Porterville Recorder

Politico’s Supreme Court scoop boosts security concerns

- By DAVID BAUDER AP Media Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — In breaking news of a Supreme Court draft opinion that would strike down 50 years of abortion policy, Politico’s most impactful moment also put the news organizati­on squarely in the middle of one of society’s most contentiou­s issues.

Politico sent a memo to staff members on Tuesday saying it had restricted access to its offices and told security to be “extra vigilant” about visitors. The company also urged employees to consider removing their Politico affiliatio­n on social media accounts.

The company has not reported any specific threats.

But the story on the court’s apparent readiness to overrule the 1973 Roe v. Wade case that legalized abortion nationwide led to wide speculatio­n online about Politico’s sources, some of it specific and malevolent.

The Federalist, a conservati­ve website, headlined a story: “The SCOTUS Abortion Decision Leak is what Actual Treasonous Insurrecti­on Looks Like.” The site said it believed the news was leaked to bully justices into changing their votes.

Politico’s story struck like a thundercla­p when posted at 8:32 p.m. Eastern Monday. It’s very rare for internal Supreme Court discussion­s to be made public, and unpreceden­ted for a full draft decision to see the light of day — much less for one of the most closely watched cases to come before justices in years.

Demonstrat­ors quickly appeared outside of the court, and cable news networks rearranged schedules to cover the news.

“I gasped and reflexivel­y put my hand over my mouth,” journalist Emily Kaplan wrote on Twitter. “Haven’t done that since Election Night 2016.”

The story, written by Josh Gerstein and Alexander Ward, said the court had already voted to eliminate Roe as a precedent. It linked to a copy of the draft decision which, according to a stamp on it, was written by Justice Samuel Alito and circulated within the court on Feb. 10, 2022.

Politico emphasized it was a draft decision that could change. In the article, Politico said it had received a copy of the draft opinion “from a person familiar with the court’s proceeding­s” in the case that was argued Dec. 1, along with “other details supporting the authentici­ty of the document.”

That would seem to limit the potential sources: Each one of the court’s nine justices has four clerks and there is an unknown number of support staff. It was not clear whether Politico had an electronic or hard copy of the decision.

The story was a closely held secret even within Politico, with few people knowing that it was coming. At the time it was posted, Politico’s top news executives, Editorin-chief Matt Kaminski and Executive Editor Dafna Linzer, sent a memo to the full staff about it.

“After an extensive review process, we are confident of the authentici­ty of the draft,” the executives wrote. “This unpreceden­ted view into the justice’s deliberati­ons is plainly news of great public interest.”

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