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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (16838)12/30/2005 10:46:06 AM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
Finally!!



To: Sully- who wrote (16838)12/30/2005 11:03:12 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Breaking: FBI to also investigate NSA leak

Note the lib spin in this article......

Justice Department Opens NSA Spy Leak Probe

Friday, December 30, 2005
By Greg Simmons

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has opened an investigation into who leaked information about the NSA eavesdropping program to the media, senior Justice Department officials confirmed Friday.

The officials, however, would not comment as to when the investigation began or whether the referral for the probe came from the National Security Agency itself. Officials also would not say whether the FBI is conducting the investigation. The official would only say that an investigation has been opened.

The investigation comes after the December revelation that President Bush authorized the NSA to monitor phone calls and e-mails inside the United States without court warrants. But some question whether the government can even pursue the leakers in this particular case.

"The government has no legal right to pursue the whistleblower [or] whistleblowers who disclosed what's been publicly aired to date," Tom Devine, the legal director for the Government Accountability Project and a lawyer who represents whistleblowers, told FOXNews.com.

The New York Times was first to report on Dec. 16 that without judicial approval, the NSA has been monitoring phone calls and e-mails in which one party to the conversation was inside the United States. The warrantless wiretaps allegedly fly in the face of standing federal surveillance law.

The day after the report broke, Bush acknowledged that he had authorized the program, saying it only focused on members or associates of Al Qaeda. He added that the Constitution and congressional resolution permitted his decision, which was necessary because the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act doesn't allow U.S. intelligence to act quickly enough.

The president has also described the leak as "shameful," saying the program's disclosure gives terrorists the upper hand. He said he presumed the Justice Department would look into the matter if the NSA requests a probe of the leak.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales earlier would not comment as to whether there would be an investigation.

Several lawmakers have demanded hearings into the NSA surveillance while others have also said the leak itself is a serious breach.

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and one of the members briefed by the administration about the surveillance plan, expressed deep reservations about the program to the vice president in 2003. But he said he also would like hearings into who leaked the story to reporters at the Times.

Reps. Peter Hoekstra and Jane Harman, the chairman and ranking Democrat, respectively, on the House Intelligence Committee, also condemned the leak, saying it hurt national security.

While Harman, of California, said she believes broader oversight is needed of the NSA program, "its disclosure has damaged critical intelligence capabilities."

"These politically motivated leaks must stop," Hoekstra, of Michigan, said in a statement.

A leak investigation could have taken at least two forms: through normal channels within the Justice Department or through a special task force. The investigation could focus on individuals in the media or the government.

Ronald Cass, a legal scholar and former dean of the Boston University School of Law, told FOX News that special investigations can be distractions, and too much pressure will be put on bringing back an indictment.

"It's better to leave these matters in the hands of the Justice Department; let them handle it through the ordinary course," Cass said.

But a special prosecution might be needed to speed up the process, said Edward Turzanski, a senior fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute and a national security analyst at La Salle University.

"We've reached a critical mass," Turzanski told FOX News. "There's too much damage to our national security capabilities, to critical information and to the war-fighting effort. And that is where this urgency comes in."

Devine said at least two laws protect a potential leak source. One is a so-called anti-gag statute that prevents the government from spending money on a leak investigation unless it specifically warned the employee that its gag rules cannot trump good-government laws.

The leak also could be legal if the Whistleblower Protection Act covers it, Devine said, as long as the leaker was not in the FBI, CIA or NSA, which aren't covered by the act. For instance, a civilian Pentagon employee who wanted to expose government wrongdoing would have free speech protections to expose abuses of power or illegal actions.

The laws don't apply to public disclosure of classified information, Devine said, but a government worker could tell an inspector general if wrong-doing involving classified information has occurred. Because it's not yet known if classified information was given to reporters, there's no telling yet if that's a problem in this case.

So far, though, Devine said he thinks everything he's seen published so far is safe from prosecution. "This has been apple pie, protected speech," he said.

Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Washington-based Project for Excellence in Journalism, told FOXNews.com undoubtedly the Times story was enabled by a leak. But noting the ongoing investigation into the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson's identity, he said politicians will have a hard time meeting the burden of proof of criminality in a leak.

"There's a difference between a leak that violates, or might violate a specific law against outing an individual who's undercover or whose identity is classified, and an investigation into the more general kind of leaking about operations policies, that goes on, frankly, every day in this town," Rosenstiel said.

Because of that, Washington's press corp doesn't appear to be greatly concerned. But Rosenstiel said it doesn't mean journalists should forget about the ethics of revealing secretive or sensitive information.

Rosenstiel stopped short of saying whether the Times should have run the story; rather, he said, those decisions are made on a case-by-case basis that changes not only by the story but by the people running the newsroom. The Times has said it held the story for a year after the administration told editors it could harm national security

"There is no perfect equation," Rosenstiel said. "We want journalists to be parsing out and not just publishing everything they take in. ... If you're just putting everything you know in the newspaper ... then you're not doing your job."

Georgetown University constitutional law professor Peter Rubin said he hasn’t seen anything in the stories that gives terrorists additional information about government operations. It’s widely known, he said, that the United States can spy on people via wiretaps without letting the subject of the wiretap know beforehand — that’s the purpose of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, created under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Rubin noted that illegally putting out classified information is still a crime. But regardless of any investigation, he said he thinks that the general public is better off now than it was before the story about domestic spying broke.

“It seems obvious that they’re better off by having this story in front of them,” Rubin said.

He said the NSA program is “a dramatic step of spying on American citizens in the United States. I think most people were very surprised to hear it,” including lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

“That suggests a level of gravity of this,” Rubin said. The government has not said who has been the subject of eavesdropping, but that it may have involved American citizens.

The New York Times reported that the eavesdropping program helped uncover a plot by Iyman Faris, an Ohio trucker and naturalized citizen who pleaded guilty in 2003 to helping Al Qaeda plan to blow up the Brooklyn Bridge in New York.

The Justice Department's investigation into the NSA domestic spying program isn't the first such leak probe and certainly won't be the last.

The Plame investigation has resulted in an indictment of former vice presidential chief of staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby on obstruction charges. Libby resigned, but prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald has called for a new grand jury and continues to focus on presidential adviser Karl Rove's activities.

In the Plame case, syndicated columnist Robert Novak first published Plame's identity, but he has been quiet on who his sources were. Although Novak has not been called in to testify before a grand jury, he is believed to be cooperating in the investigation. No one has been charged in the actual commission of a crime related to the leak.

In another story published in November, The Washington Post revealed the existence of secret "black site" prisons run by the CIA in a handful of countries, including in Eastern Europe. That story has been referred to the Justice Department, and lawmakers also have planned hearings into the matter.

foxnews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (16838)12/31/2005 11:58:43 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Justice Department To Follow Plame Precedent

By Captain Ed on War on Terror
Captain's Quarters
    "The fact is that al Qaeda's playbook is not printed on 
Page One and when America's is, it has serious ramifications.
You don't need to be Sun Tzu to understand that."
-- Thomas Duffy, White House spokesman

The New York Times will soon wish it hadn't pushed so hard for a criminal investigation into the leak of Valerie Plame's identity on the basis of national security violations.
The Justice Department has now decided to act on the NYT's publication of a top-secret NSA program in exactly the same manner for much clearer damage to national security, and the NYT's James Risen and Eric Lichtblau find themselves in the Judith Miller Hotseat in this case:

<<< The Justice Department has opened an investigation into the disclosure of classified information about a domestic surveillance program authorized by President Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, officials said today.

Justice prosecutors will examine whether classified information was unlawfully disclosed to the New York Times, which reported two weeks ago that the National Security Agency had been conducting electronic surveillance on U.S. citizens and residents without court-approved warrants. >>>


The Times won't find itself alone in the dock, however. The Washington Post will also have some dancing to do over its exposure of CIA detentions of terrorists captured abroad, endangering missions in Eastern Europe and undermining our wartime alliances:


<<< The Justice Department has also opened a probe into whether classified information was illegally disclosed to The Washington Post, which reported on a network of secret CIA prisons in Eastern Europe and elsewhere. >>>

Thomas Duffy at the White House has the best line on the new investigations, as I quoted at the start. That one leak started a flood of Big Brother hysteria that flooded the Exempt Media over the past month, most of it complete nonsense and almost all of it miscommunicated and misunderstood. The NSA program that the NYT "exposed" has less reach than the infamous Echelon program, reported by CBS News in 2000, but has specific application to suspected al-Qaeda assets and their contacts. Despite the continuing insistence of critics to call it "domestic spying", the Times report clearly stated that domestic calls only got wiretapped after getting a FISA warrant, and that the presidential directive only applied to calls and communications that crossed international boundaries and did not appear to involve "US persons" as defined by FISA. Those communications don't require a warrant at all, especially while the President works under a grant of war powers from Congress.

However, the exposure of the program and the wailing and gnashing of teeth have done two things for the enemies of the US. First and most generally, it has shown them that Americans have a problem getting serious about national defense even after the loss of 3,000 of its citizens after a terrorist attack. Second and more specifically, it reveals to them the broad strokes of how the NSA has gleaned enough information to frustrate their plans for more attacks on American cities. Both developments allow Islamofascist terrorists to recalculate their strategies and tactics in the future for greater success -- which means Americans are more likely to die in an attack, thanks to the New York Times. As for the Post, they have made it more difficult for the CIA to get intelligence from captured AQ assets, thanks to their leak, and have made it much more difficult for European leaders to provide support and logistical assistance to our intelligence operations.

The pattern of leaks clearly shows that members of the intelligence community want to fight a war -- but rather than fight a war against the terrorists that killed thousands of Americans and want to kill millions more, they've chosen to fight one against the elected civilian government of the US. For some strange reason, those who claim to love civil liberties have decided to take the side of the unelected bureaucrats in this Coup Of The Thousand Leaks. When partisan hatred meets with professional egotism, the resulting bedfellows turn strange indeed. The Justice Department needs to put an end to this wholesale dismantling of the national defenses that have kept the US safe from attack for the past four years, and do it quickly.

UPDATE: Mark Tapscott links back to me and, as a former newsman himself, muses about journalist shield laws:
    Will any of the reporters who could now face jail time 
for not disclosing their sources be able to hold out as
long as Judith Miller? Frankly, I doubt it, as Miller was
caught up in a misguided Special Prosecutor drama that
had everything but an actual crime.
    This time around there is no question about serious crimes
having been committed
and only the most blindly obstinate
professor of journalism will insist on the right of the
relevant journalists at the Times, Post and elsewhere to
protect the guilty parties.
    I am generally a supporter of the strongest possible shield
laws for journalists, but in these newest cases it seems
most likely there will be no such legitimate place to
afford cover for the recipients of the illegal leaks that
almost certainly damaged national security and endangered
the lives of thousands, possibly millions, of Americans.
I'm not as big on the shield laws as others.

In this case, the people who came to the Times and the Post had plenty of other opportunities to blow the whistle through other means if the sources felt that the programs were illegal.
They could have gone to Congress and forced hearings, a la Able Danger; I daresay they would have gotten more attention than Lt. Colonel Anthony Shaffer. They hardly needed to run to James Risen and Eric Lichtblau to expose top-secret American capabilities to everyone, including our enemies.

Be sure to read all of Mark's commentary.

captainsquartersblog.com

washingtonpost.com

tapscottscopydesk.blogspot.com