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FBI seeks dead reporter’s papers
Official's refusal to comment irks senators.
Published Tuesday, June 6, 2006
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Judiciary Committee gave the Bush administration a new lashing today over its use of executive power, citing the FBI’s posthumous investigation of columnist Jack Anderson and questioning the notion that espionage laws might allow the prosecution of journalists who publish classified information. "It’s highly doubtful in my mind that that was ever the intent of Congress," Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter said. The World War I-era espionage laws, countered Department of Justice Criminal Division Chief Matthew Friedlich, "do not exempt any class of professionals, including reporters, from their reach." "I believe that’s an invitation to Congress to legislate on the subject," replied Specter, R-Pa. "Clearly, the ball is in our court." Friedlich refused to comment on the Anderson case, in which the FBI is seeking 50 years’ worth of papers from the investigative journalist who exposed government scandals and earned a place on President Richard Nixon’s "enemies list." Friedlich’s response echoed deferrals by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and other justice department officials in previous hearings on the administration’s domestic wiretapping, phone tapping and other policies. Specter and other committee members grew exasperated. "Why in heaven’s name were you sent up here?" ranking Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont fumed. "Are there any questions you guys are allowed to answer other than your title, time of day?" Friedrich responded that the committee was advised of this limit before the hearing opened. He added that the FBI was preparing answers to the committee’s questions about the Anderson case. With the administration considering prosecuting journalists who publish classified information and refuse to reveal their sources, the committee wants the full story of the effort to obtain Anderson’s archive months after his death at age 83. Scheduled to testify are Anderson’s son Kevin and Mark Feldstein, a former investigative reporter who is writing a book about Anderson. Feldstein says two FBI agents showed up at his home March 3 seeking the roughly 200 boxes of Anderson’s papers that the family had granted him access for the book. The agents, Feldstein has said, cited national security concerns. Members of the committee don’t buy the explanation. "I fail to see what possible national security interest is served by the FBI rummaging through Mr. Anderson’s files many years after he published articles about these matters," Leahy said. The FBI has said that if the papers contain classified information, they belong to the government. The FBI had long sought Anderson’s papers after he published stories exposing the Keating Five, a CIA plan to assassinate Fidel Castro and details of the Iran-Contra affair. Anderson’s son said the FBI contacted his mother shortly after his father’s funeral, expressing interest in documents that would aid the government’s case against two former lobbyists for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee who have been charged with disclosing classified information. In addition, the agents told the family they planned to remove from the columnist’s archive - which had yet to be catalogued - any document they came across that was stamped "secret" or "confidential" or was otherwise classified. The family refused. The younger Anderson’s account is similar to that of Feldstein, a George Washington University journalism professor and Anderson biographer, who said he was visited by two agents at his Washington-area home in March. "They flashed their badges and said they needed access to the papers," Feldstein said. Anderson donated his papers to the university, but the family had not yet formally signed them over. FBI Special Agent Richard Kolko, a spokesman in Washington, said in an interview that the bureau wants to search the Anderson archive and remove classified materials before they are made available to the public. "It has been determined that, among the papers, there are a number of U.S. government documents containing classified information," Kolko said, declining to say how the FBI knows. The documents contain information about sources and methods used by U.S. intelligence agencies, he said. Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Copyright © 2006 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.
The Columbia Daily Tribune
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