Posted on 01/24/2006 5:12:07 AM PST by Quilla
Pinch Sulzberger, meet Larry Franklin. The publisher of the New York Times had better pay attention to the fate of Mr. Franklin.
Last Friday, US District Judge T. S. Ellis III sentenced Pentagon employee Larry Franklin to just over 12 years in prison for his role in providing classified Department of Defense documents to two former employees of AIPAC (The American Israel Public Affairs Committee), Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman, and to a diplomat, Naor Gilon of Israel.
Virtually all the coverage of the sentencing focused on the implications for Rosen and Weissman in their upcoming trial. But the real story of the sentencing, and the Judges comments on Friday, are what they might reveal about the risk to media leakers and publishers of classified information, such as those who provided information for the NSA surveillance story published by the New York Times.
Franklins sentence was on the low end of federal sentencing guidelines, and followed a guilty plea he made to three felony counts last October. Franklins sentence will likely be reduced in exchange for his cooperation in the upcoming trials of the two former AIPAC employees. Franklin has been cooperating for several years with the Justice Department, including serving as a courier in a federal sting directed against Weissman and Rosen.
As reported in the Washington Post,
Rosen, 63, of Silver Spring, is charged with two counts related to unlawful disclosure of national defense information obtained from Franklin and other unidentified government officials since 1999 on topics including Iran, Saudi Arabia and al Qaeda. ....
Weissman, 53, of Bethesda, faces one count of conspiracy to illegally communicate national defense information.
Attorneys for Rosen and Weissman have argued that Rosen and Weisman did nothing more than what lobbyists involved in foreign affairs do all the time: exchange information and rumors with reporters, US government officials, and foreign government officials.
Clearly, if Rosen and Weissman are found guilty, it will have a decidedly chilling effect on the activities of all kinds of lobbying groups in Washington DC.
The same language about chilling effects has been used in recent weeks in discussion of the Justice Departments investigation into who leaked the story to the New York Times about the NSAs surveillance of phone calls between al Qaeda operatives and suspects abroad and their phone contacts in the US. Aside from any controversy about the legality of the surveillance itself, the media is concerned that the Justice Department investigators will demand to know who contacted the Times reporter James Risen and leaked the story to him.
Champions of the theory that Bush did something illegal by ordering the surveillance, tend to also be champions of the need to protect the whistleblower. If you believe that the Administration overstepped, then you seem to also wind up in the camp that believes that leaking by the whistleblower and dissemination of the story by the New York Times, was a public service in each case, and certainly not a crime. The issue of whether journalists should have to give up sources was also recently a focus in the Valerie Plane/Joe Wilson story.
Judge Ellis stated in the Franklin sentencing that he believed that Franklin thought he was helping America by providing the documents and information to the people that he did. Ellis also stated that he did not believe that any damage caused by Franklins actions compared to the damage caused by classified information provided to the Soviets during the Cold War.
As reported by the Associated Press, Ellis also stated during sentencing,
that civilians who receive and disseminate unauthorized classified information are as culpable as the government officials who leak it.
Federal prosecutor Kevin DiGregory had urged the Judge to hand down a tough sentence since Franklin had knowingly disclosed classified information to unauthorized people.
The danger of such unauthorized disclosure, when you disclose national defense information is that the United States government loses control of such information, he said.
It seems that the Judges comments and the Prosecutors statement have some bearing on the NSA matter.
If a government employee believes that illegal government behavior is taking place, there is a formal whistleblower mechanism for that employee to report the problem. It does not appear that this happened with the NSA issue. The leaker(s) decided to go to the newspaper with the story, instead.
It is hard to see how the prosecutors position with regard to Larry Franklin that disclosing unauthorized information means the US government loses control of it would not apply in the NSA case. Arguably, the revelation in the New York Times of the NSA program was at least as much of a loss for the government as would be the disclosure of individual names of those whose calls were monitored.
But what should be really scary for the New York Times and its shills in the free to leak press brigade are the judges comments on the culpability of the individual who receives classified information.
Judge Ellis thinks those who receive such classified information and then disseminate it are as guilty as those who provide the classified information to them.
I am unaware of any special legal privilege given to the press, in terms of disseminating classified information, that does not exist equally for any other citizen or private party. If the logic that Judge Ellis used in the Franklin case were applied to the NSA case, then the New York Times will be in a lot more serious legal situation than merely choosing whether or not to protect its sources confidentiality by hiding the original government leakers identity.
In fact, even without knowing who provided the information to the paper and its reporters, it is obvious that the Times disseminated it, fully knowing the material was classified. The dissemination was against the express wishes of the President who believed that exposing the program would damage the countrys efforts in fighting al Qaeda. And the Times has a large megaphone over a million print subscribers, and many more online, and its story was quickly picked up by virtually all the other news media.
Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman are in legal jeopardy for, among other things, passing on a bogus story that was supplied to them by Franklin in his role as agent for the Justice Department. No one has argued that anything they disclosed, whether provided by Franklin or others, to Israeli officials or to reporters, caused any real damage to this country. Similarly, the long investigation into the Valerie Plame outing in the end did not result in anybody being accused of disclosing the identity of a covert agent. Lewis Libby is charged with telling a different story to the grand jury than did a few reporters about their conversations concerning Plame and Wilson.
The NSA disclosure is a far more serious affair than the Franklin/Rosen/Weissman story, or the Plame/Wilson story, that kept the chattering crowd in DC on their toes for more than a year. If one follows the logic of Judge Ellis, it is hard to see how James Risen, Bill Keller, and possibly Pinch Sulzbeger will not be asked to take a perp walk, mabye even in leg irons, some day soon.
The two AIPAC are facing jail time for talking to reporters, revealing classified information, and for revealing secrets to a friendly country. In the NSA/New York Times case, one of the recipients of the information the New York Times disseminated is al Qaeda, which now knows of the surveillance effort and is better able to evade detection of its communications. Providing relevant secrets that aid an enemy in time of war is no laughing matter, and a legal precedent exists for prison sentences of non-trivial duration for those who are found guilty.
Save.
Gives hope that some traitors might do jail time.
I certainly hope we have the technology to listen in on and track the location of the hundreds of recently purchased prepaid cell phones.
The NSA leakers are "heroes" like those that released the "Pentagon Papers" and will have movies made by Clooney, songs sung by U-2, poems written by Maya Anjelou, and Harry Belafonte/Ted Kennedy/Dean/Pelosi/ and the rest of the MSM will "honor" them.
they should be put up against the wall and shot for traitors.... of course that's only my opinion... and I could be wrong.
Giant PING!
Thanks for the ping, Carolinamom!
I agree,good article.It would be personally very satisfying to see Pinch and friends prosecuted.I follow the logic,but i find it hard to believe anyone at the NYTimes will take "the perp walk possibly in leg irons".I suspect this story will die quietly.
I hope some NYT reporters are absolutely shaking in their boots!
"I would not think that any religion, any god, worthy of the name, would sanction what terrorists do" and "I would not worship any god that would promise what, in essence is some bordello in heaven".
I'm looking forward to the NYT management and its guilty reporters in a "Shake, Rattle, and Roll" scenario...right into prison.
Oh, I hope that happens. Somehow, when it comes to the people we WANT to go to jail (Sandy Berger), it never happens.
String em up! The only thing traitors are good for is decorating Lampposts.
Pray for W and Our Freedom Fighters
Thanx for the link.Will ck later.Hi ho,hi ho,it's off to work i go:)
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