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Government |
Obama DOJ Now Considers Freedom of the Press Espionage |
2013-05-24 |
The Justice Department did more than seize a Fox News reporter's emails while suggesting he was a criminal "co-conspirator" in a leak case -- it did so under one of the most serious wartime laws in America, the Espionage Act. It's the same law used by the Nixon administration to go after The New York Times and Daniel Ellsberg over the leak of the Pentagon Papers. It's the law used to charge the Rosenbergs, American communists, for allegedly passing secret information to the Soviet Union -- they were executed for the offense in 1953. One Washington attorney, who represents two defendants recently charged under that World War I-era law, told FoxNews.com that the decision by the Justice Department to invoke it in the current case is "beyond chilling" -- and could set a dangerous precedent for going after reporters. |
Posted by:Whock de Medici1307 |
#3 P2k, not to mention that those open records showed that Joe McCarthy was basically correct about the infiltration of gov't and institutions. (the above does not validate the tactics he chose to use) |
Posted by: AlanC 2013-05-24 10:34 |
#2 Nah, in the brief time that the Kremlin records were open in the early 90s, some stuff turned up that validated their participation. Had they turned in their fellow travelers early enough, Stalin wouldn't have gotten the bomb or at least taken a lot longer to do so. Would there have been a Berlin Crisis or Korean War? Probably not. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2013-05-24 08:25 |
#1 Perhaps the Rosenbergs are now due an apology ? |
Posted by: Besoeker 2013-05-24 07:57 |