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Monday, May 12, 2008
Frank Gaffney :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Leaker Shield Act
by Frank Gaffney
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There is something unique about what has come to be called the War on Terror. In this conflict, as the U.S. government struggles to defeat the enemy and keep our people safe, it is up against not only those who overtly and unambiguously seek to destroy us. It also confronts those who are prepared to reveal classified information and programs, even when doing so makes it harder to vanquish our foes and protect this country.

The latter fall into four principal categories:

* Some call themselves “journalists” who work for traditional news organizations, notably the New York Times. On occasion, they win Pulitzer Prizes for compromising the Nation’s secrets.

* Some are members of what has come to be called the “new media” or “alternative media.” Most traditional journalists detest the idea that their trade is being practiced by people who find in outlets like on-line publications, the Blogosphere, YouTube and FaceBook vehicles to disseminate information worldwide and instantaneously. But the reach of the world-wide web is, well, world-wide and so is the impact of its “journalists.”

* Among those making use of these “New Age” tools are some who use the guise of journalism as a cover for our enemy’s disinformation and propaganda. In fact, some of the most capable users of the Internet routinely engage in information warfare on behalf of Islamofascist terrorist organizations like Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, Hamas and their state-sponsors.

* Then there are the individuals who hold positions of trust in the federal government itself. They have been given access to secret data and capabilities on the promise not to reveal such knowledge without authorization. Yet, some choose to violate their oaths in the furtherance of divergent policy agendas. Of course, folks in this category are not journalists. They are called “sources.”

It is imperative to consider these four categories as the U.S. Senate prepares to consider legislation with the unobjectionable-sounding name of the “Free Flow of Information Act (FFIA) of 2007.” The bill, S. 2035, is better known as the “media shield” law. It would be more accurate to call it the “Leaker and Other Enemies Shield Act.”

Freedom of the press is, of course, one of the bedrock principles upon which this nation was founded. And those who dare criticize the media and its efforts to expand privileges it enjoys under the rubric of press freedoms – notably, officials responsible for prosecuting journalists’ “confidential government sources” for the illegally revelation of classified information – generally are subjected to very bad notices.

Still, it is a terrible idea – particularly in time of war – to be providing “media shields” to anyone who can claim to be a journalist and to their law-breaking sources in government. Yet, that is precisely what S.2035 would do.

The FFIA creates a highly problematic journalist’s privilege. It would effectively prevent the federal government from compelling anyone “engaging in journalism” to give testimony or produce any document revealing that journalist’s source, if the source gave the information under cover of confidentiality.

Were S.2035 to become law, investigators and prosecutors charged with bringing to justice sources who have engaged in criminal leaks would have to prove all of the following to the satisfaction of a federal judge: (1) The government has first exhausted all other avenues besides the journalist to obtain a source’s identity; (2) there are reasonable grounds to believe that a crime has taken place; (3) the source’s identity is “essential” to the investigation; (4) the information that was disclosed was “properly classified” to begin with; (5) the person who leaked the information had authorized access to it; (6) the source’s unauthorized disclosure “has caused or will cause significant, clear, and articulable harm to the national security; and (7) non-disclosure of the source’s identity would be contrary to the public interest when weighed against the other public interest in “gathering news and maintaining the free flow of information.”

As a practical matter, as an array of Cabinet and subcabinet officers responsible for keeping us safe and enforcing the law have warned the Senate, no source is going to be held accountable under this law. For example, Attorney General Michael Mukasey and Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell advised the Senate’s leadership they would be hobbled by myriad Catch-22s inherent in the FFIA.

Consider two of these cited by the AG and DNI: How can a prosecutor show that a person who leaked information had authorized access to it (Requirement 5), without first knowing the identity of the source? How can a prosecutor show that a leak “has caused or will cause significant, clear, and articulable harm to the national security” (Requirement 6), without first having to offer evidence to a judge that will reveal even more classified information?

By assuring “journalists” – the bill’s definition is broad enough to cover all of the first three categories described above – they need not fear having to divulge the source of a leak, sources will feel even less compunction than they do today to break their promises and leak with impunity.

In short, the Free Flow of Information Act is not about freedom of the press. It is about freeing government officials of their legal responsibilities and enabling those who would do us all harm – whether intentionally or in the name of “the people’s right to know.” The President’s senior advisors have rightly indicated that they will recommend his veto should this bill make it to his desk. Senators should ensure that the Leakers and Other Enemies Protection Act never gets there.

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About The Author

Frank Gaffney Jr. is the founder and president of the Center for Security Policy and author of War Footing: 10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World .
 
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curious
Is the point of classifying information to keep it from such enemies of America as American judges?

The bill here certainly sets a high bar, possibly too high. But freedom of the press is an area in which an at least somewhat high bar is called for.

Gaffney might make a more persuasive case that the bar being set here is too high if he were able to hide his contempt for the freedom of the press in the first place. Are reporters for the major newspapers only "reporters" rather than reporters? Does one have to be a conservative propogandist to be a full conservative in gaffney's book?

OK Gaffney, you're no journalist
"it is a terrible idea – particularly in time of war – to be providing “media shields” to anyone who can claim to be a journalist and to their law-breaking sources in government."

And since we're in an endless, undeclared war, freedom of the press will just have to be endangered eternally. This is the second pantload column from Frank Gaffney in as many tries. Scare quotes, dishonesty, hysteria, paranoia, and contempt. Why is this guy even here?

Freedom of the Press
This is one of the most misunderstood terms in the history of the Constitution. In the first place, the founders never intended for the first amendment to mean that a newspaper could print anything it wanted with impunity. The clear intent was that the federal government could not suppress political speech. Laws against libel were widespread and dueling was also a common feature. This tended to prevent the abuses you see by the press now. But back to the main intent of the article; printing secret information.

Most of the public thinks that the government can not do anything about the press when they print stories that release classified information. This is far from the truth. The controlling case is that infamous anti-Nixon piece of liberal court work, the Pentagon papers case. Oh how the liberals love that one.

The outcome of that case did NOT say that the press could not be punished for printing classified information. What it said was that the government could not engage in PRIOR CENSURESHIP of the material unless they could show the material would cause eminent harm. In addition, the ruling said that the government could prosecute newspaper employees who were responsible for printing classified information if it caused harm. Later evidence did in fact show that release of the “Pentagon Papers” caused harm to the U.S. so that if it had desired the New York Times could have been prosecuted.

Daniel Ellsberg himself could also have been prosecuted. There was never any doubt of that. The problem was that Nixon had “the plumbers” break into his doctor’s office and the case was thrown out in a mistrial. This shows how stupid liberals can actually be. Anyone who releases classified information, who is not authorized to release said information, to people who are not authorized to see it is in violation of law and can be prosecuted.

cont...

pt 2

It appears that this bill is an attempt to allow people to release classified info without being punished. What I would see out of this is the Commiecrats would protect leakers of classified info who did it for political purposes; i.e. harm Republicans, while punishing people who did it to harm Commies or who did it for monetary reasons.

The other thing I have heard about this bill is that bloggers are NOT protected under the bill. Dems do not like the “alternate media”.

Just look at what started this entire debate. Democrap operatives in the CIA released portions of classified documents designed to hurt Bush. What I will call “selected leaks”. When the entire document was released it showed what idiots these people were.

This bill should go nowhere, but given the “roll over and die” attitude of the RINO party today there is no telling what will happen.

war on terror
unique??? you mean you just noticed. we have an enemy. He resides in Afghanistan. we go after him. so far so good although i do wonder why marines who are going into places in Afghanistan that they have never been able to ebter before, are forbiden to harm the poppy fields, even though the reducytion of opium was one of our few stated objectives . especially wwhen al=Qaeda is making much of its money by hiring out their men to the growers ti guard the fields. Anyway. went to afghanistan===good. now everything strts going goofy. we invade a country for no logical reason, even granting, as i do not, the good and true intentions of the administrations war goals. if, as been stated lately many times. it was done witherroneous infomation.why ar ew we still there. Humans when they make a mistakd typically do their best to redeen thenmselves by getting out of the situation. anyway there we are. in addtion we have established beyon much rasonable doubt that our main potentil damgerous enemies are North Korea, which already has that a bomb we were so afraid the iraq had, and whic certainly sems to have enough hatred for us, and Iran which as far as we know is no further along in developin their atomic weapons than iraq waas whwn we invadedn that country. where are we and where does it logically seem we should be? go after those that have directly harmed you or who most certainly will. how doi you think it looks to the restb of the world when we have incvade iraq and left north korea alone. and by the way, if any other country had done to iraq or any other country what we did to iraq, (for examople hitler to Poland) it would heve been justifiably clled naked aggression.

DISCLOSURE OF SECRETS
Gaffney has this one absolutely wrong. The government with ever increasing frequency uses secrecy to hide things the public should know. Essentially all of the points are valid. If a judge cannot easily tell that a disclosure should have been kept secret (after all, he/she gets to read it), it almost always should have been made public in the first place.

I too am curious.
Do you need a licence to become a reporter? Can any schmuck with an agenda become a one?
Maybe we should administer oaths and licences before giving away rights of protection an average American does not have. An average American can be thrown in jail for conspiracy easily. Even thought can be considered part of a conspiracy. Not knowing is no excuse, helping the enemy is not freedom of the press, it is its antitheses.

Dave
Did you read my post t all? The current interpretationby the courts takes care of the overclassification issue.

Blocked head.
Why is it so hard for particular mimicking minds to grasp this statement:

We will go after terrorists and all states that sponsor terrorism.

Ignore it at your Country's peril.

Vic
What in your post is supposed to cover the over classification issue? Is it that there needs to be a showing of harm? The Pentagon Papers were dated by the time they were released, and their harm was to government officials who behaved badly. And yet according to you the pentagon paper is a case of harm that is not protected. So it is hard to see how any example of overclassification will wind up protected.

Do you think current law protected Libby's leaks? Should it have?

Lon
The government can not pre-censor a release without going to court and showing harm. If it is a case of “over-classification” they can not show harm. The government can not prosecute the news outlet personnel after the fact unless they can show harm, so the same thing hold true.

As for the Libby thing they never showed that he “outed anyone”. They prosecuted him for perjury when the government already new who the supposed leaker was, and it wasn’t Libby. In fact, no actual crime was ever committed and the entire thing was a travesty.

And finally the Pentagon Papers classification wasn’t so much about what they revealed on Vietnam but on means and methods. After their release the Soviets were able to go in and roll up several U.S. agents and informants. Yes, real harm was done and Ellsberg and the NYT should have been prosecuted. However, that failure can be laid to idiot liberal Nixon who blew the entire thing with his blundering around.

Heroes
used to be people who stood up publically for causes in which they believed. Now they are anonymous or undisclosed sources. We don't have the heroes we used to have.

Vic
Libby was one of four leakers. That is not really in any factual doubt. He gave the information to the press at a time when it was classified information. The particular law concerning that kind of factual information had other clauses about state of mind when the leak was done that were difficult to prove. And so he was tried and convicted for his perjury and obstruction of justice instead. The other leakers were not prosecuted at all because at least they owned up to leaking.

But are you maintaining that the Libby leak was a harmful leak that he should have been prosecuted under or not? Judith Miller spent time in jail for protecting Libby as a source. So if you think this was not a harmful leak, then your argument turns out to be nonsense on its own terms. Miller was not protected from jail because her leak was not harmful.

Or are you acknowledging that the leak was a harmful one and simply controlling your anger at the fact that the other three leakers did not do time as well?

Lon
BS - If Libby had actually leaked classified info and boke the law he would have been charged with it.

Lon.
You stated: " That is not really in any factual doubt."

Okay, what facts do you have? Who decided I am not allowed to doubt those "facts"? You strike me as someone looking for some kool-aid to drink.

You, and people on both sides of the argument on this thread, all need to read M. Stanton Evans' tome, Blacklisted By History. If you really want to understand the liability our society faces, and the history of how public opinion has been manipulated, read and discover that the Soviet infiltration of our government before the second world war is directly responsible for the success of communism in China. Our tolerance of security breaches will be the downfall of our republic!

If it were my call, Pinch Sulzberger would have been jailed several years ago, as the responsible party for the ultimate publication of national security leaks! Rather than pass garbage like S. 2035, we should be reinforcing security guidelines and employment contracts with stricter penalties for unauthorized release of classified information. Certain government positions should contractually preclude the right to anonymity as a press informant. Exclusions can guarantee the employee from sexual or bureaucratic malfeasance, but classified must mean classified, … and leaking is not whistle-blowing!

"Sources"
"Of course, folks in this category are not journalists. They are called “sources.”

I thought they were called Congressmen and Senators.
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