Eric Holder Should Condemn James Clapper Calling Journalists 'Accomplices'
from the and-obama-should-fire-clapper dept
We already pointed out James Clapper's ridiculous prepared remarks that referred to journalists as "accomplices" with Ed Snowden. In that post, we noted that Eric Holder had gone through a bit of controversy a year ago when it was revealed that the DOJ had claimed to a court that a reporter was involved in a crime in order to get access to his sources -- and that Holder had promised that the DOJ would not target journalists. As Holder said at the time:"The Department has not prosecuted, and as long as I’m attorney general, will not prosecute any reporter for doing his or her job," Holder told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.He has further stated (in a separate Congressional hearing) that the DOJ is already using these new guidelines, which make it clear they are not to target journalists.
DOJ's goal, Holder said, is to "identify and prosecute government officials who jeopardize national security by violating their oaths, not to target members of the press or discourage them from carrying out their vital work."
And then Clapper makes his idiotic statement.
That leaves open the obvious question, asked by Trevor Timm at the Freedom of the Press Foundation: will Eric Holder condemn Clapper's remarks?
If Holder wants to stay true to his word, the Justice Department should repudiate Clapper’s remark immediately. Journalists do not become “accomplices” or “co-conspirators” by reporting newsworthy information. They’re just good journalists.Oh yeah, and this:
Journalism is not a crime. On the other hand, lying to Congress is.
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Filed Under: accomplices, chilling effects, ed snowden, eric holder, james clapper, journalism
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Journalism is a crime. On the other hand, lying to Congress is not.
No? Why is Clapper allowed to lie to Congress and come unscathed while journalists reporting the Constitutional abuses are threatened? Maybe upholding the Constitution is the crime now?
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Nope - talking to authority is.
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Because what's good for the goose is good for the gander. Eric Holder is on record for multiple perjury before congress himself. Tasked with the slightly conflict-of-interest laden job of investigating his own perjury, he let himself off without consequences.
So why would he do something different to Clapper? You have to smoke out the whole lot. You can't expect them to turn on themselves while they can still dupe and rob the public.
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The DOJ's mission
The DOJ's goal is to make itself look good by persecuting individuals who game the system and make greedy companies with stupid business models look bad by exposing the emperor's lack of attire. The DOJ proudly colludes with partner companies and institutions of higher learning to accomplish this mission.
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While the reaction here is understandable (even expected), it is easy to conceive of circumstances where a journalist can cross the line from being a journalist into an active participant in what is otherwise an illegal act...i.e., becomes an accomplice. Frankly, from what I have garnered from numerous sources that are attempting to relate factual information, it seems a close call.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reporter%27s_privilege
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shield_law
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Is it illegal to report upon the exposure of an illegal activity? I suppose the recent declaration that what was once illegal is now "ok" might affect the answer to this question. Using this as an excuse to dodge the issue is simply politics, right?
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It is one of our oldest and highest laws, which applies to journalistic sources under the chilling effects doctrine. So I ask you, if the ability to decline to provide sources is not covered by the protection of the press, then what journalistic privilege was not covered by freedom of speech?
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As far as I know, the press in that statement is the printing press. That is it prohibits congress from censoring any printed publication; they obviously did not anticipate radio, television, film and the Internet. It does not, and should not be specifically applied to journalists, but be taken as a prohibition on congress limiting anybodies ability to publish.
Treating journalists as a privileged class of people is a quick road to censorship, as it can become a protection for registered journalists, with threat of removing their registration used to make them toe the governments line, while allowing anybody elses speech to be controlled.
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Note that in general a case can be made against compelled testimony of any kind under both the freedom of speech and the fifth amendment. Also note that courts have upheld a journalistic privileged based on a dissenting Supreme Court opinion.
As to your absurd argument that journalists would have to be reserved as a separate class of citizen, the courts would instead devise a test to determine journalistic purposes. Thus, even someone who typically does not act as a journalist could invoke the protections upon demonstrating that their interest was in the broad dissemination of information.
*Originally, the entire bill of rights was designed to protect the States from the Federal government, with State constitutions being responsible for furnishing citizen rights. So the original meaning is largely irrelevant at this point.
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You know incorrectly. The clear intent, and this is uncontroversial and supported by every court that has had the occasion to comment on it, is that the "press" means "mass communications", not the printing press specifically.
It isn't that there's some class of people called "journalists" that get special privileges. It's the act of journalism that is a protected right. It applies just as much to you or me as it does to people who are employed by news agencies.
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The laws suppressing publication draw on the specific waiving of rights by the individual targeted. The constitution does not provide any ban with regard to this.
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Yah. There is no longer any supreme law of the land, formerly known as "The Constitution".
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High horse
The concerns here are that apparently what has been "released" from the Snowdon pile is only a small amount of the total material, and that a number of journalists are holding copies of the rest of it. Since we know that the material was obtained illegally, and we know the source, it is fairly questionable why a journalist (or ANY CITIZEN) would be allowed to keep hold of these files.
Quite simply, there is a line that a journalist can cross from only reporting the news towards creating the news themselves. That the journalists are not releasing additional documents, allowing Snowdon to coordinate with them to release stuff for maximum impact seems well beyond just reporting the story. If they have the documents, they should report on them, and not wait for a third party to tell them when they can or cannot run a story.
They are acting like co-conspirators, and not just reporting the facts.
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Actively encourage the garnering and transfer of various types of information so that it can/will be published? Answer not at all clear, though one possible outcome is being deemed an accomplice to the performance of an illegal act.
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On the other hand...
Totally EXPECTED 21st century situations --like large organisations, secretly spying on criminal networks en masse-- fully undermine any classic journalistic approach of exposing merely the wrongdoing yet stopping short of publishing the fully suite of leaked docs lest 1 such doc one day results in ultimately touch-and-go (thus negative) legal outcomes for that publisher, journalist, or their (ex)employer!
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This is the world we live in now, and unless a significant part of the American people take some sort of action rather than just blogging or chatting about it ,there will be no changes in the foreseeable future.
a well known and highly respected person could make all the difference.
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Leakers gonna leak
Once someone working for the government has uncovered an activity they consider abhorrent and decided to do something about it, they have four options:
1) Leak to the regular press
2) Leak to press hostile to the US
3) Direct document dump
4) Defection
Under scenario 1, the press will generally approach the government before publishing, which provides the agency three ways to mitigate the danger to field agents. They can negotiate for a deferral of publishing until all active investigations can be closed out. They can convince the press to impose redactions. Finally if the press insists on publishing compromising information, they can recall the agent and drop the investigation.
Under scenario 2, the government must rely on the judgement of the journalist to impose important redactions. This is actually in the best interests of even a somewhat hostile journalist, as it increases their credibility with their readers. So at least someone will be filtering the material for those truly damaging pieces of information.
Under scenario 3, the government must scramble to analyze the material before their opponents do, in order to shut down compromised investigations. This is clearly far from ideal, however, there at least remains the ability for them to do so.
Scenario 4 is something wholly different. The leaker does not choose scenario 4, but is drawn into it only when the other three are not an option. Convinced that the government is carrying out evils on its people, and finding no way to address this, the would-be leaker becomes heavily susceptible to manipulation by a handler working for a foreign intelligence service. Once they defect, they can funnel information out of the US, potentially for years before being discovered. Under scenario 4, there is no chance to protect agents and they will die.
Clapper's vendetta against the Snowden leaks, and any government policy change to facilitate it, is therefore a demonstrably greater risk to US agents then anything so far revealed as part of those leaks.
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I'm reminded
Sherman responded that journalists are worse than spies, because they'll tell anyone.
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Scumbags
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re
"New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971), was a landmark decision by the United States Supreme Court on the First Amendment. The ruling made it possible for the New York Times and Washington Post newspapers to publish the then-classified Pentagon Papers without risk of government censorship or punishment"
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We are all enemies of the state
"journalists" who are not criminals work for the state. The rest are criminals who have not been caught.
Since we (citizens) are being spied on: we are the enemy. Is there any doubt?
Has the state done anything for the citizens without regard for itself? Personally, I can't think of anything. Roads? Nope, commerce. Internet/radio/satellite/TV? Nope, telecommunications companies. FCC? Income for the state. Healthcare? No. Tax on the citizens. Property rights? No. You don't own property here; you pay taxes (rent). Non rent payment, the state takes its property back. Food? No, Monsanto and big Agra is taking that away from us. Freedom of speech? No! Snowden is illustrating that pretty well. Guns? They are mostly a non issue for the state, they can overpower that pretty easily. Civil liberties? Again, the justice system is stacked in favor of corporations. We are forced into "agreements" we can't fight against. Welfare? The state is out of cash. Freedom? That depends on what you mean by freedom. I say, we haven't had that in years. Safety? If anything we have to fear our own state. Movement? Tried to fly lately? TSA anyone? It's all theater. War? Again, no! The problem is war is not done at our behest. It's done against our will. Destruction? No. The state destroys property for its own benefit, never ours. Education? Been to public school lately? We can't afford it, what we get is indoctrination. Currency? LOL, the Federal Reserve? We're in this financial mess now due precisely to the uncontrolled theft the Federal Reserve has infested on us. QE? Fractional banking? Call it leveraged debt.
And now, the state wants to control our retirement money (MyRa)? Do I even need to say why this is a horrible idea for citizens? Oh, for the state it's wonderful!
The answer is person to person. Simple. People doing things for people, not the state. The more we isolate the state from our lives, the better off we become.
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Re: We are all enemies of the state
If you post your access details here then TD commenters can take a look and advise you I'm sure.
Until then you better DYI. Or pay a multinational. Or your gov taxes.
Roads are quick and easy. Got any tar? Just you & your buddies decide on what you want, don the overalls, and go make it so. If it's a clear improvement, nobody will bother taking you with a court challenge. We're all too time poor. Having too much fun. Because internet.
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