San Diego Union-Tribune

EXPERTS: CHARGES UNLIKELY IN LEAKING OF DOCUMENT

Court’s marshal to investigat­e how draft became public

- BY MATT ZAPOTOSKY Zapotosky writes for The Washington Post.

Not long after the historic leak Monday night of a draft Supreme Court opinion that would overturn the right to abortion establishe­d in Roe v. Wade, the calls began for the U.S. Justice Department to identify and criminally charge the leaker.

“This lawless action should be investigat­ed and punished as fully as possible. The Chief Justice must get to the bottom of it and the Department of Justice must pursue criminal charges if applicable,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, RKy., said in a statement.

“If there’s not thorough criminal investigat­ion into who leaked privileged documents from the United States Supreme Court then we live in a clown show state,” Donald Trump Jr., the former president’s son, wrote on Twitter.

Chief Justice John Roberts said he was directing the Supreme Court’s marshal to open an investigat­ion into how the document became public — a situation essentiall­y unheard of in the high court’s history. But while the leaker or leakers might face profession­al consequenc­es — such as getting fired or losing their law license — legal analysts say they will almost certainly not face any criminal exposure, provided they had legitimate access to the document.

Experts also said it might be a stretch of the Justice Department’s authority to even investigat­e the matter — unless evidence emerged to point to another crime, such as a break-in at the court or hacking of the court’s systems.

“Unless the draft was obtained through means that were themselves unlawful, I’m having a really hard time seeing what crime was committed in leaking it to the press,” University of Texas Law School Professor Stephen Vladeck said, adding later: “That doesn’t mean that there won’t or can’t be an investigat­ion, but I’d be really surprised if it ended up with any kind of criminal charge.”

A draft Supreme Court opinion is not classified, which is typically the basis for leak investigat­ions. And while someone could argue that sharing the document with a reporter amounts to theft of government property, the department’s own guidance suggests it would not charge a leak like this as a crime.

“I am extremely skeptical of what basis or what authority the Justice Department would have to inquire into this matter,” said national security and whistleblo­wer lawyer Bradley Moss. “It is certainly a fireable offense — without question — but there is no obvious criminal provision that would apply.”

The law that could be at issue is 18 U.S.C. 641 — which prohibits the theft or receipt of stolen government informatio­n, as well as theft of the documents. That could apply to Supreme Court documents.

But the Justice Department’s criminal division has said, as a matter of policy, that it would be inappropri­ate to bring a prosecutio­n under the law in the following circumstan­ces: when the thing alleged to have been stolen was “intangible property, i.e., government informatio­n”; when the person “obtained or used the property primarily for the purpose of disseminat­ing it to the public”; and when the property was not obtained by wiretappin­g, intercepti­on of correspond­ence or trespassin­g.

In other words, if someone with legitimate access to the draft — such as a justice, clerk or administra­tive assistant — leaked the informatio­n because they thought the public should know about it, the Justice Department would not treat the leak as a crime.

Politico — which broke the news of the draft opinion and posted a copy of the document on its website — said only that it “received a copy of the draft opinion from a person familiar with the court’s proceeding­s.” It did not identify the person.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called for the leak to be investigat­ed and punished to the fullest extent possible.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called for the leak to be investigat­ed and punished to the fullest extent possible.

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