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White House official Libby guilty White House official Libby guilty
(20 minutes later)
A former key White House official, Lewis Libby, has been found guilty of obstruction of justice and perjury.A former key White House official, Lewis Libby, has been found guilty of obstruction of justice and perjury.
Libby, ex-chief of staff to Vice-President Dick Cheney, faces a prison term of up to 25 years. He will be sentenced in June.Libby, ex-chief of staff to Vice-President Dick Cheney, faces a prison term of up to 25 years. He will be sentenced in June.
He was accused of lying to the FBI and a grand jury over revelations about CIA agent Valerie Plame's identity.He was accused of lying to the FBI and a grand jury over revelations about CIA agent Valerie Plame's identity.
Correspondents say the case shed light on the inner workings of the George W Bush White House. Libby's lawyer said they were "very disappointed" at the verdict, and would ask for a new trial, or would appeal.
Libby was found guilty on four out of five counts. He was acquitted on one count of lying to the FBI.
'Honest lapses'
Correspondents say the case shed light on the inner workings of the Bush White House.
Critics claimed the White House had deliberately leaked Ms Plame's identity to ruin her career. Her husband, former ambassador Joseph Wilson, had publicly cast doubt on the Bush administration's case for going to war in Iraq.
LIBBY CHARGES AND VERDICT Two counts of perjury - guilty on bothTwo counts of making false statements - guilty on oneOne count of obstruction of justice - guilty Send us your comments
It can be a crime to reveal the identity of an undercover CIA agent.
The alleged cover-up rather than the leak itself was the subject of the trial.
Libby told FBI investigators and a grand jury investigating the leak of Ms Plame's name, that he had learned of her identity as a CIA agent from reporters.
However, several people testified that he discussed her identity before the date he said he learned of it.
"He claims he forgot nine conversations with eight people over a four-week period," prosecution lawyer Peter Zeidenberg said in his closing statement.
The defence maintained that Libby's false statements were the results of honest lapses in memory by a man tasked with extraordinary responsibility.
"He was bombarded with a blizzard of information. Those briefings would make your toes curl," defence lawyer Theodore Wells said.