Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Customs unit tracks journalist­s

Agent calls practice of using government databases ‘routine’

- MARK SHERMAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Elliot Spagat of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — A special Customs and Border Protection unit used sensitive government databases intended to track terrorists to investigat­e as many as 20 U.S.-based journalist­s, including a Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press reporter, according to a federal watchdog.

Yahoo News, which published an extensive report on the investigat­ion, also found that the unit, the Counter Network Division, queried records of congressio­nal staffers and perhaps members of Congress.

Jeffrey Rambo, an agent who acknowledg­ed running checks on journalist­s in 2017, told federal investigat­ors the practice is routine.

“When a name comes across your desk you run it through every system you have access to, that’s just status quo, that’s what everyone does,” Rambo was quoted by Yahoo News as saying.

The AP obtained a redacted copy of a more than 500-page report by the Homeland Security Department’s inspector general that included the same statement, but with the speaker’s name blacked out. The border protection agency is part of the department.

The revelation­s raised alarm in news organizati­ons and prompted a demand for a full explanatio­n.

“We are deeply concerned about this apparent abuse of power. This appears to be an example of journalist­s being targeted for simply doing their jobs, which is a violation of the First Amendment,” Lauren Easton, AP’s director of media relations, said in a statement.

In its own statement, Customs and Border Protection did not specifical­ly address the investigat­ion, but said, “CBP vetting and investigat­ory operations, including those conducted by the Counter Network Division, are strictly governed by well-establishe­d protocols and best practices. CBP does not investigat­e individual­s without a legitimate and legal basis to do so.”

An employee at Rambo’s Storymaker­s Coffee Roasters, a small storefront in San Diego’s Barrio Logan neighborho­od, said Saturday that Rambo was not immediatel­y available to comment. Rambo lives in San Diego.

PAST SCRUTINY

The new disclosure­s are just the latest examples of federal agencies using their power to examine the contacts of journalist­s and others.

Earlier this year, Attorney General Merrick Garland formally prohibited prosecutor­s from seizing the records of journalist­s in leak investigat­ions, with limited exceptions, reversing years of department policy. That action came after an outcry over revelation­s that the Trump Justice Department had obtained records belonging to journalist­s, as well as Democratic members of Congress and their aides and a former White House counsel, Don McGahn.

During the Obama administra­tion, federal investigat­ors secretly seized phone records for some AP reporters and editors. Those seizures involved office and home lines as well as cellphones.

Rambo’s and the Customs and Border Protection unit’s use of the databases was more extensive than previously known. The inspector general referred possible criminal charges for misusing government databases and lying to investigat­ors, but the Justice Department declined to prosecute Rambo and two other Homeland Security employees.

Rambo complained to Yahoo News that U.S. Customs has not stood by him and that he has been unfairly portrayed in news reports.

“What none of these articles identify me as is a law enforcemen­t officer who was cleared of wrongdoing, who actually had a true purpose to be doing what I was doing,” he said, “and CBP refuses to acknowledg­e that, refuses to admit that, refuses to make that wrong right.”

Rambo had previously been identified as the agent who accessed the travel records of reporter Ali Watkins, then working for Politico, and questioned her about confidenti­al sources. Watkins now writes for The New York Times.

Rambo was assigned in 2017 to the Customs unit, part of the National Targeting Center in Sterling, Va. He told investigat­ors he initially approached Watkins as part of a broader effort to get reporters to write about forced labor around the world as a national security issue.

He also described similar efforts with AP reporter Martha Mendoza, according to an unredacted summary obtained by Yahoo News. Rambo’s unit “was able to vet MENDOZA as a reputable reporter,” the summary said, before trying to establish a relationsh­ip with her because of her expertise in writing about forced labor. Mendoza won her second Pulitzer Prize in 2016 as part of a team that reported on slave labor in the fishing industry in Southeast Asia.

Dan White, Rambo’s supervisor in Washington, told investigat­ors that his unit ran Mendoza through multiple databases, and “CBP discovered that one of the phone numbers on Mendoza’s phone was connected with a terrorist,” Yahoo News reported. White’s case also was referred for prosecutio­n and declined.

In response, Easton said, “The Associated Press demands an immediate explanatio­n from U.S. Customs and Border Protection as to why journalist­s including AP investigat­ive reporter Martha Mendoza were run through databases used to track terrorists and identified as potential confidenti­al informant recruits.”

It was Rambo’s outreach to Watkins that led to the inspector general’s investigat­ion. While he ostensibly sought her out to further his work on forced labor, Rambo quickly turned the focus to a leak investigat­ion. Rambo even gave it a name, “Operation Whistle Pig,” for the brand of whiskey he drank when he met Watkins in June 2017 at a Washington, D.C., bar.

The only person charged and convicted stemming from Rambo’s efforts is James Wolfe, a former security director for the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee who had a personal relationsh­ip with Watkins. Wolfe pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with reporters.

In the course of conversati­ons with FBI agents, Rambo was questioned extensivel­y about his interest in Watkins. He used the travel records to confront her about her relationsh­ip with Wolfe, asserting that Wolfe was her source for stories. Watkins acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip, but insisted Wolfe did not provide informatio­n for her stories.

Rambo said Watkins was not the only reporter whose records he researched through government databases, though he maintained in his interviews with the FBI that he was looking only at whether Wolfe was providing classified informatio­n. Rambo said he “conducted CBP record checks” on “15 to 20 national security reporters,” according to a FBI summary of the questionin­g that was contained in the inspector general’s report.

New York Times spokeswoma­n Danielle Rhoades-Ha said new details about the investigat­ion of Watkins raised fresh concerns.

“We are deeply troubled to learn how U.S. Customs and Border Protection ran this investigat­ion into a journalist’s sources,” Rhoades-Ha said. “As the attorney general has said clearly, the government needs to stop using leak investigat­ions as an excuse to interfere with journalism. It is time for Customs and Border Protection to make public a full record of what happened in this investigat­ion so this sort of improper conduct is not repeated.”

Watkins said she, too, was “deeply troubled at the lengths CBP and DHS personnel apparently went to try and identify journalist­ic sources and dig into my personal life. It was chilling then and it remains chilling now.”

 ?? (AP/Eric Gay) ?? Border Patrol agents hold a news conference prior to a media tour of a new U.S. Customs and Border Protection temporary facility near the Donna Internatio­nal Bridge in Donna, Texas, May 2, 2019.
(AP/Eric Gay) Border Patrol agents hold a news conference prior to a media tour of a new U.S. Customs and Border Protection temporary facility near the Donna Internatio­nal Bridge in Donna, Texas, May 2, 2019.

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