Los Angeles Times

Justice Dept. restricts access to reporters’ records

- By Meena Venkataram­anan

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department on Monday issued a formal policy that restricts the ability of federal prosecutor­s to obtain the records of reporters, a shift that followed intense lobbying by free press advocates and media organizati­ons outraged by the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to obtain such data.

In a memorandum released Monday morning, Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland said federal prosecutor­s would no longer use grand jury subpoenas or any other “compulsory legal process” to obtain informatio­n from reporters acting within the scope of their jobs. The rules come with a few exceptions — prosecutor­s may seek such informatio­n if reporters are the target of an investigat­ion, if they work for a foreign power or terrorist group, or if there is an imminent risk of death or injury.

“The goal is to protect members of the news media in a manner that will be enduring,” Garland wrote in the memorandum, adding that he has instructed the deputy attorney general to develop regulation­s governing how prosecutor­s handle such investigat­ions.

Garland took the action in the wake of disclosure­s by the New York Times, Washington Post and CNN that federal prosecutor­s had secretly sought email and phone records while hunting for government officials who might have leaked classified informatio­n. Prosecutor­s were seeking to find out how reporters learned details about the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and other sensitive matters.

The data seizures drew sharp criticism from media advocates, and President Biden in May said obtaining such records was “simply, simply wrong.” The Justice Department in June endorsed Biden’s approach, saying it would no longer seek such informatio­n, and officials said that Garland would be issuing new rules restrictin­g how prosecutor­s approached such cases.

Journalism and free press groups hailed the new policy, saying it would help protect reporters’ sources.

“The attorney general has taken a necessary and momentous step to protect press freedom at a critical time,” said Bruce D. Brown, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. “This historic new policy will ensure that journalist­s can do their job of informing the public without fear of federal government intrusion into their relationsh­ips with confidenti­al sources.”

Administra­tions of both political parties have relied on grand jury subpoenas and court orders to obtain journalist­s’ records to identify sources of classified informatio­n.

The Justice Department under President Obama aggressive­ly pursued leak investigat­ions, but under media pressure crafted regulation­s making it harder for prosecutor­s to obtain journalist­s’ records. The Trump administra­tion ramped up leak inquiries, though prosecutor­s appear to have followed the Obama-era regulation­s requiring them to obtain such journalist­s’ data as a final resort.

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