Government's AP Spying Part of a Larger Pattern of Targeting the Press
Feds try to choke off whistleblowers' contacts with the press
As part of a new leak investigation, the Justice Department has secretly obtained the call records for twenty phone lines owned by the Assocated Press (AP), which could put sources for as many as one hundred reporters at risk. The AP called the move a "massive and unprecedented intrusion," saying they "regard this action by the Department of Justice as a serious interference with AP's constitutional rights to gather and report the news."
We agree. It's time to stop looking at all of these leak investigations and prosecutions as ancillary to press freedom; they are a direct attack on it. This should be an important wake-up call for journalists.
While this incident has brought the Justice Department's crackdown on leakers to a new extreme, it's important to remember, this storm has been brewing for a while now. In five years, the Obama administration has prosecuted more leakers under the Espionage Act than all other administrations combined, and virtually all these prosecutions have engulfed journalists one way or another.
As part of this current investigation, we've known the FBI has been data mining government officials' phone and email records for months, looking for links to journalists on a systematic scale. The Washington Post reported in January, the FBI is using new, "sophisticated software to identify names, key words and phrases embedded in e-mails and other communications, including text messages, which could lead them to suspects."
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