mean I do consider the 03 7th of January to be a drop-dead date and I don't want to have 04 that date changed. But to the extent there is going to a need 05 for more time because of my order in this regard, you will just 06 have to work it out somehow. Okay. 07 Let's go back to the first request that was made by 08 the defense in the first motion to compel. And we are talking 09 about the reporters notes. Is there something else? 10 MR. WELLS: I was going to make a suggestion how we 11 thought we might proceed. Mr. Jeffress is going to address the 12 reporters issue. I am going to address the issue relating to 13 the morning intelligence reports. What I think might make it 14 more focused for, Your Honor, is if Mr. Jeffress addressed the 15 reporters issue. Let Mr. Fitzgerald respond to that and then I 16 will return to the podium. 17 THE COURT: That is fine. I understand that a lot of 18 what was requested or at least some of what was requested when 19 the motion to compel was filed has now been satisfied. So 20 what's outstanding at this point? 21 MR. JEFFRESS: That is right, Your Honor. As we 22 understand it, there are two categories, two types of 23 information, and this is not voluminous information but it is 24 important information. The two categories are this. 25 First, there is the identify of a particular 00023 01 government official, obviously not in the White House, who told 02 two reporters as early as mid-June of 2003 about Mrs. Wilson. 03 I don't feel, because a lot of these revelations are made in 04 letters that are marked confidential and are covered in an 05 affidavit filed under seal, I don't feel comfortable going 06 beyond I guess that description publicly. 07 THE COURT: I understand what you're telling me. 08 MR. JEFFRESS: But Your Honor understands what I'm 09 talking about. That's one thing that has, explicitly I guess 10 the government has advised us that it is not disclosing. 11 THE COURT: Let's deal with that. Why do you believe 12 that's material to the preparation of your defense? 13 MR. JEFFRESS: Your Honor, the indictment in this 14 case alleges that Mr. Libby lied about a conversation with Mr. 15 Tim Russert in which Mr. Libby recalled that Tim Russert told 16 him, mentioned the wife to him and said all the reporters know 17 it. 18 Mr. Libby also testified that he was hearing that 19 reporters were mentioning to the White House as opposed to vice 20 versa that Ms. Wilson worked at the CIA. Mr. Libby in the 21 grand jury identified two particular people from the press who 22 he recalled had given that information either to him from 23 someone else in the White House who had passed it on to him. 24 The government says that he is wrong about Mr. 25 Russert, who was one of those two people, and indeed that he 00024 01 lied about the conversation. But the indictment also alleges 02 that there is someone who did tell Mr. Libby about this who Mr. 03 Libby didn't remember when did testify at the grand jury, and 04 that is Mr. Cooper and that's alleged in the indictment. 05 The defense, in order to prepare the defense, to show 06 that Mr. Libby was correct even if he may not have been correct 07 about exactly who or exactly when but that Mr. Libby was 08 correct that he was hearing from reporters either directly or 09 through other people at the White House that they knew that Ms. 10 Wilson worked at the CIA, the defense needs to investigate, to 11 ascertain, to prove what reporters knew that or had heard that 12 Ms. Wilson worked at the CIA. 13 THE COURT: Even if there's no indication that these 14 other purported reporters had any contact whatsoever with Mr. 15 Libby? 16 MR. JEFFRESS: Absolutely. Number one, Mr. Libby, 17 even if one of the sources he says -- I know the government is 18 telling, Your Honor, that unless somebody personally told it to 19 Mr. Libby, it wouldn't be anything Mr. Libby could rely on. 20 But that is just not so. 21 Mr. Libby himself told the grand jury about another 22 reporter who had told somebody in the White House who had told 23 Mr. Libby. And when Mr. Libby said, we are hearing or I've 24 heard that or we've heard that, he wasn't necessarily limiting 25 himself to conversation directly between himself and other 00025 01 reporters. 02 THE COURT: What if there's nothing that would 03 indicate that this other government official that you reference 04 had no contact whatsoever with Mr. Libby in regard to this 05 information? 06 MR. JEFFRESS: But here's the thing, Your Honor, what 07 Mr. Libby -- a central issue in this case is whether it is so, 08 as Mr. Libby recalls, that reporters were, number one, all the 09 reporters knew. Now obviously not all of them knew. But when 10 he's saying that, he means many of them knew that Mr. Wilson's 11 wife worked at the CIA. 12 And when he is saying we are hearing that from 13 reporters, that at the very minimum the defense is entitled to 14 the information that would enable us to determine whether that 15 is so, whether there were many reporters who knew. 16 Now let's focus on official one as we will call him 17 just for purposes of this argument, that we are talking about 18 his identity. Now we know, Your Honor, if that person -- well, 19 let me start back. 20 All we can ask for at this stage is what the 21 government has. The government represents to Your Honor that 22 it has told us the identities on each reporter that the 23 government knows received this information. But, Your Honor, 24 it is obvious from the representations made by the government 25 to us that the government did not fully investigate that 00026 01 question. 02 There are many reporters that they didn't talk to at 03 all, including reporters who have made public claims that they 04 or that they had heard others knew. There are people, for 05 example, Mr. Russert, as to whom the government made an 06 agreement that it would only ask him narrow questions about his 07 side of the -- 08 THE COURT: Are you suggesting with reference to Mr. 09 Russert that if other reporters, in fact, knew about this and 10 were, in fact, talking about it, and let's assume that Mr. 11 Russert may, in fact, have heard those conversations, that you 12 would be able to present that to a jury in support of the 13 proposition that because Mr. Russert had heard it and because 14 people were saying it that that would prove that Mr. Russert, 15 in fact, made the statement as Mr. Libby suggests? 16 THE COURT: It would certainly make it more likely 17 than not which is a test of relevance that he did, in fact, say 18 it, if it's true. Now Mr. Russert, you know he's going to 19 testify. I don't know what he's going to testify. I haven't 20 talked to Mr. Russert. But presumably it will testify that he 21 didn't say anything about the wife to Mr. Libby. Mr. Libby 22 recalls that he said that, mentioned that the wife worked at 23 the CIA and that other reporters know it. 24 What would make it more likely than not that Mr. 25 Libby's account is correct and Mr. Russert's account is 00027 01 incorrect? What would make it more likely than not is if we 02 were able to show that other reporters -- Mr. Russert, as you 03 recall, is head of NBC news bureau in Washington. 04 THE COURT: And maybe if we had some folks who were 05 news reporters in that bureau under his guidance, maybe that 06 may make it less attenuated. But if we're talking about 07 somebody who is in a totally different news agency and there's 08 no indication whatsoever that that person had any contact with 09 Mr. Russert, I don't see how that would be relevant in proving 10 whether Mr. Russert, in fact, made that statement. 11 MR. JEFFRESS: Your Honor, number one, its 12 materiality under Rule 16(a)(1)(E) is information that may 13 assist the defense in finding evidence. As a matter of fact, 14 under the Marshall and the Lloyd case, it will play an 15 important role in uncovering evidence as well as aiding witness 16 preparation, corroborating testimony or assisting impeachment. 17 How is the defense, and as Your Honor may imagine, 18 the reporters, although one has voluntarily come forward since 19 the indictment with information that was not known to the 20 prosecutor at the time, the reporters generally speaking are, 21 should I say, reluctant to discuss questions about their 22 sources with anybody including the defense. 23 So we anticipate this is going to be a hard job. But 24 we are, at least, entitled to the information in the possession 25 of the government that would enable us to do that. 00028 01 If you take official one, for example. Official one 02 -- we know of two reporters that official one talked to. And 03 you know, and I don't mean, and by the way we talked about 04 innocent accused. And certainly I'm not here to tell you that 05 official one did anything wrong whatsoever. But we do know 06 that he did discuss Ms. Wilson with at least two reporters. 07 How many others did he discussed it with? How many 08 others discussed it with him? We don't have a single piece of 09 information from the government as to what official one said 10 about that. We presume that they have interviewed official one 11 and we presume that he has testified . But we don't know that 12 and we don't know a single thing that he has said about that. 13 How would we investigate? We would go talk to 14 official one. If official one won't talk to us, we would serve 15 him with a trial subpoena. Right now since we don't even know 16 who he is, we can't even serve him with a trial subpoena. 17 We would have other means of investigating if he 18 wouldn't talk to us. We would be able to get phone records, 19 call logs. We would be able to ask other reporters who talked 20 to this particular official. 21 Your Honor, simply it is a fact that is key to this 22 case to know what reporters out there knew or had heard about 23 Wilson's wife, what they were saying to each other, what they 24 were saying to government officials. 25 And here is a key person, the first person that we 00029 01 know of, according to the evidence, actually discussed Mr. 02 Wilson's wife's employment with a reporter and not only did it 03 then but did it again with a separate reporter later. This is 04 some person not in the White House. And, Your Honor, this is 05 information that is, of all the information, it is key. 06 THE COURT: This other aspect of the issue you said 07 in reference to Mr. Libby saying that he had heard this 08 information, is that what you indicated? 09 MR. JEFFRESS: Mr. Libby said that he had heard this. 10 One of the reporters told Mr. Libby offical one discussed Ms. Wilson. 11 The government says one of those didn't tell him that. However, 12 the government in the indictment has revealed another person 13 who did tell him that. So you know we have two people but the 14 government specifically alleges in the indictment that when Mr. 15 Libby said that he was hearing this from other reporters that 16 was part of the lie that's charged in this case. 17 THE COURT: Do we know in what form it was where Mr. 18 Libby says he heard? Was it at the White House? 19 MR. JEFFRESS: He heard it, well, what he testified 20 that is public in the indictment but I can tell you, Your 21 Honor, yes, he heard from another official at the White House 22 who reported to him that a reporter told me today that he knew 23 that Ambassador Wilson's wife worked at the CIA. That's one 24 source from which he got it. Knew that it came from a 25 reporter. That's one. Mr. Libby was told it came from offical one. 00030 01 THE COURT: You have the ability obviously to 02 investigate that. 03 Mr. Jeffress: Yes. The second is that Mr. Libby said 04 that Tim Russert said that to him. Now the government says 05 that's a lie. Tim Russert didn't say that. The government 06 also says, however, that, well, Mr. Cooper did say words to 07 that effect that when he talked to Mr. Libby, Mr. Cooper, not 08 Mr. Libby, was the one who said I heard that Mr. Wilson's wife 09 worked at the CIA. Now he says that Mr. Libby confirmed that 10 by saying, "I've heard that too." But that is the sum and 11 substance of Mr. Cooper's, the allegations as to Mr. Cooper. 12 And, Your Honor, Mr. Libby didn't recall it in the 13 grand jury but that is another person from whom he did, in 14 fact, hear it. Who else has talked to Mr. Libby that he has 15 forgotten? Who else discussed it with him that he just can't 16 name today? But we are entitled to investigate those things. 17 Let me say as to official one, there is no desire 18 here to embarrass somebody publicly. This information, if it's 19 given to us, presumably would be given to us like everything 20 else, under a protective order. There is a limit to what we 21 can do with that. 22 But it is inevitable. Your Honor, I submit that this 23 person will be subpoenaed at trial. And I think, and Your 24 Honor will, if the prosecution objects, Your Honor will have to 25 rule on the admissibility of that testimony. It is not like 00031 01 this is somebody accused of some serious crime. As far as we 02 can tell from what he did, he did not commit a crime. 03 THE COURT: I understand you have additional 04 presentations to make. Let me get from Mr. Fitzgerald a 05 response to this particular issue. 06 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, the one thing that is 07 clear is we should focus on what the allegations are. It is 08 not just the single statement of whether, it's whether Mr. 09 Russert said all the reporters knew, not even the truth of 10 that. 11 But the indictment alleges that on Monday Mr. Libby 12 told Mr. Fleischer this information about Mr. Wilson's wife and 13 indicated that it wasn't widely known, on a Monday. 14 On Wednesday he claims to have learned it as if it 15 were new for the first time from Mr. Russert in his 16 conversation even though we've alleged six different 17 conversations, more than six conversations in the month before 18 he discussed it with everyone from the vice president to people 19 at the CIA, to ranking officials at the State Department. 20 If he's giving the information out on Monday and yet 21 on Wednesday he says he was struck by this information as if it 22 were something new, when, in fact, Mr. Russert has publicly 23 stated on TV he didn't know the information until it came out 24 in Mr. Novak's column. At the same time he is testifying under 25 oath that he has a specific recollection that he was telling 00032 01 the reporters, Ms. Miller, Mr. Cooper, that he didn't know if 02 it were true. He didn't know if Mr. Wilson had a wife. 03 If you focus on July 7 through July 12, he's giving 04 out specific information indicating it is not widely known and 05 yet then later that week he is claiming to have heard it as if 06 it were known for the first time and specifically characterized 07 it as something he did not know if were true. 08 The bottom line being, if he's trying to find out 09 what reporters knew before July 14th, every reporter that we 10 are aware of, which isn't many, that knew before July 14 we 11 have disclosed that to him. 12 So to adopt an investigation of official one with no 13 showing how that's going to relate to anything, to cite 14 reporters, one reporter who said it was common knowledge, and 15 then the network withdrew it and said it is a mistake, the 16 bottom-line is the pool of reporters that we know, we have 17 identified to Mr. Libby. And there must be some logical 18 relevance to go there. 19 If Mr. Russert didn't even know it, he couldn't have 20 passed it on. I think we have to focus that it is not just one 21 part of the statement but he's claiming to have truthfully said 22 to these people, he didn't even know if the man had a wife but 23 he had been discussing it multiple times, and I think we go far 24 a field and jeopardize the rights of innocent people if we 25 start turning over an investigation of somebody else. 00033 01 THE COURT: Okay. Any brief rebuttal to that? 02 MR. JEFFRESS: Your Honor, there is one thing that I 03 neglected to mention and again this is subject to filings that 04 have been made under seal but there is, in fact, a transcript 05 of a tape recording that involves official one. 06 And I remind you, Your Honor, that's exactly who 07 we're talking about. In the particular transcript there is, 08 and the government filed something else yesterday, there is a 09 factual dispute as to what is said or what is meant by a 10 portion of the transcript wherein it appears the official 11 saying, "everyone knows it," referring to the wife's employment 12 at the CIA. 13 We have not heard that tape. We did to hear that 14 tape. If, in fact, as the transcript suggests that one 15 official said, "Everyone knows it," who did he mean by 16 "everyone knows it." 17 It's vitally important to us, Your Honor, number one, 18 to investigate what other reporters knew and may have mentioned 19 it. And number two, to confront Mr. Russert with what other 20 reporters knew it. 21 And remember there is another ABC reporter, Andrea 22 Mitchell, who once publicly stated the identity of Ambassador 23 Wilson's wife, the fact that she worked for the CIA was well 24 known to reporters who were covering the intelligence 25 community. 00034 01 There are many, many leads to this, Your Honor, but 02 without key information such as the identity of this person, 03 the defense simply cannot fully understand it. 04 THE COURT: Let me ask government counsel. Is there 05 anything in that transcript or tape recording whereby this 06 government official number one says something to the effect 07 that everybody in the media corps knows about this? 08 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, now that we have sort of 09 burned what was sealed, my understanding of that conversation, 10 there are people talking over each other, my understanding is 11 that was a reference that everyone knows it, that Mr. Wilson is 12 the unnamed ambassador. 13 THE COURT: Right. 14 MR. FITZGERALD: Mr. Wilson didn't reveal himself as 15 the unnamed ambassador until July 6. This was prior to that 16 time. We turned it over in an abundance of caution but I don't 17 believe that says it, and frankly there is a very limited 18 number of reporters that we found out who had known it. I 19 can't represent we know every reporter because we took 20 seriously the attorney general guidelines. But any reporter we 21 knew about we give over. If the point is to find out the 22 extent of knowledge of the reporters, we can't do more than 23 tell them every reporter we know about. 24 THE COURT: I can appreciate I guess to some degree 25 why the defense would want this. Obviously the defense wants 00035 01 everything. But whether we should have open file discovery is 02 the issue that I guess will always be debated until maybe one 03 day we reach that point but we are not at that point now. 04 Obviously there has to be a showing of materiality in 05 order to warrant under Rule 16 this information being provided 06 clearly based upon what's been submitted to me and what was 07 submitted to me ex parte. 08 There is no indication that this information would in 09 anyway amount to Brady and I don't conclude that it satisfies 10 the materiality requirement. I just think it is too attenuated 11 to conclude that the revelation of this information would, in 12 fact, lead to information that would assist Mr. Libby in his 13 defense. So in reference to that particular request, it will 14 be denied. 15 The second matter, I don't know to what extent what is 16 left regarding that request regarding reporters. I know again 17 I think some of that has been satisfied by information that may 18 have been provided since the motion was filed, and I am talking 19 about all documents and other information reflecting any 20 mention of Valorie Plame Wilson in any communication between a 21 news reporter and a government official, another news reporter, 22 an employee of an organization, of a news organization or any 23 other person prior to July 14, 2003. 24 I don't know if what we have already discussed has 25 addressed that or not. Is that still an open issue? That was 00036 01 the second matter listed in -- 02 MR. JEFFRESS: What has happened, Your Honor, as we 03 interpret, and again we have this redacted affidavit. We don't 04 know what's in it. 16 pages or something. 05 But trying to discern what it says, it appears that 06 paragraph 45 of that affidavit lists some documents that the 07 government is withholding from the defense. The government has 08 given us some information as to reporters. It has not 09 represented that it was given to us, all information that is 10 requested paragraphs one and two of our request in our motion. 11 It seems from the redacted affidavit that there are 12 some specific items that have been identified to Your Honor but 13 not to us. We would respectfully ask that Your Honor enter an 14 order that compels the government to give us all the 15 information that's described in paragraphs one and two of our 16 request which is at pages 4 and 5 of our motion so that we know 17 that we have everything responsive. 18 THE COURT: Mr. Fitzgerald, is there anything else 19 based upon that second request that would not be encompassed in 20 my ruling regarding the first request? 21 MR. FITZGERALD: I want to look at that. There are 22 some that are not encompassed by the ruling with regard to 23 official one. But by the logic of it, I think what we tried to 24 do is we didn't think they were responsive. But if I'm going 25 to tell Your Honor that we're not giving documents to the 00037 01 defense that are in the ambit, I wanted to spell out what they 02 were. I think there were four tick marks in our ex parte 03 affidavit. 04 THE COURT: Okay. I have it. 05 MR. FITZGERALD: I think I can cite that paragraph 45 06 to which Mr. Jeffress refers to. I believe items one and four 07 would be encompassed by Your Honor's ruling. 08 THE COURT: Let me look at those real quick. I would 09 agree. 10 MR. FITZGERALD: I believe number 1, 2, and 4 are in 11 reference to official one. 12 THE COURT: I would agree in reference to number 2 13 also. 14 MR. FITZGERALD: With regard to number three, that 15 refers to a different matter about which we made some 16 disclosure to the defense and the only point being that this 17 refers to conversations way later, and as a general matter, I 18 recognize the defense was trying to say any knowledge before 19 July 14 but which it has created later. But people are having 20 conversations about the investigation, anything about the so- 21 called Novak leak, as it is referred to by laymen, triggers all 22 sorts of conversations that aren't relevant to the events of 23 what reporters knew back in July when people discuss it later. 24 So that's why it might arguably be technically 25 responsive but I don't see the logical relevance of what 00038 01 happens much later in time when the relevant communications 02 between persons in July 2003 have been disclosed. That was the 03 reasoning behind three. Those conversations in no way could 04 have, it's not as if those conversations at that time much 05 later could have informed reporters retroactively. 06 If the issue is to find out what reporters knew when 07 -- 08 THE COURT: I guess it depends upon whether an 09 inference could be drawn that this individual may have known 10 about the information earlier. 11 MR. FITZGERALD: And we have turned over documents 12 showing that that person did. What I could suggest, Your 13 Honor, is I could, there is a discreet amount of documents. I 14 could produced to you what we produced to the defense involving 15 that topic by timeframe and then produced to you what we 16 haven't produced so you could just look at them yourselves. 17 THE COURT: I think I would because I kind of feel 18 that maybe this might be producible but I think I would need to 19 look at that and make that assessment but my inclination is 20 that that may have to be produced. 21 MR. FITZGERALD: And it is a handful of items. My 22 only point, I don't think it refers to conversations about the 23 spring as much as it refers to events in the fall about the 24 investigation. 25 THE COURT: I will reserve ruling on that particular 00039 01 item of evidence. 02 MR. JEFFRESS: May I say one thing, Your Honor? 03 THE COURT: Yes. 04 MR. JEFFRESS: I gather that Mr. Fitzgerald is 05 talking about submitting something to Your Honor in camera. 06 THE COURT: Yes. 07 MR. JEFFRESS: It is perfectly obvious that the last 08 time that he was given the opportunity to do that, he made 09 extensive arguments ex parte that we still don't know about, 10 obviously having to do with official one. 11 You know I don't know what representations were made 12 to Your Honor. The defense is seriously hampered by that. 13 Today we have filed a motion to attempt to prevent the 14 prosecutor, we're not a grand jury proceeding anymore. We're 15 in a criminal case. An adversary proceeding. 16 We would like an order that the government not, no 17 longer file with Your Honor these ex parte communications. If 18 it wants to submit, just like in a civil case somebody gives 19 you a document to determine whether that is privileged, that is 20 one thing. But for the government to submit communications 21 about the case, and we don't know what's been said and can't 22 reply to it, we think is inconsistent with due process, 23 inconsistent with the rules. We object to it. 24 THE COURT: I mean I am always troubled by having to 25 consider information ex parte. However, if the government is 00040 01 of a view that something is not discoverable which is what I 02 understand their position is in reference to what they 03 submitted that you are challenging, the only other option then 04 is to, because it is a government obligation, is to again shut 05 down the flow to me. Tell them not to do it. You make the 06 call. Don't give it to me and, therefore, the decision that 07 you make is final because Rule 16 is their obligation. If 08 they're not going to give it to me and they make it one of 09 their own, I mean I'm happy to get it out of the picture. I've 10 got enough work on my desk. 11 MR. JEFFRESS: I think we made clear in our motion, 12 Your Honor, and I neglected to make clear in my oral statement 13 today that we are not objecting to the government's submitting 14 to Your Honor for in-camera review a document to determine 15 whether that is material or whether that is privileged or 16 whatever the decision may be. 17 We are certainly objecting to the government 18 submitting argument to Your Honor. And this 19-page affidavit 19 had 16 pages that obviously went way beyond what the purpose of 20 the affidavit was supposed to be and we feel prejudiced quite 21 frankly. 22 THE COURT: Mr. Fitzgerald, do you want to respond to 23 that? 24 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes, Your Honor. I'm going to tell 25 Your Honor that I'm not producing certain things and making 00041 01 assumptions, I want to be careful that I don't make a mistake 02 and mislead the court. When I tell Your Honor there is a 03 continuing investigation, I want to make it clear where it's 04 at. 05 My intention with these documents was to send you the 06 documents with a note indicating exhibit A is the document from 07 Mr. X or Ms. Y, whatever it is that we produced to the defense. 08 Exhibit B are the pages that weren't produced. 09 Going forward, you know, first of all, CIPA, the 10 Classified Information Procedure Act, and they may disagree but 11 it provides for some ex parte filings, and sometimes you say, 12 judge, here is the reason why we can't produce his document. 13 Here is why a substitution is appropriate. We will go ex parte 14 when we think that is appropriate. We will do it in Section 6 15 on notice to defense with them having the documents where 16 appropriate. 17 Rule 16, ordinary discovery provides under Rule 16(b) 18 for protective orders. Sometimes judges are told there is a 19 wiretap related to a drug case that is ongoing and can't be 20 taken down for three weeks. So in limited circumstances, it is 21 appropriate to do so. I think it was appropriate to do so in 22 response to when we are telling you that we are not producing 23 certain information and they asked for information, not just 24 documents. 25 So we ought to be telling you what the information we 00042 01 are not producing is. I think in this case to show the 02 document. 03 Going forward, we will try to follow the same rule 04 but a blanket order that would overrule 16(d) and the 05 Classified Information Procedures Act Section 4, I don't think 06 would be appropriate. 07 THE COURT: I think you know counsel obviously have 08 to be circumspect in what is submitted to the court ex parte. 09 But on the other hand, it seems to me that if I'm going to play 10 a role in making judgment calls where the government has 11 questions about whether information is discoverable or not and 12 they want to submit that to me for my evaluations and when we 13 are talking about something that's foreign to the court and 14 that the government obviously is in a better position to 15 explain what it is, that it seems to me it is appropriate for 16 the government to do that, mindful of the obligation of trying 17 to have an open proceeding where by defense counsel and the 18 defendant knows exactly what is taking place. 19 But I just don't know how else we can effectively 20 address the discovery issues other than the way it's been done. 21 Obviously everything that is submitted to me will be 22 maintained. And if there alternatively is a need for appellate 23 review, that information would be available for the circuit to 24 consider in deciding whether the information that was not 25 produced was appropriately withheld. 00043 01 So I would obviously caution counsel to make sure 02 that when things are submitted to me ex parte, that there is a 03 good cause to do that but I am not prepared to rule that the 04 government can't in the future make such submissions to me. 05 Otherwise, it seems to me I do put the case in the posture 06 where the government is independently making its decision as to 07 whether it has an obligation under Rule 16 or otherwise to 08 produce and then I guess that becomes final until the case 09 ultimately would be reviewed on appeal and I don't want to 10 proceed in that manner. So I understand your concerns but I 11 would deny that request. 12 So I think that resolves the first two requests. We 13 have already dealt with Mr. Libby's notes. So I think that 14 takes care of the three requests, as I see it, that were made 15 in the first defense motion to compel. Anything else on that? 16 I think that's it and I need to give the court reporter about a 17 five-minute recess and then we'll start back and deal with the 18 other issues. 19 (Recess from 3:31 p.m. to 3:39 p.m.) 20 THE COURT: Before we move to the next issues, I 21 would assume, based upon from what the government said and 22 based upon my ruling, that the information regarding the media 23 and reporters all that is going to be provided as been and I 24 assume the defense wants to proceed in reference to its 25 investigation of the case by seeking to require information 00044 01 from the reporters. I assume that is where we may be at this 02 point. 03 MR. WELLS: That is correct. 04 THE COURT: How do you all recommend where we proceed 05 at this time in this regard so we can start that process 06 moving? 07 MR. WELLS: What we intend to do is to submit Rule 08 17(c) subpoenas that we will serve on various news 09 organizations and perhaps others. We suspect that the news 10 organizations may oppose and an issue will be joined. We want 11 issue to be joined as quickly as possible so that if there has 12 to be any appellate litigation, it can take place. 13 THE COURT: So are you requesting that I set some 14 early return dates or how do you want to proceed in that 15 regard? 16 MR. WELLS: Excuse me for one second. 17 (Pause.) 18 THE COURT: I guess there are a couple ways we could 19 proceed. Obviously one would be that you issue your subpoenas. 20 We could I guess either now or at that time we could set a date 21 for the return of those subpoenas. I assume at least in 22 reference to some of the reporters that there is going to be 23 some objections raised and I would have to obviously give them 24 an opportunity to do that. But if you all have any suggestions 25 as to how we could most efficiently accomplish this, I'd like 00045 01 to hear from you. 02 MR. JEFFRESS: I think it would be good, Your Honor. 03 We will begin to prepare our subpoenas, and if you could set a 04 return date now, we could make those subpoenas returnable here 05 in this court. 06 THE COURT: When? 07 MR. JEFFRESS: Say the middle of April. I am sorry 08 that I don't have my calendar here. 09 THE COURT: April 14 is the mid point I guess. 10 MR. JEFFRESS: That is a Friday. 11 THE COURT: It is a Friday, yes. 12 MR. JEFFRESS: We'll make our subpoenas returnable to 13 April 14. 14 THE CLERK: That is Good Friday. 15 MR. JEFFRESS: Could we make it April 21? 16 THE COURT: That is good. What is your proposal as 17 to how we proceed at that point? 18 MR. JEFFRESS: Well, I think you know there may well 19 be news organizations or reporters as to whom they will comply 20 or as to whom we are able to work things out with and I hope 21 that's the more the better. But those who do want to file 22 their motions to quash, the motion to quash would be argued 23 that day would be my anticipation. 24 THE COURT: We could try and do it that way. But I 25 obviously would want to give the reporters and their attorneys 00046 01 some opportunity to submit something in writing to the court. 02 So I don't know if that really works. I guess we could make it 03 returnable on that date and then set a hearing date subsequent 04 to that that would give the media reporters an opportunity, if 05 they choose to file objections or motion to quash, an 06 opportunity to do that. 07 MR. JEFFRESS: I understand, Your Honor. That's 08 probably more practical. 09 THE COURT: So I guess I would need to give them at 10 least a couple of weeks. That would take us to the 5th of May. 11 We would probably have to do it again in the afternoon like we 12 are doing now because I have a heavy schedule in the morning. 13 Is that a good day for everybody? If there are going to be any 14 motions filed to quash or objections to the subpoenas, then we 15 could address them at that time. 16 MR. JEFFRESS: What is that date, Your Honor? 17 THE COURT: May 5. 18 MR. JEFFRESS: That is agreeable to us, Your Honor. 19 THE COURT: My only concern, and I don't know if we 20 can move it any faster, is that if there are challenges and if 21 there are subsequent challenges to my ruling and the case has 22 to go on to the circuit, query as to whether the circuit would 23 be able to resolve those issues before they go out of session 24 at the end of June and then they are basically out of session 25 until after Labor Day. 00047 01 I mean they do emergency matters I think but I think 02 by and large they are not sitting during that period and I 03 don't know if we would be able to get the matter before them 04 and have a resolution. 05 Obviously if there's a resolution sometime in the 06 early fall that would not create a problem for us but I just 07 have some concerns I guess in that regard. But maybe with the 08 trial date being set for January maybe that gives them enough 09 time, and I can always obviously make a request for expedited 10 resolution. 11 MR. FITZGERALD: My suggestion, judge, is maybe we 12 should have the return date earlier but still allow anyone who 13 is objecting more time to file motions because since 17(c) 14 subpoenas can only go to documents, there may be people who 15 have nothing responsive. 16 THE COURT: That is what I was thinking. I 17 understand the difficulty. But I think I would like to move 18 that up to the 7th of April and then set the 21st of April for 19 the date when we could have a hearing on any objections that 20 would be raised. Again we would have to set an afternoon at 21 2:30. Is that good? 22 MR. JEFFRESS: That would be 2:30 on the seventh as 23 the time and date for the return? 24 THE COURT: Yes. That is good. 25 MR. FITZGERALD: Judge, I assume if documents are 00048 01 returned pursuant to the subpoena they are given to both 02 parties just like a trial subpoena. 03 THE COURT: Yes. If there are going to be 04 objections, then they would be held on the afternoon at 2:30 on 05 the 21st. Anything else? Let's move on to the next matters 06 then. I guess that is the PDBs. 07 MR. WELLS: Yes, Your Honor. I will be addressing 08 two separate issues. One is the PDBs and the second one 09 relates to documents concerning the classified nature of Ms. 10 Wilson's employment and any possible damage assessment issue. 11 THE COURT: Let me just ask in that regard. Should 12 we not conceivably wait until Mr. Libby has a chance to review 13 his notes to see if that's going to be adequate to refresh his 14 recollections? 15 In that regard also, and I don't think I'm jumping 16 the gun in raising this, it seems to me that I'm going to have 17 to make some assessment as to exactly what he's going to be 18 able to testify about regarding his activity during this period 19 of time in order to assist what is really relevant because, as 20 Mr. Fitzgerald suggests, for him to have to go into the gory 21 details of all the various things he was doing is not really 22 necessary to give the jury a flavor of the demands on his time, 23 i.e., he can present evidence of his time sheets to show how 24 long he was at work. He can present information about who he 25 had to meet with during those periods of time. The number of 00049 01 people. He could present information in general about the 02 topic areas he was dealing with. 03 But is it really going to be necessary for him to go 04 into the details on what he was doing with, and if that is not 05 necessary, because I have to strike a balance between obviously 06 the government's concern about national security and on the 07 other hand his right to a fair trial, and if he is not going to 08 be able to go into the details, does that have any affect on 09 your need to have these documents? 10 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, the extent of the deal he 11 will be able to go into, and actually how it will work at 12 trial, what is the script that he has developed based on our 13 CIPA discussions will result from CIPA hearings. 14 But in the first instance what we have to do as to 15 defense lawyers is be able to sit with the client, not only his 16 recollection as to what is going on in what periods but to 17 identify with precision what is the relationship, for example, 18 between what he's being told on a particular day in connection 19 with the PDBs and what information does the government say he 20 got, should have remembered, didn't remember. 21 THE COURT: Isn't it virtually certain, though, that 22 if I ordered this, it's going to sabotage the ability of this 23 case to go forward because I would suspect that the White House 24 is never going to agree to permit these documents to be 25 released. 00050 01 As I recall, there was a big debate with Congress 02 over the submission of the same documents. And ultimately 03 Congress decided not to seek to pursue the matter by way of a 04 subpoena and the issue is dropped. I would assume that if I 05 order this, it sabotages this prosecution because, as I recall, 06 the vice president, his boss, said these are the family jewels. 07 MR. WELLS: I would say very strongly that the way 08 our system is built where the courts are the ultimate arbiter 09 of what information should be produced, that it should never 10 sabotage this case. There is a case, United States versus 11 Nixon, which covers the issue of when the executive branch can 12 claim a privilege appropriately and what kind of showing we 13 have to make in order to overcome it. 14 I believe we can make that showing and I believe Your 15 Honor will overrule any objections, or should, under the Nixon 16 case as put forth by the executive branch. If they take an 17 appeal, we have enough appeals lined up so we may as well get 18 everything done at once. 19 But I do not believe this administration or any 20 administration has the right to disobey a court order. And if 21 we make the showing, then there is no reason for it to be 22 sabotaged. This is not a government by -- it is a government 23 based on laws. 24 In other words, Your Honor, there would be no reason 25 for the U.S. Supreme Court to have cases like the U.S. versus 00051 01 Nixon if, at the end of the day, the executive brings could 02 just ignore what the judicial branch does. 03 THE COURT: We are talking about actual criminal 04 activity on the part of government officials who were in the 05 White House itself. That creates a somewhat different 06 situation than here. I mean here the end result is not that 07 criminal behavior on the part of White House officials is not 08 discovered. The end result is that if the executive branch 09 says that this is just too important to the welfare of the 10 nation that we're not going to comply, the criminal prosecution 11 goes away. 12 MR. WELLS: If Your Honor finds that the test is met 13 under Nixon, that they don't have a right to claim a privilege, 14 that's all they can do, a valid subpoena or request is made, 15 they will at a point impose privilege. Your Honor will hear 16 argument on whether the footage is valid. 17 If Your Honor as an Article 3 judge decides that 18 their assertion is invalid, they will have the right to take it 19 to the Court of Appeals. If the Court of Appeals of the 20 circuit decides it has to be produced, I submit that it will be 21 produced as it would be in any case. I do not believe that the 22 executive branch under an order from this Court of Appeals, or 23 if necessary from the U.S. Supreme Court, is not going to 24 comply. 25 I don't understand that notion that because the 00052 01 executive branch may impose a privilege claim which this 02 Court's job is to decide and if the court decides against them, 03 that in some way sabotages the case any more than if some news 04 organization says they refused to comply and we go to the Court 05 Of Appeals. But ultimately our government is based on the rule 06 of law. There can't be some notion, I would submit, that this 07 court should ignore all our discovery rights and that's all 08 we're talking about at this juncture whether we can work with 09 those documents over in the skiff. It's the only issue at this 10 juncture. 11 THE COURT: Let me ask you this. Are you convinced 12 that there's nothing else that's available, i.e., his notes, 13 his daily schedule, any other information that may exist that 14 would not be adequate to provide him with what he needs in 15 order to put himself in a position to recall exactly what was 16 occurring around that time? 17 MR. WELLS: Yes, I am so convinced, and I have 18 submitted so there's no issue of a sworn affidavit that sets 19 forth a good faith proffer. 20 Your Honor, let's start with what you said a minute 21 ago. We are talking about the family jewels, and my client's 22 defense is not based a la the George case on preoccupation. 23 My client's defense is based on the fact that he was 24 either confused, mistaken, or his memory was bad because he was 25 focused on the family jewels. That is different. That is 00053 01 radically different. The very heart of our defenses is about 02 the family jewels. And that's what I hope to make a jury 03 understand. I'm not saying Lewis Libby was just busy that day. 04 He was busy with the family jewels. 05 THE COURT: That gets to the second issue I raised. 06 To what extent does he need to present to the jury the details 07 regarding those family jewels rather than just an overview of 08 the subject matters he was dealing with on those given days? 09 MR. WELLS: And what we need to do, point one, we 10 can't do it from the notes. When the PDBs, when he got the 11 morning briefing, and we call it the PDBs, but as I said in my 12 brief, it is somewhat of a misnomer. What I am asking for is 13 Mr. Libby's morning briefing which was in three parts. 14 Part one, one book, part one was the presidential 15 daily brief, which the president of the United States gets. 16 But in Mr. Libby's book that was only part one of his book. 17 Then in his book was part two which the vice president gets. 18 So the vice president gets more than the president. Part three 19 of the book was there for Mr. Libby. Mr. Libby got more than 20 the president and vice president. So the book was in three 21 parts. 22 Now six days a week, every week no matter whether he 23 was in Arizona or Europe, he got a daily brief. The briefer 24 travel with him. As a normal course, his morning began every 25 day at 7 a.m. at the home of the vice president of the United 00054 01 States where Mr. Libby and Vice President Cheney would sit and 02 the briefer from the CIA would come and brief them and they did 03 not take notes. 04 And when you look at Mr. Libby's notes, there are not 05 many references to the PDBs. We need the notes and the PDBs to 06 put together the picture to present to Your Honor the story we 07 want to tell to this jury that will make the jury believe that 08 his defense is valid, that it is not something concocted, that 09 it is something that's worthy of belief. And then we have to 10 work out during the CIPA hearing how we say it and to talk now 11 about it in the level of detail that is necessary is premature 12 because I understand we can't go into all the detail. 13 I understand that the court has the power under Rule 14 403 to deal with issues of whether things are cumulative. I 15 believe I have a constitutional right to have a fair 16 opportunity to have him testify in such a way so that this jury 17 understands just the urgency and the enormous pressures but I 18 understand I can't do it for three days. 19 THE COURT: And I don't take exception with that. 20 What do we do to put them in a position where he's able to do 21 that? 22 MR. WELLS: What I'm saying, Your Honor, is that at 23 the heart, I would submit I believe he has a constitutional 24 right to tell his story to the jury because it is a story about 25 the family jewels, and because it is about the family jewels, I 00055 01 believe the jury may, in fact, be more likely to give him 02 credit that he would not have remembered certain information at 03 the day he was being interviewed or the day of the grand jury 04 about Ms. Wilson. 05 I'm not saying he forgot the issue of Mr. Wilson and 06 the 16 words and what have you. But in terms of her role, that 07 that was a relatively minor role. I have given, Your Honor, a 08 very targeted request, and it is our understanding in terms of 09 burden that is probably pushing a button and they could 10 probably have the PDBs collected probably in a matter of hours 11 if not a matter of days. So this is not about burden. 12 But I submit he can't be penalized, he can't be 13 penalized because that was his job. He's got to be able, under 14 the Constitution, to tell his story. And because his job was 15 involved with the family jewels, he can't be penalized and not 16 tell the story and you can't do it from the notes. We worked 17 with those notes. You can't do it. 18 THE COURT: Did he keep a daily calendar? 19 MR. WELLS: I assume he did but not about PDBs. I 20 want you, Your Honor, to understand I am not doing what George 21 is about. George is something about the pre-occupation that I 22 don't totally understand. In the George case -- 23 THE COURT: I understand. As I understand what you 24 are suggesting is that these were weighty issues of the most 25 important matters that this country deals with and that he had 00056 01 to on a daily basis confront those and that, therefore, because 02 of the magnitude of those things he was dealing with, he 03 wouldn't remember something that, at least from his 04 perspective, would have been an insignificant event. 05 MR. WELLS: In terms of the life, not the event. 06 THE COURT: Right. 07 MR. WELLS: I do draw a distinction. And this is not 08 a burden issue in terms of the acquisition. These documents, 09 in terms of the daily books, these are not voluminous. We are 10 not asking a la George for millions of pages. 11 What we are asking for at this juncture is for the 12 documents to be produced in the skiff so we can go through 13 them, refresh his recollection, prepare him for his testimony 14 so that we can then sit down in the CIPA proceeding and have a 15 gave and take about how do you recognize his rights to tell his 16 story fairly, because it can't be done -- Your Honor, if it is 17 done in a quick and dirty way, he's going to be convicted. If 18 it's done quick and dirty, he's going to viewed, oh, he was 19 just trying to say he was busy. 20 It can't be done quick and dirty, but it can't be 21 done in a way that ignores or violates the national security 22 interests on the other side. Everybody understands that. 23 The motion can't be denied based on the fact that the 24 White House might impose a privilege that would be invalid 25 because I think it would be invalid. That can't be. This 00057 01 court, the U.S. Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court has the 02 power to command that these documents be produced. 03 I mean look ultimately, Mr. Fitzgerald on behalf of 04 the government, he made a decision to bring an indictment. 05 That's within his power, although we filed a brief objecting to 06 his appointment, but at least until his appointment is declared 07 invalid, he had the power to do what he did. But the 08 consequences of that is that Mr. Libby now has some 09 constitutional rights that just can't be ignored. 10 THE COURT: Let me hear from the government and then 11 I will give you a chance to respond to what Mr. Fitzgerald 12 says. 13 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, ordering production of 14 the PDBs could well derail the case. Let's step back to the 15 notes for a moment. In seeking the notes, the defense argued 16 that Mr. Libby's notes, quote, reflecting the matters that he 17 himself chose to memorialize constitute powerful evidence of 18 the issues and tasks that commanded his attention during the 19 overtime period. 20 Now we're seeking PDBs for stuff not captured in the 21 notes, not captured in his memory, where they haven't even 22 sought his calendars for those days. We are going to jump to 23 the third rail of the presidential daily briefs which are the 24 family jewels and which are not produced in cases involving 25 very very serious crimes. 00058 01 When you ask for discovery, particularly classified 02 discovery, both in invoking national security concerns which 03 triggers the Rezaq standard of helpful to defense but also 04 privilege concerns, the U.S. versus In a Sealed Case makes 05 clear that you should explore alternative means to get that 06 evidence. 07 There are serious privilege issues in the sheaf of 08 Libby notes that I understand are going to take six months to 09 review for classification purposes if there are 1500 pages as I 10 asked at the break. 11 If we are going to go through those notes and Mr. 12 Libby has his notes from everyday all for the issue of did he 13 truthfully say to somebody, I don't even know if he has a wife, 14 covering something on July 14. If he worked on war plans, if 15 he worked on serious things, the level of detail in a 16 presidential daily briefing, if it is not reflected in his 17 notes which are described as the things that he focused on 18 other than Wilson's wife which he is already getting in 19 volumes, not in his daily calendars, not otherwise reflected, 20 we're going very far a field for something very tangential all 21 for a level of detail that I think would just confuse the jury. 22 At the end of the day, he was a busy man. He did 23 work on very important stuff. And a lot of the important work 24 he worked upon can be divined from his calendars and certainly 25 more than his important work can be divined from his daily 00059 01 notes. 02 To reach out to the family jewels, the president's 03 daily brief and to turn them over in discovery, it seems to me 04 is to violate what In Re Sealed Case is. 05 Before you reach out to privileged materials, seek 06 alternatives. What is that he can represent that we can have a 07 solid basis to believe is so important that it might affect his 08 memory when he testified about the wife that wouldn't already 09 be in his notes, that is so important that it isn't in his 10 memory already, that isn't reflected in his daily calendar. 11 THE COURT: What other information besides his notes 12 and you said there may be a daily calendar that he hasn't 13 sought would conceivably exist that would assist him in that 14 regard? 15 MR. FITZGERALD: Besides his own memory of what was 16 so important, I mean if it's important enough -- I know this 17 about memory, and I'm not an expert, if it's important enough 18 to sort of block out what else you are doing, you should 19 remember the topic. You don't forget the broad strokes. And 20 if we're getting down to the level of detail at PDBs, I'm very 21 worried. One thing that should be clear -- 22 THE COURT: And I assume from what you indicated 23 earlier that your position would be that he would not be 24 permitted to testify about the gory details. He could only get 25 an overview of the topics and issues he was dealing with. 00060 01 MR. FITZGERALD: Exactly, Your Honor. And so to get 02 into these issues which would derail the case for something 03 like that, I also want to make clear that the burden, I asked 04 before court, Your Honor issued an order and I tried to get as 05 up-to-date as I could on what the burden would be involved. 06 THE COURT: Right. I was going to ask you about 07 that. 08 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes. Just on the questions that Mr. 09 Libby asked of his briefer and the responses he gave, we would 10 agree with the defense that they could be determined. In 11 asking the relevant agency as to what would be involved my 12 understanding is -- 13 THE COURT: Do you oppose providing him with that 14 information also? 15 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes, Your Honor. They fall into 16 the same privilege category. But let me just lay out what the 17 burden would be just physically. My understanding is that the 18 best estimate from the people involved is that if you assumed 19 that their understanding is he might have asked a question 20 every other day that it would trigger two to three hundred 21 items during the relevant period and that the defense estimate 22 of 30 to 500 pages we believe to be accurate. 23 But the amount of man hours it would take would be in 24 the months and here's the reason because I didn't understand it 25 at first. The daily briefs that are shown to Mr. Libby are a 00061 01 variation on the presidential daily brief. To reconstruct what 02 questions he asked and what responses he gave requires them to 03 basically do a research project on each debrief, and I'll give 04 an example. 05 If he's had a daily brief and someone asks him, 06 whether it's from the newspaper or from the daily brief, what 07 is the status of the health of a foreign leader, that will go 08 back and it will be in a file and can be retrieved. They can 09 go find that there was a question asked by Mr. Libby, but the 10 answer has to be researched afterward. 11 It might be a simple question. It might have an oral 12 answer the next day which might be reflected. It might require 13 further research which may come up later and often the answer I 14 understand it isn't really apparent what question was responded 15 to. They may have asked about the health of a leader. They 16 may decide that he should be given more information what the 17 succession plan is. 18 And often times if he asks a question, if they think 19 it is sufficiently important to brief it to others, it may show 20 up in an intelligence product that takes more time, and come 21 back. They basically have to go back, find out what's in his 22 particular brief, what was left out and do research, and 23 basically do a forensic process backwards just to find out for 24 each day, was a question asked, trace out the following 25 briefings, how was it answered. 00062 01 Then when they get that material, they have to do a 02 classification review because these daily briefs are unusual in 03 that they expose sources in ways that other documents don't. 04 Then they have to realize where did the information come from, 05 how many different agencies are involved before they can do a 06 classification review, and then you have to get into issues of 07 privilege review. 08 So just his taskings back-and-forth would take people 09 I understood man-months. And unlike, as I understand it, if 10 you told me it took six weeks to paint the house, you might 11 say, well, get six painters and you can do it in a week and 12 you're done. 13 The number of people who can do this is limited 14 because they have to be people who understand the process and 15 the number of briefer is limited, and their primary function is 16 to brief the president. 17 So the assumption that we just push buttons and that 18 this just sort of turns out is not true. It would be 19 incredibly burdensome, just Mr. Libby's notes, doing the 20 classification review for one agency, I was told, might take 21 six months if it is about 1500 pages which I was doing 22 guesstimates at the side. 23 Going through this is another huge project which 24 sidelines us all for what? I don't believe at the end of the 25 day a jury needs to be told about a detail of national security 00063 01 of the utmost sensitivity from the family jewels that doesn't 02 reflect itself in Mr. Libby's memory today or his notes or his 03 calendars that he worked on something. 04 We all read the papers every day and see important 05 things that we don't work on. That doesn't affect our memory, 06 and certainly when you are dealing with things of privilege and 07 confidentiality, you want to do everything you can do to find 08 it from alternative sources, and that is from In Re: Sealed 09 Case. 10 I think it would be a terrible mistake to sort of 11 derail the case by ordering presidential daily brief material 12 when we're going, and by respecting your Honor's rulings, we're 13 giving a lot of Libby's notes that should reflect by his own 14 account in his own brief what it is that imprinted on his mind 15 and told him what to work on particularly since the ultimate 16 issue is that none of these notes reflect his conversations 17 about Wilson's wife. They reflect other things that he may say 18 he's not talking about preoccupation but he's talking about 19 immersion and inundation. And I'm lost as to how it is not 20 preoccupation. 21 THE COURT: Let me just ask this question, and I 22 don't know if you know the response to it. But hypothetically 23 if I order the production of this information, what happens? 24 MR. FITZGERALD: The CIA is the one agency that has 25 the complete set. They would not give them to me. They would 00064 01 defer the question to the White House. And my understanding is 02 production of the daily briefs is an extraordinary matter. 03 So the CIA, they automatically call the White House 04 on presidential daily brief material. My point being why do we 05 address that precipice for something where there is going to be 06 a mass of material that will be going through Section 5 hearing 07 or Section 5 procedures for months already on the notes that 08 already by our understanding since they are not responsive to 09 questions about Wilson's wife, we're going to have thousands of 10 pages of some of the nation's most sensitive secrets for Mr. 11 Libby to review, none of which shed light on the direct 12 question of what he heard about Mr. Wilson's wife when he can 13 tell the jury I worked on this war effort. I worked on this 14 plan. I worked on a lot of things without getting to the third 15 rail. 16 THE COURT: Thank you. 17 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, first, in this area we have 18 two different requests. Request number one is for the PDB 19 morning briefing that Mr. Libby got six out of seven days a 20 week. That is in one book and I believe that is pushing a 21 button. 22 There is a second request that relates to Mr. Libby's 23 inquiries and the answers that came back. I want to hand up, 24 because we have a couple of them over in the skiff just to show 25 you what at least we have, and it looks like there is a file 00065 01 that says Libby requests, and you can see the answers. 02 Again I want to make clear, I have not asked for the 03 underlying material. But I believe that, in terms of the 04 questions he posed and the answers that came back, I think that 05 is in a file and I do think it is pushing a button, and I'm not 06 asking for whatever Mr. Fitzgerald was describing that would 07 take weeks or months. I'm just asking for those documents but 08 I want to hand up to Your Honor. Here are the keys. 09 THE COURT: He is the security office there. 10 MR. WELLS: I have no problem if Mr. Fitzgerald wants 11 to look over your shoulder if that's okay with Your Honor. 12 (Pause.) 13 THE COURT: I can review them but obviously there 14 can't be any discussions about the substance of what's on the 15 documents. 16 MR. WELLS: It is more to see the form, Your Honor. 17 (Pause.) 18 (At the bench.) 19 THE COURT: I wouldn't be a good safe breaker. 20 (No discussion at the bench.) 21 (In open court.) 22 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, so at least in terms of the 23 process, the form, it is my understanding, just based on my 24 limited review, that there is a file with his inquiries. 25 In fact, Your Honor, to the extent the government is 00066 01 saying that matching up a response with the inquiry that that's 02 what's going to take time, I'm perfectly willing to discuss 03 that with the government and cut back on anything that's going 04 to take time. 05 Your Honor, I need the PDBs in order to join issue, 06 to get my client prepared and that way we can have whatever 07 claims of privilege are going to be done. I don't want to wait 08 six months. I would like to put this in play with the White 09 House or CIA or whoever the right person is is going to say 10 privilege. We can believe that now and move on. 11 But in terms of the notes, the notes are inadequate. 12 I have spent weeks with the notes. Mr. Cline has been weeks 13 with the notes. The notes are different. The notes do not 14 permit us to tell a truthful valid story about the national 15 security issues that he was focused on. They do not. The 16 calendar is not even classified. You don't put down I'm 17 concerned about a terrorist threat from Iraq in the calendar. 18 The calendar is worthless. It's not even classified. It does 19 nothing for us. In our defense -- 20 THE COURT: I guess what Mr. Fitzgerald is suggesting 21 is that what would really reflect was the focus of his 22 attention were the things that he jotted down. 23 MR. WELLS: Most of the notes are taken from various 24 meetings. The family jewels were such you did not take notes 25 during the meeting. That's the point. I'm concerned it is 00067 01 kind of a disconnect -- 02 THE COURT: I mean I -- 03 MR. WELLS: -- because that's not how it worked. 04 THE COURT: I had some experience with this when I 05 worked in the drug office and I know when I looked at those 06 same type of document that I did not make notes and that was 07 our policy not to take notes. 08 MR. WELLS: Right, and that's how it worked. What 09 would happen at the end of the session so if you can picture 10 just what the jury might be told. He is sitting in a room 11 every morning 7 a.m. The vice president sitting next to him. 12 They finish with the PDB. The PDB itself is taken out and 13 given back to the briefer. It doesn't even go back to his 14 office. He hands it back. He doesn't take notes. He hands it 15 back. 16 But those are things that in terms of his job, his 17 focus was these urgent national security matters. He had three 18 titles. He was assistant to the president of the United 19 States. He was chief of staff to the vice president of the 20 United States, and he was national security adviser to the vice 21 president. 22 But in terms of what he will testify his focus was it 23 was not on making sure the vice president's office ran on time. 24 That was not his focus. His focus was on the national security 25 aspects. And he has a right to put that picture together and 00068 01 that we cannot do it with the notes. 02 THE COURT: I think I understand the parties' 03 positions. This is obviously a weighty issue that I have to 04 look very closely at before I decide how I'm going to rule and 05 I will take this particular issue under advisement. It won't 06 be a long time. We will work vigorously on trying to get this 07 done within a week or two but I will issue something in writing 08 in reference to this. 09 MR. WELLS: But I want to make clear for Your Honor, 10 though, that to the extent that second request, the inquiries 11 and responses is what concerns Your Honor about time, I'm 12 willing to cut back on that request. Just give me the 13 inquiries which I think are in a file because that shows what 14 he was questioning about. 15 So I don't want to do anything that is going to take 16 manpower hours. I don't have to. It is all in that book. 17 That is what I need. I would like his inquiries. I don't 18 think that's anything but a push of the button. I want the 19 record crystal clear. I don't want anything in terms of 20 significant man-hours with respect to collection issues. 21 THE COURT: It wouldn't be determinative but maybe it 22 would be helpful to at least complete the record if you 23 submitted something to us indicating to what extent you are 24 willing to scale back that request. 25 MR. WELLS: What I'm going to do, Your Honor, is my 00069 01 request I will limit to the PDBs, the book he got, and I would 02 like the inquiries that I believe is in one file. If my 03 understanding is wrong and Mr. Fitzgerald says to that, there 04 is no Libby inquiry file, I'd be willing to even scale that 05 back. I believe there is. But if he says that it doesn't 06 exist and you are wrong, Mr. Wells, then I'll cut back because 07 I know the book itself is in one place and that is a push of a 08 button. 09 THE COURT: Do you want to say something briefly? 10 MR. FITZGERALD: Might I suggest, if he submits any 11 sort of scaling back, I would ask the CIA to prepare an 12 affidavit to be shared with counsel as to their understanding 13 of how this is stored. I think some of those documents were 14 stored differently. It may have been from the file of the 15 briefer as opposed to the other study. 16 So we can lay out and be concrete because my other 17 understanding is that people are allowed to take notes, people 18 have taken notes during a briefing. 19 My only point being at the end of the day we're 20 talking about someone who spent a lot of time during the week 21 of July 7 to July 14 focused on the issue of Wilson and 22 Wilson's wife. I think we get lost in that. I don't at all 23 take lightly that they had important jobs. 24 But on July 7 he had a lunch where he imparted that 25 information in what was described as a weird situation. He had 00070 01 a private meeting with a reporter outside the White House with 02 this meeting. He was quoted in a very rare interview on a 03 Saturday on the record in an interview with Time magazine, a 04 very weird circumstance. 05 There are a lot of markers I won't get into that show 06 that this was a very important focus, the Wilson controversy 07 from July 7 to 14 because it was a direct attack on the 08 credibility of the administration, whether accurate or not, and 09 upon the vice president and people were attacking Mr. Libby. 10 So it was a focus. 11 And now to turn around and say on March 2003 or 12 December 1, 2004, we have to get into what the president is 13 briefed on in world affairs that isn't reflected in his notes, 14 that isn't worked on, without even looking at his calendars 15 which shows how he spent his day, all to show whether or not 16 what he said about a conversation on Monday, an conversation on 17 Wednesday, and a conversation on Friday where he said I didn't 18 know the man had a wife, when I think the evidence will show he 19 knew he had a wife and he told a number of people he had a 20 wife, and for that week, whether it should have been important 21 or not, it was, and to take that and go off into 11 months of 22 PDBs, when the notes are going to take a tremendous amount of 23 time, trigger many privilege issue, I think we're going to get 24 very far astray and shut down. 25 THE COURT: Are you suggesting that you should submit 00071 01 something to me from the CIA? 02 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes. And to counsel, to share just 03 outlining, and if it can be unclassified, it will be public. 04 THE COURT: How long will it take to do that, because 05 I want to get this matter resolved? And I would like to decide 06 this at the outside within two weeks. 07 MR. FITZGERALD: If we got it in next Thursday, would 08 that do it? 09 THE COURT: I guess so. Yes. Then I guess Mr. Wells 10 would submit something right after that. 11 MR. WELLS: Right, Your Honor. 12 MR. FITZGERALD: I'm sorry, Your Honor. We would 13 need sometime, if Mr. Wells is going to do a scaled back 14 request, then we would tell you the resources that would be 15 required from what he's asking. 16 THE COURT: So you are saying you would need his -- 17 MR. WELLS: This is easy. Look, Your Honor, I 18 understand. I don't think there is any dispute that the PDB 19 itself is in one place. Is there a dispute about that, that 20 the PDB is in one place? 21 MR. FITZGERALD: That would be disputed. 22 MR. WELLS: Is it disputed that it would take more 23 than three days to select the PDBs -- 24 THE COURT: Counsel, talk to me. 25 MR. WELLS: I'm sorry, Your Honor. 00072 01 THE COURT: I mean, unless you request that you can 02 talk to him. 03 MR. WELLS: Okay. Could I ask first, who is that 04 guy? 05 THE COURT: If you need to talk to him -- 06 MR. WELLS: Okay. I don't even know him, to be 07 honest with you, and I apologize, Your Honor. 08 THE COURT: I am from the old school even though I 09 still look young I think, you know, when I was trying cases 10 from over there, it was a long time ago and judges would kill 11 you if you talked to somebody else. 12 MR. WELLS: I apologize, Your Honor. It came from 13 the back and I was surprised. 14 THE COURT: Are you able to state what your agreement 15 would be? 16 MR. WELLS: Yes, Your Honor. Well, yes and no. My 17 agreement is I would like the PDB, the book that Mr. Libby was 18 briefed on six out of seven days a week along with the vice 19 president. 20 I would also like the inquiries if it turns out that 21 they are kept in one place. If the government comes -- when I 22 say "in one place," I mean if it would not be overly burdensome 23 in terms of people-hours to collect them. 24 If the government comes back and says it is going to 25 take three months just to find them, I'll take that off the 00073 01 table. I want to move this case as much as anybody. I believe 02 there cannot be any serious dispute that they can, in a 03 reasonable time, collect the PDBs for that period. I believe 04 that they are computerized and it can be done. If they came 05 back in and said, well, we can collect the PDBs which is the 06 first part -- 07 THE COURT: Why don't we do this? The government can 08 submit to us information from the CIA in reference to what it 09 would entail to acquire that documentation and I guess once he 10 does not, then that would give you a better idea as to what you 11 would be willing to concede on as far as your request. 12 MR. WELLS: That is fine, Your Honor. And as I said, 13 I am perfectly willing to try and be reasonable. Your Honor, I 14 would like to make one more point on this. 15 I think Mr. Fitzgerald in his last comment really 16 showed why the PDBs are so important to Mr. Libby. Mr. 17 Fitzgerald is going to stand up in this courtroom in front of 18 that jury and he's going to talk about the Wilson matter being 19 the most urgent or one of the most urgent matters confronting 20 President Bush's administration. He is going to make it seem 21 and he's going to say this was so important that how could he 22 have forgotten it. And I've got the right to respond back. 23 What he's trying to do, based on some argument about 24 time, well, in my business time kills. I will tell you. I 25 think we need time to make sure that my client gets the 00074 01 materials. And the fact that it may take an extra six months, 02 then so be it I would argue, Your Honor, because my request is 03 reasonable. It is right. None of this is made up. 04 THE COURT: So does that, based upon what you said, 05 then restrict your request or should it restrict your request, 06 just those days during which these conversations allegedly 07 occurred? 08 MR. WELLS: No, Your Honor, I don't think so because 09 I think we should be able to have the whole. If Your Honor 10 decides based on ruling and balancing that you're going to 11 restrict it to the days when he got the notes that would be 12 Your Honor's ruling based on the balancing of the interests. 13 But I think, I don't think he should be again, as basic as I 14 can say, I don't think he should be penalized because of his 15 job. 16 THE COURT: I understand. Can you do it a little 17 faster than that because I want to get this ruling made within 18 the next several weeks? 19 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, here is my concern. The 20 most important thing is the privilege issue is not the burden. 21 The burden issue is, Your Honor, ask us to collect and review. 22 THE COURT: I understand. 23 MR. FITZGERALD: Given that we are talking still now 24 about 275 PDBs and looking through them and what sources are 25 involved, what classification issues, who it comes from and 00075 01 going to the White House and saying, are you willing to do 02 something 275 times that may not have been done before and took 03 heaven and earth to move for the 9/11 commission for matters 04 not relevant. And you know U.S. versus Nixon and the Sealed 05 Case talk about matters relevant. Matters away from the issue 06 of Wilson's wife to collect and review, and it's not as if you 07 push a button and you turn these over and worry about it later. 08 THE COURT: As I call regarding the 9/11 commission 09 or at least regarding a Senate investigation regarding the 10 invasion of Iraq, there was an issue that came up about the 11 production of these presidential briefs, right? 12 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes. 13 THE COURT: And the White House never turned those 14 over, as I understand. 15 MR. FITZGERALD: I believe one PDB was redacted and 16 made publicly available and maybe two for the 9/11 commission 17 and I think that was it. 18 I might also point out. One thing I forgot to stress 19 is that the taskers, often the taskers are considered more 20 sensitive about the PDBs because they show what people are 21 focusing on. 22 But my point being, I'm not going to argue it was the 23 most important issue consuming the Bush administration. I will 24 argue during that week Mr. Libby was consumed with it to an 25 extent more than he should have been but he was and you can 00076 01 look at the time he spent with people. 02 When talking about Mr. Wilson for the first time, he 03 described himself as a former Hill staffer. He meets with 04 people off premises. There were some unusual things I won't 05 get into about that week. 06 My only point being, we will agree he was important 07 and he was a busy person. But to take 275 PDBs about matters 08 presumably not reflected in his notes about matters not having 09 to do with Wilson's wife, to throw that in front of the jury, 10 to go through all that effort and all the third rail of 11 privilege concerns -- 12 THE COURT: So your position would be that you would 13 not take exception with his position that he had a very weighty 14 job and with significant responsibilities and have those 15 responsibilities at the time when this was occurring but at 16 least at the time he was also consumed with this. 17 MR. FITZGERALD: Absolutely. 18 THE COURT: Thank you. 19 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, just one quick point. 20 Assuming the PDBs can be collected in a week, the only issue at 21 that juncture, Your Honor, is what privileges will the White 22 House assert. We can belief the issue and join issue because 23 all we are requesting at this time, and I think Mr. Fitzgerald 24 is mixing issues 25 THE COURT: I mean I'm not going to be concerned 00077 01 with, at least initially, the issue of the burden if I conclude 02 that they are material because, as I understand the law, I have 03 to make that materiality determination first. Once I make that 04 determination, then we address all these other issues at some 05 point after that. 06 MR. WELLS: Right. 07 THE COURT: I have to make that determination as to 08 whether he is entitled to it in the first instance. If he is, 09 then we have to work -- 10 MR. WELLS: Correct. But all I'm saying is that Mr. 11 Fitzgerald spent a lot of time talking about man-hours to 12 declassify things. For purposes of discovery all we're asking, 13 let's assume there were no privilege issues, all we're asking 14 for is for the documents to be put over in the skiff so we can 15 then talk about how would we do it. 16 Then at the end of the day you might decide, well, 17 Mr. Wells, based on everything, I'm going to let you have some 18 testimony from ten of them. And then they would have to some 19 way declassified those ten. 20 But at this juncture, all we're asking for is Mr. 21 Libby, who has already been cleared, has seen the documents, 22 for the defense team who has been clear to see the documents. 23 So there is no declassification issue because we haven't 24 determined if it is going to be used. 25 THE COURT: I understand. Your submission, Mr. 00078 01 Fitzgerald, that you think would help me in this regard, how 02 long do you think it would take? You said Thursday. Can it be 03 done sooner than that? 04 MR. FITZGERALD: When I said Thursday -- I keep being 05 told a week and I cheating on people by saying Thursday. Part 06 of it is I want to give Your Honor an accurate estimate and I 07 think the point isn't about the declassification review. It is 08 about seeing -- 09 THE COURT: Okay. You need until Thursday? 10 MR. FITZGERALD: Yes. 11 THE COURT: Mr. Wells, how long would you need after 12 that to submit whatever you want to submit based upon their 13 submissions? 14 MR. WELLS: Tuesday. 15 THE COURT: Okay. Then I will try to get you a 16 ruling within a week or two after that. 17 Okay. We need to move on to the final two matters I 18 guess. They're sort of similar. The damage issue I guess it 19 is. We are at that point. 20 MR. WELLS: Correct. And also the question of her 21 classified status. I would agree, Your Honor, that I think 22 they are both very related. Our core position -- THE 23 COURT: I don't want to cut you off but it may help. Does the 24 government intend to introduce any evidence that would relate 25 to either damage or potential damage that the alleged 00079 01 revelations by Mr. Libby caused or do you intend to introduce 02 any evidence related to Ms. Wilson's status and whether it was 03 classified or she was in a covert status or anything of that 04 nature? I think that will help us move this along. 05 MR. FITZGERALD: We don't intend to offer any proof 06 of actual damage. We're not going to get into whether that 07 would occur or not. It's not part of the perjury statute. 08 It's not part of the underlying statutes. 09 Just so I'm totally clear, we are not going to argue 10 that this is a trifling you know crime to lie about something; 11 and if someone was discussing this, this is an important 12 matter. So if someone were to argue we have been shown 13 materiality, it is important whether someone was discussing a 14 classified CIA employee's status. We are not going to get 15 into, and one of the things about -- 16 THE COURT: You will be seeking, however, to 17 establish the potential harm that these types of discussions 18 could have? 19 MR. FITZGERALD: No. But I don't know if the defense 20 is. If they're going to challenge materiality, I don't want to 21 act like it's no big deal he talked about her. Could I offer 22 one thing, though, judge? 23 Next week we have our Section 4 filing due. With 24 regard to her classified status, we were intending to make a 25 filing to Your Honor ex parte which I believe includes a 00080 01 proposed substitution of some information to give to the 02 defense. And part of dealing with this in the Rule 16 motion 03 ahead of that it seems to me to be putting the cart before the 04 horse because when we lay out to Your Honor what the situation 05 is and propose what we would disclose to the defense, we may be 06 on a better footing. 07 THE COURT: So you are only talking about 08 declassification. 09 MR. FITZGERALD: Declassification status, not the 10 damage assessment. 11 THE COURT: Do you disagree with that, Mr. Wells, 12 that that probably may help us in that regard? 13 MR. WELLS: If Your Honor would want to hold it off, 14 that piece, I'm perfectly -- we've been here a long time and 15 I'm perfectly happy. 16 THE COURT: I think that makes more sense so I would 17 defer ruling in reference to that until we get that submission. 18 Once we get it, if I think I need further argument, we'll let 19 you know. Otherwise, we'll just try and rule on the papers. 20 But if you want to state something in reference -- 21 MR. WELLS: Yes. If this might be my last chance to 22 argue it, I would like to argue it. Your Honor, Mr. Fitzgerald 23 has indicated correctly that under the perjury or obstruction 24 statues that showing actual damage is not an essential element 25 of the offense. We both agree with that. 00081 01 But there's no question, he is going to stand up in 02 front of that jury and he's going to convey to that jury that 03 Mr. Libby has engaged in a very serious crime involving 04 disclosing the identity of a CIA agent. It's in the 05 indictment. I don't even understand how the government can 06 draft the indictment, put these issues in play and then act 07 like it's not an issue at trial. 08 Now the indictment reads -- 09 THE COURT: But would I let that in? I mean I assume 10 there might be an objection to it and I would have to make a 11 balancing determination conceivably in the context of this type 12 of case and the charges that we are dealing with. There may be 13 some level of probative value. Obviously you're talking not 14 significant prejudice on the other hand. 15 MR. WELLS: Sure. 16 THE COURT: So I mean I'm not sure. I might you 17 know, assuming the government sought to introduce that 18 evidence, I'm not so sure I would necessarily let it in based 19 upon the charges before the court. 20 MR. WELLS: Right. Right. But for Rule 16 purposes, 21 as a defense, I can't live in the world of, well, maybe Judge 22 Walton will rule my way in January. I have to take the 23 indictment. That's where you have to start I submit. Start 24 with the indictment. The indictment says on page 2 -- 25 THE COURT: There would be nothing to preclude me 00082 01 from making a ruling at that time if it helped facilitate the 02 discovery issue, would there? 03 MR. WELLS: You mean make a ruling right now? 04 Because if you don't, in other words, I have to prepare -- 05 THE COURT: I understand. 06 MR. WELLS: See, as you know, Your Honor, I have to 07 prepare for motions I win and motions I lose. If I am on 08 notice, as I am, with this indictment, I have to prepare to 09 meet the allegation. 10 The indictment reads page 2, subparagraph (d), the 11 responsibilities of certain CIA employees required that their 12 association with the CIA be kept secret. 13 So what he has done in that first clause, he has 14 connected the responsibilities of what they're doing is what 15 drives the secrecy. He then goes on to say. As a result the 16 fact that these individuals were employed by the CIA was 17 classified. Disclosure of the fact that such individuals were 18 employed by the CIA had the potential to damage the national 19 security in ways that range from preventing the future use of 20 those individuals in a covert capacity to compromising 21 intelligence gathering methods and endangering the safety of 22 CIA employees and those who dealt with them. 23 I am on notice, Your Honor. He is saying that 24 whatever Mr. Libby did, it could put people in danger. 25 THE COURT: But just because it's alleged in the 00083 01 indictment does not make it necessarily admissible? I would 02 say obviously no. 03 MR. WELLS: It does not but, Your Honor, if I as a 04 defense lawyer when confronted with an indictment by any 05 prosecutor and there's an allegation there that I know could 06 be, as you said, extraordinarily prejudicial, if I didn't ask 07 for the Rule 16 discovery on that point that would be 08 malpractice. 09 THE COURT: I appreciate that. 10 Does the government intend to introduce that evidence 11 to support what he just read? 12 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, we may well argue 13 potential damage but what we're talking about here is actual 14 damage. The argument they are making is Mr. Libby had no 15 motive to lie to the grand jury. Since nothing bad happened, 16 there is no actual damage. There is no showing, not even an 17 attempt or proffer that Mr. Libby had any idea what the damage 18 was. If somebody took that filing that you had in the blue bag 19 locked and it says classified which means there is potential to 20 cause national security and I handed it out and lied about it 21 later -- 22 THE COURT: Is that evidence that you would be 23 introducing in your case-in-chief or is that evidence you would 24 seek to introduce in rebuttal if Mr. Libby, in fact, takes the 25 position? 00084 01 MR. FITZGERALD: We would never intend to put in 02 actual damage. Our only view would be the materiality of the 03 perjury is that, you know, it's a serious matter if he lied 04 about whether or not he talked about a CIA employee's 05 association and we believe that there will be evidence at the 06 trial that at times he talked about it with other people as if 07 he couldn't talk about it on an open telephone line or told 08 someone else it was hush hush or QT. 09 So we will argue that he knew or should have known it 10 was classified and that he was being investigated for 11 disclosing classified information. We will argue that he 12 committed the crime of lying. But we are not going to argue 13 and say, tell us Valorie Wilson's life history. Tell us what 14 actually happened. 15 THE COURT: I understand. 16 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, there will be a filing 17 of a Section 4 notice setting forth issues about damage 18 assessment so that's another issue that was flagged for the 19 CIPA filing. But in terms of Rule 16, actual damage is not 20 relevant in our view. 21 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, I fully accept his 22 representation that he will qualify whatever he says that is 23 not actually damage. But for 12 jurors sitting in that box 24 that distinction is for lawyers. Actual, comfortable 25 potential. What they're hearing is that, as Mr. Fitzgerald 00085 01 said in his press conference, Mr. Libby outted a CIA agent, and 02 they are going to be sitting in the box thinking 007's identity 03 has been disclosed and that my client is a terrible person. 04 Maybe if he would give me the discovery showing 05 whether she was classified, whether she was covert, I would be 06 in a position to make some educated judgments about how to try 07 this case. Ms. Wilson may be a witness. 08 THE COURT: Wouldn't it only become, as far as actual 09 damage, wouldn't it only become relevant if he actually knew 10 what her status was? 11 MR. WELLS: It might in terms of a actual damage. I 12 don't know. See, I might call Ms. Wilson. One of the 13 questions is, the indictment also says that outside of the 14 intelligence agency or community no one knew about her. I may 15 decide to call her. I may call her husband. There are going 16 to be CIA employees, operatives who are witnesses in this 17 trial. They may have a bias against Mr. Libby because they 18 think he outted somebody. 19 I need to understand is she covert or not. If she's 20 classified, is she really classified or is just classified 21 because some bureaucracy didn't unclassify her five years ago 22 when they should have. I just want to know the facts. 23 Rule 16 is not only about learning good stuff. It's 24 about me learning bad stuff that tells me as a defense lawyer 25 stay away, don't touch, it is dangerous. So you talk about the 00086 01 third rail, I want to know if that third rail on this issue is 02 on and can I get shocked by it. Or I want to know when he 03 stands up is there nothing to it because maybe she, even if she 04 was classified based on a piece of paper, it was some 05 bureaucracy. And I have a right to know those facts because it 06 is going to be an issue. 07 He has told you, Your Honor, he's going to say it in 08 opening, he's going to say it in summation. And then when I 09 sit down and can't talk anymore, he's going to get up there in 10 rebuttal and wind up and he's going to hit Mr. Libby and again 11 it's going to be like we have turned over the crown jewels 12 because we outted a classified CIA agent. I've got a right to 13 basic discovery on this issue, Your Honor, and that's all I'm 14 asking. 15 THE COURT: Anything else? 16 MR. FITZGERALD: I'll just say one thing. We are 17 trying a perjury case. What I am going to say to the jury in 18 opening and closing and rebuttal is that Mr. Libby knowingly 19 lied about what he did. And the issue is whether he knowingly 20 lied or not. And if there is information about actual damage, 21 whatever was caused or not caused that isn't in his mind, it is 22 not a defense. 23 If she turned out to be a postal driver mistaken for 24 a CIA employee, it's not a defense if you lie in a grand jury 25 under oath about what you said and you told people I didn't 00087 01 know he had a wife. I didn't know this. I learned it if it 02 was new. I just passed it on from one reporter to another 03 things I didn't hear anywhere else. That is what this case is 04 about. It is about perjury, if he knowingly lied or not. This 05 has no relevance to that. 06 THE COURT: Okay. 07 MR. WELLS: There is just one other point. As Your 08 Honor knows, on this particular issue, Mr. Fitzgerald has taken 09 a position that he didn't have the documents, that the 10 documents are housed at the CIA. We briefed the issues that, 11 because the CIA was the referring agency, that the CIA is 12 aligned with Mr. Fitzgerald. 13 Now I have asked Mr. Fitzgerald to give me the 14 referral. He responded in a letter that came I think two days 15 ago. I think it was February 21. I submitted it this morning, 16 where he refuses to give me the referral. I am going to brief 17 that on the next round. But in that letter, he asserts an 18 attorney-client relationship between the CIA and the Justice 19 Department. He says it is an attorney-client privileged 20 relationship so it is clear at least in terms of alignment that 21 they are aligned and I would refer to that letter. 22 THE COURT: Do you disagree with that, counsel? I 23 mean I think it seems to me there is a lot here that suggests 24 that there is a fairly close alliance between the prosecution 25 of this case and the CIA. 00088 01 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, alignment is a strange 02 word. We don't need to reach it in this case. Our argument 03 about not producing her file is not where is it located. It is 04 that it is not relevant and that there are security concerns, 05 not because it's in Langley's possession and not all ours, and 06 we will be addressing that in the Section 4 filing. We have 07 access to it. It's not one that we can't find. It's a 08 question of not being relevant, much less material and having 09 issues of national security that are implicated. 10 THE COURT: Obviously I'll await the filing that 11 you're going to make regarding the classification issue, and 12 once we get it, we'll get you out a written ruling. I think 13 these issues are close enough that I probably should just 14 reserve ruling on both of them and issue my ruling in writing 15 which I will do. It won't be long. I mean I'll get these out 16 fairly quickly. 17 MR. WELLS: We're going to have some more discussion 18 after he makes his filing? 19 THE COURT: If we feel that there is a need for 20 further argument, yes. 21 MR. WELLS: Okay. Thank you, Your Honor. 22 THE COURT: One moment. 23 (Pause.) 24 MR. WELLS: Your Honor, one thing Mr. Jeffress remind 25 me of that we will be filing by the end of the day an objection 00089 01 to any ex parte filings with respect to this issue. I don't 02 want you to be surprised. It is written, and as soon as we get 03 back to the office, we're going to proofread it and I'll be 04 filing it. 05 THE COURT: Okay. The only other issue I have and I 06 wasn't able to discern whether it was being at least suggested 07 that the defense was going to possibly call, and I know we are 08 far out from the trial but I want to get the heads-up on it, 09 expert testimony on memory and recall. 10 MR. WELLS: The answer to that is I don't know. 11 THE COURT: That would be a tough one for me to bite 12 on because it seems to me if we go down that path and we start 13 to conclude that memory and recall is a relevant issue in 14 criminal proceedings for experts to testify about, every case 15 involving people who have money to pay for experts turns into 16 an issue of who can win on the experts, and I have real issues 17 with that because it seems to me, you know, we live everyday 18 lives as the juries do making assessments on memory and it 19 seems to me we can't start to substitute as evidence expert 20 testimony on this type of issue. 21 MR. WELLS: Sure. Your Honor, as I said I don't 22 know. And I'll take your comments to heart. But could I just 23 say one thing on -- 24 THE COURT: Just let me know as far out as you can if 25 that's going to be an issue. 00090 01 MR. WELLS: Look, Your Honor, the honest answer is 02 you really couldn't make that decision until you knew what your 03 package looked like and then you have to sit with the expert 04 and you got to make a judgment, does it raise Daubert issues, 05 does it advance the ball. So right now I'm flying blind. 06 But I would say one point. It goes go right to what 07 Mr. Fitzgerald was saying. Some of the memory literature shows 08 that if Mr. Libby was focused on a certain issue let's say in 09 this period where he says he was obsessed with the Wilson 10 matter, whatever the word was that he used, and then he was 11 asked nine months later about it, that intervening events can 12 interfere with how the brain retrieves certain information even 13 though you had it back then. 14 The real question is what did he remember when he was 15 interviewed by the FBI and when he was in the grand jury. And 16 so the research shows that even if you have encoded something 17 the day you heard it, if by the time you asked about it, it is 18 very possible you can't get it back, and if you get it back, 19 you get it back wrong even if you believe you got it back 20 right. That type of research exists but I'll take Your Honor's 21 comments to heart. 22 THE COURT: Okay. Get me that information I've 23 requested and we'll get your rulings expeditiously because I 24 know we want to move this matter along. 25 Anything else? 00091 01 MR. WELLS: No, Your Honor. 02 MR. FITZGERALD: Your Honor, we had talked about 03 having a Section 2 conference, a closed one. I would suggest 04 in the interest of brevity and open proceeding, talking to Mr. 05 Cline, I think there's nothing to discuss at that conference 06 that we haven't discussed already. 07 THE COURT: Do you agree? 08 MR. WELLS: I do. 09 THE COURT: Thank you. Have a good weekend. 10 (Proceedings adjourned at 4:49 p.m.) 11 CERTIFICATE OF REPORTER 12 I CERTIFY THAT THE FOREGOING IS A CORRECT TRANSCRIPT 13 FROM THE RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS IN THE ABOVE-ENTITLED MATTER. 14 WILLIAM D. MCALLISTER 15 OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 16
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