Bush Declares War on Freedom of the Press
Doug Thompson
Capital Hill Blue
March 6th,
2006
Using many of the questionable surveillance and
monitoring techniques that brought both questions and criticism to his
administration, President George W. Bush has launched a war against reporters
who write stories unfavorable to his actions and is planning to prosecute
journalists to make examples of them in his "war on terrorism."
Bush recently directed Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales to use "whatever means at your disposal" to wiretap, follow,
harass and investigate journalists who have published stories about the
administration's illegal use of warrantless wiretaps, use of faulty
intelligence and anything else he deems "detrimental to the war on
terror."
Reporters for The New York Times, which along
with Capitol Hill Blue revealed use of the National Security Agency to monitor
phone calls and emails of Americans, say FBI agents have interviewed them and
criminal prosecutors at the Justice Department admit they are laying "the
groundwork for a grand jury that could lead to criminal charges,"
CIA Director Porter Goss told Congress recently
that "it is my aim and it is my hope that we will witness a grand jury
investigation with reporters present being asked to reveal who is leaking this
information. I believe the safety of this nation and the people of this country
deserve nothing less."
As part of the investigation, the Justice
Department, Department of Homeland Security and the National Security Agency
are wiretapping reporters' phones, following journalists on a daily basis,
searching their homes and offices under a USA Patriot Act provision that allows
"secret and undisclosed searches" and pouring over financial and
travel records of hundreds of Washington-based reporters.
Spokesmen for the Justice Department and
Department of Homeland Security admit there are "ongoing
investigations" regarding publication of stories "involving threats
to national security" but will not reveal what those investigations
include.
In addition to using the USA Patriot Act to pry
into the lives of journalists, the Justice Department has also dusted off a
pre-World War I law to prosecute people who receive classified information,
although the law was aimed at military personnel not civilians.
"This is the first administration that I
can remember, including Nixon's, that said we need to think about a law that
would put journalists who print national security things up in front of grand
juries and put them in jail if they don't reveal their sources," says
David Gergen, who served as President Regan's director of communication and
also worked in the Nixon and Ford White Houses.
Political scientist George Harleigh, who worked
in the Nixon administration, says such use of federal law enforcement authority
was illegal when Nixon tried it and still so today.
"We're talking about a basic violation of
the Constitutional guarantee of a free press as well as a violation of the
rights of privacy of American citizens," Harleigh says. "I had hoped
we would have learned our lessons from the Nixon era. Sadly, it appears we have
not."
In recent weeks, the FBI has issued hundreds of
"National Security Letters," directing employers, banks, credit card
companies, libraries and other entities to turn over records on reporters.
Under the USA Patriot Act, those who must turn over the records are also
prohibited from revealing they have done so to the subject of the federal
probes.
"The significance of this cannot be
overstated," says prominent New York litigator Glenn Greenwald. "In
essence, while the President sits in the White House undisturbed after proudly
announcing that he has been breaking the law and will continue to do so, his
slavish political appointees at the Justice Department are using the mammoth
law enforcement powers of the federal government to find and criminally
prosecute those who brought this illegal conduct to light.
"This flamboyant use of the forces of
criminal prosecution to threaten whistle-blowers and intimidate journalists are
nothing more than the naked tactics of street thugs and authoritarian
juntas."
Just how widespread, and uncontrolled, this
latest government assault has become hit close to home last week when one of
the FBI's National Security Letters arrived at the company that hosts the
servers for this web site, Capitol Hill Blue.
The letter demanded traffic data, payment
records and other information about the web site along with information on me,
the publisher.
Now that's a problem. I own the company that
hosts Capitol Hill Blue. So, in effect, the feds want me to turn over
information on myself and not tell myself that I'm doing it. You'd think they'd
know better.
I turned the letter over to my lawyer and told
him to send the following message to the feds:
Fuck you. Strong letter to follow.