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Journalism

Embarrassed by Leaks, Feds Raid Washington Post Journalist's Home

Agents seized devices and data but already had what they needed to prosecute the leaker.

J.D. Tuccille | 1.26.2026 7:00 AM

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FBI agents raiding a suburban home; journalist Hannah Natanson. | Illustration: CNP for NY Post/picture alliance / Consolidated News Photos/Newscom/The Harvard Crimson
(Illustration: CNP for NY Post/picture alliance / Consolidated News Photos/Newscom/The Harvard Crimson)

On January 14, FBI agents, apparently seeking a shortcut in their investigation of a government contractor accused of illegally possessing classified materials, raided the home of a Washington Post reporter. Agents seized Hannah Natanson's devices, including both personal and work-issued computers. Now the matter is in court with the government barred by judicial order from reviewing the seized data until litigation is resolved. Important constitutional issues hang in the balance.

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Venezuela Leaks Lead to FBI Raid

"Investigators told Natanson that she is not the focus of the probe," according to The Washington Post. "The warrant said that law enforcement was investigating Aurelio Perez-Lugones, a system administrator in Maryland who has a top-secret security clearance and has been accused of accessing and taking home classified intelligence reports from secure government facilities that were later found in his lunch box and his basement."

Shortly after the raid, President Donald Trump said the federal government had caught "a very bad leaker" regarding U.S. policy in Venezuela, where American forces recently deposed President (and dictator) Nicolás Maduro. Natanson has written extensively on the subject.

U.S. law forbids federal agents "to search for or seize any work product materials possessed by a person reasonably believed to have a purpose to disseminate to the public a newspaper, book, broadcast, or other similar form of public communication." But it includes an exception allowing that "such a search or seizure may be conducted under the provisions of this paragraph if the offense consists of the receipt, possession, or communication of information relating to the national defense, classified information, or restricted data." Basically, despite ostensibly strong protections for people engaged in journalism, the government gave itself a free pass so long as it invokes magic words related to "national security."

Endangered Sources and Prior Restraint

Further complicating the raid is that the FBI didn't just seize files related to Perez-Lugones, who had messaged Natanson. It seized all her devices, which contain research on numerous stories across years, many of which offended or embarrassed federal officials. It also includes information intended to be used in stories yet to be written. That material is now accessible for government perusal, subject only to vague assurances that officials won't act like snoopy houseguests pawing through the medicine cabinet.

"Over the past year on this beat, Natanson gained 1,169 confidential sources—federal employees from more than 120 agencies or subagencies who requested anonymity because they 'fear retribution from the government due to their disclosures,'" the Post's attorneys object in an affidavit filed with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia that raises First Amendment concerns.  "Natanson's devices contain essentially her entire professional universe: more than 30,000 Post emails from the last year alone, confidential information from and about sources (including her sources and her colleagues' sources), recordings of interviews, notes on story concepts and ideas, drafts of potential stories, communications with colleagues about sources and stories, and The Post's content management system that houses all articles in progress."

Further, the affidavit calls the seizure of stories in progress an exercise in unconstitutional prior restraint that results in "generally impairing her ability to publish the stories she otherwise would have published but for the raid."

Press and Civil Liberty Groups Cite First Amendment Concerns

In support of the Post and Natanson, Bruce D. Brown, president of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, warned that "physical searches of reporters' devices, homes, and belongings are some of the most invasive investigative steps law enforcement can take." He added, "this is a tremendous escalation in the administration's intrusions into the independence of the press."

"Our First Amendment protects freedom of the press — including journalistic publication of leaked government secrets — as well as freedom for the public to access such information," agreed a joint statement by 31 press and civil liberties organizations. The statement called for the reintroduction and passage by Congress of the PRESS Act, so-far unsuccessful legislation that "prohibits the federal government from compelling journalists and providers of telecommunications services (e.g., phone and internet companies) to disclose certain protected information, except in limited circumstances such as to prevent terrorism or imminent violence."

The organizations also call for reform of the Espionage Act, which was reinterpreted by the Obama administration for use against journalists and their sources. The Trump administration subsequently used the World War I-era law to indict WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Whatever the court's ultimate reaction to arguments by The Washington Post and its supporters, federal officials can't yet make use of Natanson's seized information. In response to the Post's affidavit, on January 21, U.S. Magistrate Judge William B. Porter forbade federal agents to dig through Natanson's seized devices, at least until a hearing on the dispute in February. "The government must preserve but must not review any of the materials that law enforcement seized pursuant to search warrants the Court issued," reads his order.

The Raid Looks Like Harassment

Complicating the federal government's case is that its own prosecutors don't seem to believe they need Natanson's data to proceed. On January 22, Kelly O. Hayes, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, announced the indictment of Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones on "five counts of unlawfully transmitting and one count of unlawfully retaining classified national defense information."

The indictment makes clear that investigators retrieved a treasure trove of evidence from Perez-Lugones himself. That includes specific classified documents he retrieved and copied, messages to "Reporter1" found on his phone (presumably Natanson), and subsequent articles that cited the information.

Given that the Justice Department apparently has everything it needs to go forward with the prosecution of Perez-Lugones for leaking classified information, the raid on Natanson and seizure of her devices looks like harassment of a journalist who annoyed powerful people combined with a general search for anything the government might not want revealed.

The government doesn't get to torment people who receive and publish information that's inconvenient to the powers that be. It certainly isn't entitled to go trawling through private property for information it doesn't want to see the light of day. Hopefully, Natanson and The Washington Post will deliver a well-deserved slap to the Trump administration.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Your Wi-Fi Router Was Probably Made in China. Does That Mean It's a National Security Threat?

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

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  1. Longtobefree   3 hours ago

    Now that everyone is a "journalist", what does the "free press" part of the first amendment really mean?

    Is the Washington Post really a "news"paper, or just a propaganda outlet?

    Why is it so bad when Trump does stuff democrats do?

    Who is John Galt?

    Log in to Reply
    1. SQRLSY   1 hour ago

      Pure twataboutism!

      Butt, whatabout that them thar whatabouts? Twatabout Hillary? Whatabout OJ Simpson?

      How many brain cells does it take to run a socio-political simulation on the following:

      Judge and Jury: “Murderer, we find you guilty of murder! 20 years in the hoosegow for YOU! Now OFF with ye!”

      Murderer: “But OJ Simpson got off for murder, why not me? We’re all equal, and need to be treated likewise-equal!”

      Judge and Jury: “Oh, yes, sure, we forgot about that! You’re free to go! Have a good life, and try not to murder too many MORE people, please! Goodbye!”

      Now WHERE does this line of thinking and acting lead to? Think REALLY-REALLY HARD now, please! What ABOUT OJ Simpson, now? Can we make progress towards peace & justice in this fashion?

      (Ass for me, I think we should have PUT THE SQUEEZE on OJ!)

      Log in to Reply
    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 hour ago

      Not everyone is a journalist. Conservative journalists are still called YouTube rs by reason.

      Log in to Reply
    3. Nelson   1 hour ago

      “ Now that everyone is a "journalist", what does the "free press" part of the first amendment really mean?”

      That the government still doesn’t get to decide who counts as a journalist. If James O’Keefe counts, anyone counts.

      “ Is the Washington Post really a "news"paper, or just a propaganda outlet?”

      It’s a newspaper. The fact that the hard right doesn’t like the news they report doesn’t change that fact.

      “ Why is it so bad when Trump does stuff democrats do?”

      A sad combination of a false accusation and whataboutism. Typical if MAGA, but pathetic all the same.

      “ Who is John Galt?”

      MAGA invoking a libertarian character in defense of the government ignoring Constitutional rights is rich. And pathetic.

      Log in to Reply
    4. Weigel's Cock Ring   24 minutes ago

      It's a dying propaganda outlet that probably isn't going to be around for too much longer. It has so much negative value at this point that Bezos probably couldn't even give away ownership for nothing.

      I guess you can still use the dead tree version to pick up dog shit at least.

      Log in to Reply
  2. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 hours ago

    …illegally possessing classified materials

    Working for the press doesn’t get you a free pass.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Fu Manchu   1 hour ago

      Right, because 1A cites the government's need for national security and not freedom of the press. It's not like she had any sort of right to report on the government. And it's not like this has been done 1000s of times before, like with the Snowden leaks and the Pentagon Papers.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 hour ago

        It a journalist was hiding a murder weapon, voild they have their house searched sarc?

        As usual you comment with no understanding of reality or the situation.

        The journalist isnt being charged for retention of classified documents. They are finding evidence of a felony she has in her residence for a criminal.

        Journalists aren't a special class despite your love of Maddow.

        She has evidence of a crime. Full stop. Just like any of us if we had evidence could be searched. There is no special journalist class to the constitution fucking retard.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Nelson   1 hour ago

          And yet they seized everything. Perhaps you believe that an administration as petty and vengeful as this one won’t search everything and build an enemies list iff of it. If so you’re lying to yourself.

          Log in to Reply
    2. SQRLSY   1 hour ago

      Only being The Emperor Shitself gets ye a PervFected Pass! Then You can use Your PervFected Magic Mind Tricks, and magically declassify materials on the spot! Then you can take the top-secret docs home with you, for which crime any peon would be jailed, or worse!

      https://www.politico.com/news/2022/09/21/trump-i-could-declassify-documents-by-thinking-about-it-00058212

      Trump: I could declassify documents by thinking about it
      The former president insisted in an interview with Sean Hannity that the documents at issue in the Mar-a-Lago probe were all declassified. Evidence, he added, isn’t really needed.

      Log in to Reply
  3. Nelson   1 hour ago

    No, this administration isn’t an authoritarian, rights-ignoring, unaccountable blight on America. Not at all.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Fu Manchu   1 hour ago

      Most libertarian administration ever.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 hour ago

        Yeah I know. He didnt increase taxes like you wanted, he went after USAID and fraud which you hated, he held bureaucrats responsible for illegal acts, went after public unions, deregulated weakening controls of markets...

        You hate him sarc. We get it. Viva la Democrats retarded leftist shit.

        Log in to Reply

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