Goodale is best known for using the First Amendment of the US Constitution to successfully defend the New York Times after the paper published the Pentagon Papers in 1971. The documents, leaked by Defense Department employee Daniel Ellsberg, revealed that four presidents had deliberately misled US citizens regarding the countries’ intentions in Vietnam. The Nixon administration sought to block the publication of the documents, citing national security and the Espionage Act. The case is especially relevant today as the Obama administration seeks to punish WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for publishing diplomatic cables leaked by US Army soldier Bradley Manning. The New York Times, the Guardian, and other outlets would also go on to publish the same information revealed by Manning but have not been targeted for punishment by the government prosecutors. Speaking with RT, Goodale also gave his opinion on the recent scandals that saw the US Department of Justice tap phones used by reporters, at least once going as far as to issue a search warrant for a Fox News correspondents’ email account. All, presumably, as part of an attempt to intimidate potential leakers and media personnel into remaining silent on issues that plague the nation. Goodale’s book, “Fighting for the Press: The Inside Story of the Pentagon Papers and Other Battles,” is available now. RT: In your new book you indicate that former US President Richard Nixon was out to destroy the New York Times, but you also argue that if President Obama succeeds at prosecuting Julian Assange he will be worse than Nixon for press freedom, why so? James Goodale: Let me say one thing about Nixon. He was out to destroy the New York Times, he was out to destroy Brookings Institution, and a lot of other institutions in the United States. President Obama is not out to destroy the Times. What we’re talking about is a discreet area, which is the relationship of the press to national security. In the Pentagon Papers area of national security, Nixon was terrible. He also happened to be terrible in the whole First Amendment area. Obama, by contrast, is okay in the First Amendment area but not okay in national security. Why?Because Obama has pursued six leakers, that’s the first bad thing he’s done. The second bad thing he’s done is pursued [reporter and leak recipient] James Risen. He’s also suing Julian Assange. If he’s pursuing Julian Assange as a co-conspirator and succeeds he’ll be worse than Nixon because Nixon tried to go after the New York Times and its reporters saying they were co-conspirators but Nixon failed. RT: In this context you view Julian Assange as the publisher, similar to the New York Times, similar to the Guardian, and all the other news outlets that then published what Julian Assange exposed through WikiLeaks. US officials maintain that Assange compromised national security by publishing classified documents. As you know, in America, sometimes the First Amendment is trumped by national security issues when information is disclosed when information is published that could threaten soldiers on the battlefield, or threaten the lives of soldiers here at home. Do you believe, honestly, that Assange should face no consequences whatsoever? JG: Yes, that’s right. The same claims were made about the New York Times when it published the Pentagon Papers. It was destroying national security, it was destroying lives. The First Amendment, in that case, trumped the claim of the Nixon administration. Now here, you have to ask yourself, ‘Well what is the First Amendment claim?’ The claim is that Assange can’t be punished if, in fact, there’s no clear and present danger to the country. If you look at the stuff that Assange published I would argue there’s no clear and present danger to the country. It’s been three years, where is the danger? You’re still here and I’m still here. All claims sound terrible when it comes to national security…In my book I look backwards at the Pentagon Papers and there was no damage to national security. You have to look at these claims with a jaundiced eye because after a period of time, you can look at them, and there’s no danger. RT: As you mentioned the Obama administration has prosecuted more alleged leakers under the Espionage Act than all previous administrations combined. Do you believe that leakers such as Bradley Manning should be subject to some discipline? JG: Yes, I do. I would think that if you started leaking information for the organization you work for then you ought to be fired. I think every organization ought to have a control over its employees, and therefore I think that the 20 years to which Bradley Manning has agreed probably is a good sentence. I think the question with Bradley Manning right now is, is he agreed to 20 years but the government wants to give him life. I just wonder if that’s appropriate but I do believe every organization ought to be able to discipline its employees. RT: Then do you fault the Department of Justice for trying to find out who the leakers are, because as you well know there’s been a scandal with the DoJ secretly obtaining the phone records from Associated Press journalists and they also obtained the warrant to search the email of a Fox News reporter. Do you defend the US government in trying to find out who the leakers are? JG: Well I think there is two things. We’ve got six leaker prosecutions, three in the whole history of the United States before then. Everyone leaks in Washington because everyone has got access to national security information. I think the Obama administration has got to dial it back. He’s dialed it back on drones but six [leak prosecutions] is too many. Once you start getting everybody, some of these cases start to blow up in your face. Then the second question is how you go about it. I don’t think, when the government is concerned about the behavior of its own employees, that it ought to take the press and throw them into the middle of it, which is what they have done in what we call Rosengate. James Rosen is the reporter for Fox News who was the subject of a search warrant, on a theory that he was a co-conspirator with a gentleman named Kim. I mean, when I look at you, you don’t look like a co-conspirator to me. But if you were to start covering some Washington stories, which inevitably involve national security information, you’re subject to be called a co-conspirator. Legally I could give you the whole song and dance but just for your viewers, and common sense, we know reporters aren’t co-conspirators and we know their records shouldn’t be subject to search warrants. Come on – lay off, President Obama. RT: Do you think they’re doing this to intimidate US journalists from seeking information and publishing these reports on national security issues? JG: Sure, if they did that to your colleague here you could be intimidated. They’re also trying to intimidate those who leak and, as I said, I think they should use some discretion there because when the president speaks to you, he’s leaking. Have you ever thought about that? Every piece of information in Washington, particularly the information which he has his hands on, is classified…So the impact is we have less information, we have less power, and the government – by keeping the information secret – they become more powerful. That’s not good for any of us. RT: As a result of the AP and Fox News scandals the New Yorker has launched Strongbox, an online drop box that allows anyone to send leaked documents without their identities ever being known. So this way if the Justice Department asks anyone from the New Yorker magazine ‘Where did you get this information? Who was your source?’ the New Yorker says ‘We don’t know.’ Don’t you find it interesting that the New Yorker is now using the First Amendment practices of Julian Assange to protect the Bradley Manning’s of the world? JG: It doesn’t surprise me at all, because that’s what the New Yorker should be doing in the digital age. That’s what publishers do. After the Julian Assange story broke the New York Times said they were going to set one up and I think the Wall Street Journal, too. Now Obama is saying he wants to get Assange, but Assange is just like the New Yorker, the Wall Street Journal. Obama might as well go get the New York Times, and that’s what I’m here to say I’m scared about. RT: During his speech on Thursday President Obama did say that he’s troubled by the possibility that the Department of Justice investigations into leaks may “chill the type of journalism that holds government accountable.” As a result, he’s calling on Congress to pass a Media Shield law to guard against government overreach. Do you think that will help to do anything or is it just rhetoric?JG: I think it’s probably both. What he said was he wants Chuck Schumer, our Senator in New York, to put the bill in. So Schumer gets up and says ‘Look, I’m going to put it in but first we’re going to make an exception so it doesn’t cover WikiLeaks’ and the second thing he said is that it won’t cover national security. I will say, in defense of Schumer, that the old bill on which this is placed didn’t completely eliminate all national security leaks but it had a provision in there that made it very difficult to justify so I question whether that is worth the camel. But gee whiz, we’re not going to protect Julian Assange when the New Yorker is doing the same thing. RT: There have certainly been some cases where journalists have abused their power. A recent example is that Bloomberg reporters are facing a scandal after being accused of accessing private data on the Bloomberg terminal to further their reporting. Do you see this is as big deal?JG: Yes I think that’s a big deal. It’s a little bit like the Rupert Murdoch scandal in London when the papers were hacking in [to a murder victim’s cell phone]. This isn’t hacking, I suppose, but it is the same effect. You’ve got to have privacy for your emails but I’m not defending the Bloomberg journalists. I think we’ve got to realize that we’re in a new, digital world and we’ve got to get clear on what the rules are because it’s so easy to cheat. RT: You’ve been called the father of reporters’ privileges. What do you see as the current threats to press freedom in the United States?JG: It, frankly, is President Obama and Rosengate because this is the first time the – I hate to use the term ‘Espionage Act,’ we’ll say national security act for your viewers – has been used to get reporters. I mean, that really is frightening because it’s usually used to get leakers. Rosen is a leakee, to use legal phraseology. If the Obama administration, or at least his Justice Department, thinks they can use criminal laws to get journalists because they’re co-conspirators, honestly that is one of the worst things I’ve come across in all the years I’ve been doing this. RT: In closing, I mentioned your book at the beginning of the interview, what do you hope that readers get from your book?JG: Well, the purpose of the book is to learn the lesson from the Pentagon Papers, which is to say any president who messes with national security is going to be in deep yogurt. Wake up, America. Wake up, President Obama. President Obama, don’t go after Julian Assange and call him a co-conspirator, that’s bad for everybody. … Read More
Minister: Stockholm riots ‘not youth versus society’
With one arrest warrant being issued after four nights of rioting in Stockholm, Sweden’s Integration Minister Erik Ullenhag said the rioters are a small minority, and did not represent a clash between young people in the suburbs and Swedish society. … Read More
‘Press freedom eroding’: DOJ slammed for search warrant against ‘spying’ Fox reporter
James Rosen, Fox News’s chief Washington correspondent, had a 44-page application for a search warrant filed against him, including for his personal emails, after publishing a report based on leaked security information in June 2009. The report revealed North Korea’s intention to conduct a nuclear test despite the US imposition of sanctions on the country.The US Department of Justice (DOJ) described Rosen “at the very least, either as an aider, abettor and/or co-conspirator.” The accusation appears in a court affidavit first reported by the Washington Post on Monday.The officials digging up the case were revealed to have been tracking the journalist’s trips to and from the State Department as well as monitoring his communications, as a search warrant was obtained for the reporter’s personal e-mails.Rosen’s case has been linked with charges filed previously against a security adviser with the US State Department Stephen Jin-woo Kim for his role in leaking the classified information that appeared in the article. The search warrant application also revealed that investigators catalogued the number of times the password and profile affiliated with Kim had accessed intelligence reports.The investigation into Rosen was described as “downright chilling” by Fox executive vice president of news Michael Clemente in a statement. He added the company was “outraged” to learn that he had been named a criminal co-conspirator for “simply doing his job as a reporter.”“We will unequivocally defend his right to operate as a member of what up until now has always been a free press,” Clemente said.The scandal comes on the heels of the exposure of a US government investigation into the Associated Press, in which it was acknowledged that over the course of two months, over 20 phone lines of journalists were tapped, prompting AP President Gary Pruitt to call the ongoing monitoring a “massive and unprecedented intrusion.”The AP believes that overall, more than 100 journalists are under the DOJ’s phone surveillance, which would have involved a wide variety of stories regarding government and other topics.The Obama administration’s crackdown on journalists has roused concern across the media. “The government is obviously stepping way outside of that balance. You’re talking about reporting news information that is critical for an informed populace,” Wide Awake News founder Charlie McGrath told RT.“Yes, there’s going to be things that can’t be reported; that shouldn’t be leaked. But you’re going to go after the journalist who’s doing his job, and not the ineffective dysfunctional government that leaked the info in the first place,” he continued.McGrath went on to predict that eventually news would be composed solely of government press releases, adding that inside sources are already very much less inclined to share any real information with the press.The crackdown is intended to “scare… anybody who dares to stand up to the party line, to the agenda line. And this isn’t just the Obama administration. It was the previous administration, and it will be the next administration it’s out of control government. It’s hubris at its worst. And it’s going continue to erode the freedom of this country,” McGrath concluded. … Read More
Opposition activist sentenced to 2.5 years for inciting mass disorder at anti-Putin rally
The prosecution had previously demanded a 5-year prison term, but the sentence was shortened after Lebedev pleaded guilty and expressed remorse. His case was heard in a special, simplified procedure, and the sentence was lower than the minimum required by law.The activist will not appeal the sentence, Lebedev’s lawyer Valery Lavrov said, adding that the defendant is satisfied with the ruling. After the verdict was announced, Lebedev was taken into custody and will begin serving his sentence.Investigators have charged Lebedev, along with opposition Left Front coordinator Sergey Udaltsov, activist Leonid Razvozzhayev and Georgian politician Givi Targamadze – in absentia – with organizing violent demonstrations on May 6 on Moscow’s Bolotnaya Square, the day before Vladimir Putin was sworn in as president of Russia. A protest march that day against alleged electoral fraud ended in violence.According to investigators, Udaltsov, Lebedev, Razvozzhayev and Targamadze “aimed at destabilizing the social-political situation” in Russia. The Prosecutor General’s Office also accused the four of planning to incite further unrest in other regions across the country.“For that purpose, the accomplices were organizing the so-called training camps in [several Russian cities] as well as in the republic of Lithuania; they were also recruiting participants for planned riots,” the Prosecutor General’s Office stated.Currently, Udaltsov remains under house arrest, Razvozzhayev was arrested in October and an international arrest warrant was issued for Targamadze in February. Lebedev’s verdict is the second connected to the May 6 protests, following Maksim Luzyanin, who was sentenced to 4.5 years in jail last November.Udaltsov earlier criticized Lebedev confession, saying he showed“unacceptable weakness” and “let his comrades down.” Lebedev only confessed in hopes of reducing his sentence, Udaltsov wrote on Twitter.An investigation into the incident began after the controversial documentary ‘Anatomy of a Protest 2’ aired on Russia’s NTV in October last year. The film showed what its producers claimed was footage of the suspects meeting with Georgian officials in the Belarusian capital of Minsk in June 2012.Those at the gathering allegedly discussed plans to organize mass riots against Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow and other cities, with financial backing from abroad. The investigation of the ‘Bolotnaya Square case’ is ongoing. Around 20 others are facing criminal charges for their participation in the riot, and for injuring police officers.The wave of anti-government protests, which began in November 2011, was hailed for being largely nonviolent. Many observers were impressed with the successful demonstrations organized by the Russian opposition.But the protests turned violent on May 6, 2012, when clashes broke out between demonstrators and police. Officials said that around 30 police officers were injured, and some 400 people were detained. … Read More
Perspective: Law Enforcement Could Not Find Its Ass With Both Hands
By effectively occupying a part of the Boston metro area they made an utter mockery of the 4th Amendment. … Read More
CISPA Passes House, “Shot Across China’s Bow” Says Primary Sponsor Mike Rogers
The House of Representatives passed “cyberthreat
information sharing” legislation known as CISPA this afternoon
by a a vote
of 288-127 with 29 Republicans joining 98 Democrats in voting
no.
The legislation allows the federal government to collect data
from private corporations,
without a warrant and their privacy policies for users
would no longer be legally enforceable. Justin Amash’s proposed
amendment to prevent that from happening failed
earlier this week and is among the reasons (more regulations
being another) cited by the White House when it issued a
veto threat.
As it stands the legislation’s privacy protection consists of
the federal government taking “reasonable measures” to
limit its own data collection.
Prior to its passage this afternoon, House Intelligence
Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, a primary sponsor of the
legislation, framed it as a protection from intellectual
property theft. “If you want to take a shot across China’s bow,
this is the answer,” he told Congress just before it rejected a
motion to recommit and then passed the bill.
The last time CISPA was in the Senate, it
failed a cloture vote 52-46, as some clamor for it to be
easier to pass legislation there. ; … Read More
Feds force Oregon to surrender medical marijuana patient records
Federal agents have forced the Oregon Public Health Division to turn over an untold number of patients’ medical marijuana records, according to court records recently uncovered by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Department of Justice Special Agent Michael Gutensohn applied for a warrant to…






