The Two-Headed Monster of White House Leaks
Leaking privileged information helps keep the powerful accountable, but it also undermines the president's ability to do his job.


Last week, President Donald Trump erupted with fury over a series of public revelations of private facts — some top-secret and some office gossip — that painted him and his White House in a bad light. The president ordered the FBI to investigate some of these so-called leaks and his own White House counsel to investigate others.
There are numerous issues related to the leaking of government information. They include the leaking of classified information, the leaking of confidential communications and the publishing of leaked material.
Here is the back story.
It is a felony to reveal classified information to any person who lacks a classified clearance, as some in the intelligence community have recently done to embarrass, control, intimidate or infuriate the president. The National Security Agency employs over 60,000 domestic spies, but they work in compartmentalized areas. Thus, not all of them have access to all the data collected by all of their colleagues. Only about 100 spies have access to the top-secret data that was leaked about the president.
When members of the intelligence community leaked lurid allegations about the future president's alleged behavior in a Moscow hotel room, which he has vehemently denied, and when some leaked the partial transcripts of telephone conversations between retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and the Russian ambassador to the U.S. — shortly before Flynn became the president's national security adviser — and when some leaked an intelligence report that contradicted the president's publicly stated conclusions on the likelihood of dangerous people immigrating to the U.S. from the seven predominately Muslim countries named in the president's now enjoined temporary travel ban, one can understand the presidential anger.
And leaks are a two-sided coin. Adding to Trump's woes caused by too much revealing is the other side of that coin — too much concealing. This comes into play when one has a duty to reveal. That duty arises from the legal obligation of spies to pass on to their superiors — and ultimately to the president — all of the material information they have acquired about America's friends and enemies.
Selectively concealing and revealing this type of intelligence data, thereby manipulating the presidential judgment, when one has a duty to reveal substantially all of it is a form of interference with a governmental function — namely, the president's exercise of his judgment — and that is a felony.
As if all this were not enough for a young presidency to deal with, Trump finds himself with a White House staff leaking to the press Oval Office gossip about confidential conversations from within the White House that the participants in those conversations had every reason to believe would not be made public. This resulted in the temporary seizure of government-issued cellphones held by a dozen or so staffers so their bosses could learn whether any had spoken to the press. The cellphones episode was itself leaked, apparently by a participant not happy with it.
What's going on here?
These events are either the growing pains of a new presidential administration, still partially staffed by those loyal to former President Barack Obama, or the product of sinister forces from people attempting to exercise their own judgment about America's foes by frustrating and manipulating the judgment of the president — whom the voters elected to exercise the constitutional powers to make those judgment calls. The latter situation would be perilous, as it would mean we have unelected, unaccountable, and unnamed people pulling the levers of power in the field of national security.
The leaks of confidential communications from within the White House may be a pain in the neck for the president, but they are not criminal. And generally, a boss can look at an employee's cellphone, as long as the employer of the boss and the employee owns the phone — except when the employer is the government. The Fourth Amendment insulates government employees from governmental reach into its employees' cellphones. Absent an employee's waiving his Fourth Amendment rights, the government may not seize work-related (governmental) or personal phones without a search warrant.
Can the media publish these leaks?
In a word, yes. The media may publish anything that is of material interest to the public, notwithstanding its level of secrecy or how it was acquired. The First Amendment — which the courts have construed to treat the media as the eyes and ears of the public — protects absolutely the publication by the media of leaked data, whether gossip or top-secret, that the public wants to hear.
The courts have also ruled that everything about the president is of material public interest — meaning no criminal or civil action can be taken against the media for the publication of any leaked materials that reflect on the president as a person or as a government official. When The New York Times published a probably stolen copy of Trump's tax returns, it did so with impunity.
One can see why Trump rails against the press. Yet he has taken an oath to preserve, protect and defend the very constitutional principles that protect and liberate a free press from the anger of the government, no matter how well-grounded that anger may be. One of his predecessors who was savaged by the press, Thomas Jefferson, wrote that accountability and transparency in government are of such overriding value that he'd prefer newspapers without a government to a government without newspapers.
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These leaks wouldn't be necessary if the government didn't lie so baldly.
They literally began their administration by arguing there were more people in one photo than the other.
But in a world where millions of people will argue over the color of an ugly dress in a picture online, maybe there really is no such thing as agreeing over the obvious.... smdh
At least the dress disagreement can be explained as a neuro-optical phenomenon. People aren't lying when they say the dress is one color or the other.
Besides, leaks might in some cases hinder a politician, but more often they seem to be used by politicians.
They literally began their administration by arguing there were more people in one photo than the other
If you are referring to NYT photo of the inaugural, the time stamps show Obama inaugural at 11:30 Obama's swearing at 12:00, Trump inaugural photo time stamp 11:00 swearing at 13:00. Makes a difference, No? Even CNN photos show a much larger crowd than NYT.
Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch hardest hit:
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Of course we also have the New York Times running a national TV ad campaign in which they promise to get the Truth out about Trump. The Truth about his Russian ties, the Truth about his lies.... they literally are paying millions to advertise themselves as the arbiters of Truth who will destroy Trump. And they are even doing so on FOX news shows.
So clearly they thing bragging about having an antagonistic relationship with Trump is good for business.
Relevant link
Meanwhile, the NYT also has the story that the Obama administration disseminated intelligence about Trump's campaign and Russia internally in hopes that they would be able to use that intelligence to undermine Trump later.... er, rather "to preserve the information and leave a trail for future investigations".
In other words, having people inside the various agencies and the white house resisting Trump with leaks to the press is a preplanned strategy by the Obama administration. On would have to assume that Russia was only one aspect of that strategy.
Compare and contrast Bush II bending over backward to help Obama, even as Obama took credit for Bush policies and blamed Bush for all the evil in the world. Now Obama gave some lip service to being gracious and a good citizen, but just like Clinton before him, they are doing whatever they can to undermine the peaceful transfer of power.
The New York Times as Truth. Ha.
See Scott Shackford's March 1 article on how the NYT "truthfully" reported on the gun rights bill that Trump just signed.
Or maybe, just maybe, some staffers really dislike Trump? Little soon to deem it an Obama conspiracy methinks...
""""It is a felony to reveal classified information to any person who lacks a classified clearance"""
There is also a "need to know" factor, just because you have a secret clearance does not mean you can be told anything that is classified secret. You are only allowed to know secret information needed for you to perform your job.
You are absolutely right! There is also a requirement for the chain of custody.
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