from SLATE:

Obama’s War on Journalists
His administration’s leak investigations are outrageous and unprecedented.

By Emily Bazelon|Posted Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at 6:32 PM

Attorney General Eric Holder has said that he doesn’t want the Obama
administration’s leak prosecutions “to be his legacy.” But he has also
trumpeted the cases—six and counting—in response to criticism from
Senate Republicans. “We have tried more leak cases—brought more leak
cases during the course of this administration than any other
administration,” Holder said before the Senate Judiciary Committee
last year.

This shouldn’t be a source of pride, even the fake point-scoring kind.
In light of the Justice Department’s outrageously broad grab of the
phone records of reporters and editors at the Associated Press, the
administration’s unprecedented criminalizing of leaks has become
embarrassing. This is not what Obama’s supporters thought they were
getting. Obama the candidate strongly supported civil liberties and
protections for whistle-blowers. Obama the president risks making
government intrusion into the investigative work of the press a
galling part of his legacy.

Here’s the official excuse, from the Justice Department’s letter to AP
today and from the daily White House press briefing: “The president
feels strongly that we need the press to be able to be unfettered in
its pursuit of investigative journalism,” press secretary Jay Carney
said. “He is also mindful of the need for secret and classified
information to remain secret and classified in order to protect our
national security interests.” That sounds like a perfectly reasonable
balancing, but in practice, it’s not. Between 1917 and 1985, there was
one successful federal leak prosecution. The Obama White House, by
contrast, has pursued leaks “with a surprising relentlessness,” as
Jane Mayer wrote in her masterful New Yorker piece about the
prosecution of Thomas Drake. Of Holder and Obama’s six unlucky
targets, Drake is the guy who best fits the whistle-blower profile: He
gave information to a Baltimore Sun reporter who wrote “a
prize-winning series of articles for the Sun about financial waste,
bureaucratic dysfunction, and dubious legal practices” in the National
Security Agency. After years of hounding, the case against Drake fell
apart, and he wound up pleading guilty to one misdemeanor. No jail
time.

The Drake prosecution started under President George W. Bush. So did
the leak prosecution of Jeffrey Sterling, the former CIA officer
charged with disclosing information about Iran to James Risen of the
New York Times. But Obama’s Justice Department has also launched its
own prosecutions, as the AP probe underscores. As Scott Shane and
Charlie Savage pointed out last year in the New York Times, it was in
2009, the first year of Obama’s presidency, that DOJ and the director
of national intelligence created a taskforce that “streamlined
procedures to follow up on leaks.” At the same time, the increasing
prevalence of electronic records made investigations easier. The
result, as Shane and Savage write, is that while the Justice
Department used to be “where leak complaints from the intelligence
agencies went to die,” now they are being kept alive.

Nor is there a law or a Supreme Court reading of the constitution to
kill them. Timothy Lee lays it out nicely on Wonkblog so I don’t have
to: You don’t have a right to protect information that you give to
someone else. That’s what the Supreme Court thinks phones calls
are—the act of dialing. This could apply to the content of email that
lives in the cloud—gmail! Journalists get the benefit of a rule the
Justice Department has made for itself, supposedly to prevent
interference with the First Amendment–protected work of reporters. The
rule says that the attorney general has to approve the demand for
records, and that DOJ lawyers have to take all the other reasonable
steps they can before drawing up a subpoena, and then write it as
narrowly as possible. But the AP probe, and other examples of
surveillance of reporters, show that the rules only mean so much.

In Tuesday’s letter to the AP, Deputy Attorney General James Cole said
that in this case, DoJ “undertook a comprehensive investigation,
including, among other investigative steps, conducting over 550
interviews and reviewing tens of thousands of documents, before
seeking the toll records at issue.” But that doesn’t really tell us
whether this ordering up of phone records was a valid response to an
egregious leak that breached national security, or another Drake
affair. The AP thinks the Justice Department wants to know how it
reported a story in May 2012 about the CIA’s foiling of a plot by
al-Qaida’s Yemen affiliate to plant a bomb on a plane. Here’s the
story. The AP said at the time that it actually held off publishing
for a week, in response to White House and CIA requests, “because the
sensitive intelligence operation was still under way.” The government
knows things I don’t, of course, but reading the story now, it’s hard
to see a threat to national security in the content—it’s just not all
that detailed.

Whether a leak threatens national security is clearly not the standard
Holder and his department are using. And the problem is that the
standard is up to them. The 1917 Espionage Act, the basis for most of
these cases, was written to go after people who compromised military
operations. Back in 1973, the major law review article on that statute
concluded that Congress never intended to go after journalists with
it, or even their sources. Since then, legal scholars have proposed
various ways of narrowing the Espionage Act—University of Chicago law
professor Geoffrey Stone wants to limit the law’s reach to cases in
which there’s proof that a reporter knows publication will wreck
national security without contributing to the public debate. But
Congress has done nothing of the sort. Wouldn’t it be nice if the
Republicans who are indignant over the AP investigation got serious
about reform? Somehow, I doubt it. Instead, with a Democratic White
House leading the charge, it’s hard to see who will stop this train.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to