Am Guilty of Violating the Espionage Act

The Justice Department is setting a dangerous precedent that threatens 
reporters — and the truth.

By Laura Poitras

Ms. Poitras is a filmmaker and journalist who has reported extensively on 
national security issues. She shared a Pulitzer Prize for public service with 
The Guardian and The Washington Post for her reporting on the N.S.A.’s mass 
surveillance program and is a founding board member of the Freedom of the Press 
Foundation.

 Dec. 21, 2020

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/21/opinion/laura-poitras-assange-espionage-act.html

I am guilty of violating the Espionage Act, Title 18, U.S. Code Sections 793 
and 798. If charged and convicted, I could spend the rest of my life in prison.

This is not a hypothetical. Right now, the United States government is 
prosecuting a publisher under the Espionage Act. The case could set a precedent 
that would put me and countless other journalists in danger.

I confess that I — alongside journalists at The Guardian, The Washington Post 
and other news organizations — reported on and published highly classified 
documents from the National Security Agency provided by the whistle-blower 
Edward Snowden, revealing the government’s global mass surveillance programs. 
This reporting was widely recognized as a public service.

The Espionage Act defines the unauthorized possession or publication of 
“national defense” or classified information as a felony. The law was 
originally enacted during World War I to prosecute “spies and saboteurs.” It 
does not allow for a public interest defense, which means a jury is barred from 
taking into account the difference between a whistle-blower exposing government 
crimes to the press, and a spy selling state secrets to a foreign government.

Before Sept. 11, 2001, the Espionage Act was rarely used in the context of 
journalism. The most notable exception is the case of Daniel Ellsberg, who in 
1971 was charged with violating the Espionage Act for providing news 
organizations, including The Times, with the Pentagon Papers. The charges 
against Mr. Ellsberg were dropped when the illegal methods of the government’s 
evidence gathering — breaking into his psychiatrist’s office and warrantless 
wiretapping — were exposed.

All this changed after Sept. 11, when the Espionage Act became a tool of the 
government to selectively prosecute sources and whistle-blowers, and to 
intimidate journalists and news organizations seeking to publish reports that 
the government wanted to suppress. During Barack Obama’s presidency alone, the 
Justice Department prosecuted eight journalism-related Espionage Act cases 
against sources, more leak prosecutions than all previous administrations 
combined.

One of the most alarming abuses of the Espionage Act under President Obama was 
the case of Stephen Kim, a State Department analyst who in 2010 was indicted 
under the law for disclosing classified information to the Fox News journalist 
James Rosen. In the Justice Department’s search warrant, Mr. Rosen is described 
as a possible “co-conspirator.” Mr. Rosen was ultimately not charged, but 
tragically Mr. Kim pleaded guilty to one count of violating the Espionage Act 
and served 10 months in prison. (I produced a film about the case.)

Despite this escalation of prosecuting whistle-blowers and sources, the 
government had never crossed the line to charging journalists or publishers for 
receiving or releasing classified information — until last year.

That was when the Justice Department indicted Julian Assange, the founder and 
publisher of WikiLeaks, with 17 counts of violating the Espionage Act, on top 
of one earlier count of conspiring to violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

The charges against Mr. Assange date back a decade, to when WikiLeaks, in 
collaboration with The Guardian, The New York Times, Der Spiegel and others, 
published the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs, and subsequently partnered with 
The Guardian to publish State Department cables. The indictment describes many 
activities conducted by news organizations every day, including obtaining and 
publishing true information of public interest, communication between a 
publisher and a source, and using encryption tools.

I made a film about Mr. Assange and WikiLeaks called “Risk.” I filmed Mr. 
Assange for many years, and as the film shows, we had serious disagreements. 
There are many reasons to be critical of Mr. Assange, and I have not shied away 
from them. But we should be clear about what he is being prosecuted for and the 
stakes for press freedom.

WikiLeaks’ publications exposed war crimes, revealed previously undisclosed 
civilian deaths in American-occupied Iraq, detailed government corruption in 
Tunisia on the eve of the Arab Spring, and generated countless other reports 
that dominated the front pages of newspapers around the world throughout 2010 
and 2011.

WikiLeaks was responsible for the most unvarnished reporting on American 
occupations and foreign policy since the start of the “war on terror,” and 
helped to shift the public consciousness.

None of the architects of the “war on terror,” including the C.I.A.’s torture 
programs, have been brought to justice. In contrast, Mr. Assange is facing a 
possible sentence of up to 175 years in prison.

He is detained at Belmarsh, a high-security prison in London, recently under 
lockdown because of a coronavirus outbreak, and fighting extradition to the 
United States. A British judge is expected to rule on his extradition on Jan. 
4. On Wednesday, 15 members of Britain’s Parliament issued a letter to the 
secretary of state to meet with Mr. Assange ahead of the extradition decision, 
citing concerns of press freedom.

I have experienced the chilling effect of the Espionage Act. When I was in 
contact with Mr. Snowden, then an anonymous whistle-blower, I spoke to one of 
the best First Amendment lawyers in the country. His response was unnerving. He 
read the Espionage Act out loud and said it had never been used against a 
journalist, but there is always a first time. He added that I would be a good 
candidate because I am a documentary filmmaker without the backing of a news 
organization.

It is impossible to overstate the dangerous precedent Mr. Assange’s indictment 
under the Espionage Act and possible extradition sets: Every national security 
journalist who reports on classified information now faces possible Espionage 
Act charges. It paves the way for the United States government to indict other 
international journalists and publishers. And it normalizes other countries’ 
prosecution of journalists from the United States as spies.

To reverse this dangerous precedent, the Justice Department should immediately 
drop these charges and the president should pardon Mr. Assange.

Since Sept. 11, this country has witnessed an escalating criminalization of 
whistle-blowing and journalism. If Mr. Assange’s case is allowed to go forward, 
he will be the first, but not the last. If President-elect Joe Biden wants to 
restore the “soul of America,” he should begin with unequivocally safeguarding 
press freedoms under the First Amendment, and push Congress to overturn the 
Espionage Act.

Laura Poitras shared a Pulitzer Prize for public service with The Guardian and 
The Washington Post for her reporting on the N.S.A.’s mass surveillance 
program. She directed the film CITIZENFOUR and is a founding board member of 
the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to