DOJ Falsely Claimed That Reporter James Rosen Was Involved In Bombings In Trying To Hide Fact It Spied On Him
from the whoa dept
Okay, here's one that's just crazy. A few weeks ago, lots of folks, including us, covered the story of how the Justice Department claimed to a court that reporter James Rosen was "an aider and abettor and/or co-conspirator" in a leak of some State Department info concerning North Korea. He was none of the above. He was a reporter, but the DOJ was abusing its power in order to spy on his email and phone records, to try to find the source of the leak. Soon after that, it came out that the DOJ had been working overtime to make sure that the details of the surveillance of Rosen's communications was held under seal.However, some are noticing an odd statement in the DOJ's filing to try to keep the case under seal. In what is likely a case of an overworked DOJ lawyer just cutting and pasting from a different attempt to keep some surveillance a secret, one of the motions to keep the search warrant sealed falsely claimed that Rosen was involved in a bombing, rather than just disclosing information on North Korea.
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Filed Under: bombing, cut and paste, doj, james rosen, lying to court, prosecution, reporting, typos, under seal
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come on now
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Constitution
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Re: Constitution
/sarc
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Perhaps you should get some sleep.
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But I guess you lost the argument in the first place so this is all you've got, to scream and shout, to kick your legs all about.
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A: Just the person asking the question.
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Re: AC#3
Cretin.
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His recent claims to living for seeing his posts fold doesn't match with his previous rants about his posts closing last year. Just keep on doing what your doing Techdirt community... it's working!
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I still don't get there from here
Even if it is a cut and paste error from the unrelated bombing case, it seems only to say that he had information they found necessary (and which they need to keep sealed) to "locate and prosecute" whoever the bombers may be.
That's still a ways off from claiming any involvement, don't you think? Or what connection am I missing?
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Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
The same Mike who just today wrote "How does that computer?" --And here he makes up the ridiculous notion of an "overworked DOJ lawyer"! Oh, yeah, lawyers are burning the midnight oil at DOJ. -- Most likely it's an unpaid intern lawyer wannabe.
Masnicking: daily spurts of short and trivial traffic-generating items.
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Re: Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
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Re: Re: Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
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Re: Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
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Re: Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
As the lying shill incorrectly lies: there is no censorship on this site, just community judgement and consequences for things said. The comment has not been removed, has not been removed by anyone running the site, and is still viewable with a single mouse click.
You are a lying sack of troll.
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Re: Re: I still don't get there from here: You're missing the MIKE connection.
And another thing, national security and mistakes are not two things one would like to see together in actual application much less accept.
Most likely it is yet more indication that the DOJ is, in fact, completely off the ranch, deceitful, disingenuous and down right dirty.
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Re: I still don't get there from here
Unless they are hiding some information about North Korea (or our own state department) bombing us recently, this has nothing to do with bombings.
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Re: I still don't get there from here
While this is an obvious error, the implication is that their spying is related to this "locating and prosecuting", implying that the person they are spying on was involved somehow.
If they weren't suggesting he was involved, why would sealing the warrant be relevant?
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Re: Re: I still don't get there from here
No, it implies that the person has information. As a journalist who reports on national security issues it's not unlikely to reckon he might have information the DOJ would want.
Granted, if they're targeting him for this reason, then it really should be viewed as a violation of freedom of the press.
But it's still too big a leap to say it implicates him.
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Cut and Paste Errors
If you read over there, and drill down into some of the opinions, you might find a lot of cut and paste errors in warrant applications.
I don't have an example right off the top of my head. But, fairly often, there's no big deal. Just an overworked system trying to get stuff done in a hurry. The courts seem to understand some of that.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diet_Coke_and_Mentos_eruption
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even for you, this is pathetic.
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Troll Count Up
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(wasnt AJ the one that kept saying, "dont talk about it because its already going to pass and nothing can be dont to stop it you filthy pirates...")
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