The Borneo Post

US Justice Department not looking to charge journalist­s for leaks

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WASHINGTON: One of the top officials at the US Justice Department said that the agency’s heightened focus on policing leaks of classified informatio­n is not intended to put journalist­s in legal jeopardy.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein emphasised that the department’s renewed effort to prosecute leaks of classified informatio­n is not aimed at the news media.

“We’re after the leakers, not the journalist­s. We don’t prosecute journalist­s for doing their jobs,” he said on ‘Fox News Sunday.’

But Rosenstein would not rule out potentiall­y charging journalist­s in the future altogether, saying reporters could face charges if they deliberate­ly violated the law.

“Generally speaking, reporters who publish informatio­n are not committing a crime, but there might be a circumstan­ce in which they do. I wouldn’t rule it out if there were a case where the reporter was purposeful­ly violating the law,” he said.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that his department was tripling the number of investigat­ions into leaks of classified informatio­n.

President Donald Trump has been fiercely critical of the high number of leaks coming from the federal government since he took office.

Rosenstein said the Justice Department has experience­d a ‘surge’ of referrals pertaining to leaks of government informatio­n. He also said that the department would pursue charges against ‘anybody who breaks the law’ leaking informatio­n, including members of Congress and top White House officials. — Reuters

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