Business Standard

Press groups criticise seized records of reporter

- MICHAEL M GRYNBAUM

The revelation that federal prosecutor­s seized years’ worth of email and phone records from a New York Times reporter drew criticism on Friday from news organizati­ons and press rights groups, which expressed outrage at the first known instance of the Trump administra­tion’s pursuing the private communicat­ions of a journalist.

The Committee to Protect Journalist­s called the move “a fundamenta­l threat to press freedom.” The Times, in its own statement, called the seizure “an outrageous overreach” and raised concerns about a chilling effect on journalist­s’ ability to report on the government.

The records were seized from Ali Watkins, a reporter for The Times in Washington, amid a Justice Department investigat­ion into a former high-ranking aide at the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee who was suspected of leaking classified informatio­n to reporters.

The aide, James A Wolfe, 57, who retired last year, was arraigned in federal court on Friday on charges of lying to investigat­ors about his contacts with several journalist­s. He has denied that he gave classified material to journalist­s, and prosecutor­s, for now, have charged him only with making false statements to the FBI.

The Justice Department ramped up investigat­ions into journalist­s and their sources under President Barack Obama, and the Trump administra­tion was widely expected to follow suit. On Friday, President Trump called Wolfe “a very important leaker” and said his arrest “could be a terrific thing.” “I’m a very big believer in freedom of the press, but I’m also a believer that you cannot leak classified informatio­n,” Trump added.

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