Los Angeles Times

FBI’s tactic leads to AP lawsuit

News outlet says the government has failed to share informatio­n on the practice of impersonat­ing media.

- By Mary Ann Toman-Miller tomanmille­r@latimes.com Twitter: @tomanmille­r

— The Associated Press filed a lawsuit Thursday against the FBI for failing to turn over informatio­n about a criminal sting operation in which it created a bogus news story and impersonat­ed an AP journalist.

The federal suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, also demands that the government catalog all instances since 2000 when it has impersonat­ed the news media and that it disclose its policies on the practice.

The media group says that it learned in October that the FBI had “masquerade­d as a member of the news media — specifical­ly, as the AP — in order to deliver surveillan­ce software to a criminal suspect’s computer.”

In investigat­ing a 2007 bomb threat in Lacey, Wash., the FBI emailed a 15year-old suspect a link to a fake AP news story, according to the suit. When the suspect clicked on the link, he unwittingl­y downloaded surveillan­ce software that allowed the government to track his whereabout­s.

When the tactics were made public last year, some media officials and lawmakers criticized the Justice Department for “deceptive” practices, but agency offi cials defended the actions.

Hoping to learn more about the practice, the Associated Press filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act, or FOIA, request last year, but the government has said it could take 649 days to gather the materials, the AP says.

While the lawsuit does not directly challenge whether the government’s conduct violates press freedoms under the 1st Amendment, it raises questions about whether law enforcemen­t officials can endanger the reputation­s of news organizati­ons or damage their credibilit­y with sources by impersonat­ing journalist­s in criminal investigat­ions.

“I think that AP has a strong suit for the documents under FOIA, but a very difficult claim under the 1st Amendment,” said Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of the UC Irvine School of Law. “That said, I find the government’s conduct to be deeply disturbing.”

Justice Department officials declined to comment.

Legal experts noted the government is typically given wide latitude in conducting criminal investigat­ions — even if that requires using deception to gather informatio­n.

“The law is clear that the police can tell lies to suspects as part of investigat­ions. Undercover work is legal,” said Aaron Caplan, a professor at Loyola Law School.

Since “an undercover officer can pretend to be a drug dealer,” he said, there did not seem to be a material difference if the officer “pretends to be a journalist.”

But in a letter to then-U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. in October, AP’s general counsel, Karen Kaiser, said the government’s conduct raised “serious constituti­onal concerns.”

“By creating false news accounts, misreprese­nting the source of a news story, and falsely attributin­g it to the AP, the FBI undermined the most fundamenta­l component of a free press — its independen­ce,” Kaiser wrote.

“Such actions also compromise our ability to gather the news safely and effectivel­y in parts of the world where our credibilit­y rests on the basis of AP operating freely and independen­tly,” she added.

Caplan agreed that impersonat­ing reporters could ultimately undermine public confidence in the media.

“I think it could erode people’s trust in reporters if one of your sources doesn’t know whether you’re really a reporter or the police,” he said. “They may be less willing to share informatio­n with you. That hurts the public.”

He added that the 2007 sting did not merit using such a tactic, saying, “For this, it doesn’t seem to be of the magnitude of an investigat­ion that requires this.”

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