Man Who Secretly Recorded Mitch McConnell Meeting Explains Actions
Doesn't regret it
Earlier this year, I secretly made an audio recording of Sen. Mitch McConnell, the most powerful Republican on the planet, at his campaign headquarters in Kentucky. The released portion of the recording clocks in at less than 12 minutes, but those few minutes changed my life.
I leaked the recording to Mother Jones, which published it with a transcript and analysis in April, and over the days that followed, blogs and cable news shows lit up with the revelations from that one meeting. At the time, McConnell was prepping for a race against the actress Ashley Judd — it was "the Whac-a-Mole stage of the campaign," McConnell said smugly — and the recording captures his team in some Grade-A jackassery, including plans to use Judd's history of depression against her.
But also up for debate was the the ethics of the audio recording itself. Here's the latest: An assistant U.S. attorney, Brian Calhoun, telephoned my attorney yesterday, asking to meet with him next Friday as charges against me are being presented to a grand jury.
(Hat tip to Julian Sanchez)
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Then Snoop, you haven't been paying attention.
It's about power. John Yarmuth knows that he could be the next target of a secret recording.
If the secret recording had been about a Biden or Clinton campaign, the howling wouldn't stop until the "victim" was in the White House.