by Matt Taibbi on his TK News Substack:
I woke this morning to find the Twitter version of a block party, over the news that Donald Trump is being investigated under the Espionage Act. A few examples:
đ¨đ¨ A former U.S. president is under investigation for violations of the Espionage Act. Let that sink in. đ¨đ¨
— Jon Cooper (@joncoopertweets) August 12, 2022
For the warrant to cover the Espionage Act, there had to be PROBABLE CAUSE of espionage.
Not just a âwhat if Trump gave classified docs to foreign agents.â
There was PROOF presented to the judge â witness testimony, video footage, other documents, something. Tangible proof.
— Tristan Snell (@TristanSnell) August 12, 2022
How long until Trump tries to fundraise off of potentially violating the Espionage Act?
— Robert Reich (@RBReich) August 12, 2022
The most mind-blowing of these tweets is by Reich, who should know better. If I were Trump, I absolutely would fundraise off being investigated under the Espionage Act. By pursuing him under this provision, the Justice Department just did Trump the mother of all favors, adding his name to a list of some of the most famous political martyrs in our history.
âEllsberg, Hale, Winner, Snowden, Assange, and now Trump,â Gabriel Shipton, brother of Julian Assange said this morning. âIncredible.â
Maybe Reich canât see how this will play politically, or doesnât care, but anyone thrilled at the prospect of trying to prosecute a former president under the Espionage Act has blacked out the recent history of this law. How much does this Act suck, and shame us all? Letâs count the ways.
The Espionage Act represents the evolution of a series of laws whose purpose is/was to criminalize unauthorized use of sensitive information. I wrote this after the indictment of Assange:
The indictment stressed Assange/Manning were seeking ânational defense informationâ that could be âused to the injury of the United StatesâŚâ [This] gave off a whiff of Britainâs Official Secrets Acts and Americaâs Defense Secrets Act of 1911, prohibiting ânational defenseâ information going to âthose not entitled to receive itâŚâ
These laws were written in a way that contradicted basic speech protections⌠There was a way to read the Espionage Act that criminalized what the Columbia Law Review back in 1973 (during the Pentagon Papers controversy) called the âmere retentionâ of classified material.
If you want a clear portrait of the shift in establishment thinking about this, look at the attitude of the New York Times toward its own role in the history of the Act. In 1981, on the ten year anniversary of the government charging former Daniel Ellsberg with violation of the Espionage Act for taking the âPentagon Papersâ to the Times for publication, the paperâs former attorney in that case, Floyd Abrams, wrote an editorial celebrating the episode. He said it âstiffened the spines of all journalists.â
Thirty years later, the Times ran a very different essay. Written by attorney Gabriel Schoenfeld and entitled âLeaking the Pentagon Papers was an Assault on Democracy,â Schoenfeld argued âMr. Ellsbergâs legacy is at best mixed,â as he was âstill a rogue actor,â who âif the fundamental ground rules of our constitutional democracy are to be respected, deserves a measure of condemnation.â
Katie Halper and I asked Ellsberg about the Act around then:
Theyâve learned to wield the Espionage Act, to criminalize whistleblowing⌠9/11 comes along, and itâs âConstitution be damned.â Since then weâve had total surveillance of everybody, totally unconstitutionally⌠Weâre not a police state, but we could be a police state almost from one day to the next⌠They know where we are, they know our names, they know from our iPhones if weâre on our way to the grocery store or not⌠We could be East Germany in weeks, in a month.
The general public not long ago had sympathy for revealers of secrets like Edward Snowden, who disclosed the county had been the subject of an illegal mass surveillance program. They also had growing contempt for a security apparatus that awarded itself virtually unlimited power via pseudo-laws like the PATRIOT Act, the Office of Legal Counsel secret memo supposedly legalizing drone assassination even of Americans, and the Bush-era memo with the amazing Orwellian name, âHumane Treatment of Taliban and al Qaeda Detainees,â that unilaterally exempted the U.S. from Geneva convention prohibitions against torture.
When CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou revealed details about the program, what law was used to charge him? The Espionage Act. What âespionageâ did he commit? Did he sell secrets to Russia, China, al-Qaeda? No. He talked to American journalists, including a network TV pair named Matthew Cole and Richard Esposito (remember those names).
Even as the government defined talking to American reporters as espionage, and even as Kiriakou went to jail for two years (the only CIA person ever to be jailed in connection with the torture program), the press backed the concept. âIt took my lawyers a year to get CNN and MSNBC to stop calling me CIA-leaker John Kiriakou and to start calling me CIA-whistleblower,â he said.
Barack Obama was one of the most enthusiastic deployers of the Espionage Act, using it at least eight times to bring charges against people not for âespionage,â but for talking to the press. The list included Thomas Drake, Shamai Leibowitz, Stephen Kim, Chelsea Manning, Donald Sachtleben, and Jeffrey Sterling, plus Kiriakou and Snowden. The AP wrote how the Obama administration âobtained the records of 20 Associated Press office phone lines and reportersâ home and cell phones,â while they also:
Secretly dogged Fox News journalist James Rosen, getting his phone records, tracking his arrivals and departures at the State Department through his security-badge use, obtaining a search warrant to see his personal emailsâŚ
Establishment attitudes toward âwhistleblowingâ shifted with Trumpâs election. Director Laura Poitras, won an Oscar in 2015 for her documentary about Snowden, CitizenFour. Glenn Greenwald, the reporter with whom Snowden collaborated, won the Pulitzer Prize. Yet when Trump got elected, a new type of âwhistleblowingâ became common. Highâlevel leaks about issues like the Trump-Russia investigation, seemingly all coming from senior intelligence officials or congressional sources, were an almost weekly occurrence, and none were prosecuted.
One that didnât go unpunished involved NSA contractor Reality Winner, sentenced to five years under, you guessed it, the Espionage Act. What was different about her case? She wasnât a former CIA director or a DNI, just an ordinary person. âItâs about low-hanging fruit,â Titus Nichols, Winnerâs attorney, told me at the time.
Winnerâs case came after a 2017 story in the Intercept entitled, âTop Secret NSA report details Russian hacking effort days before election.â They called it the âmost detailed U.S. government account of Russian interference in the election that has yet come to light.â
The affidavit attached to Winnerâs indictment charges her with having first âimproperlyâ removed ânational defense information,â then having âunlawfullyâ transmitted it âto an online news outlet.â The lead reporters on the Intercept story, by a remarkable coincidence â like a remarkably remarkable coincidence â were Matthew Cole and Richard Esposito.
A military analyst named Daniel Hale couldnât take being a drone assassin, disclosed details about his work, and got 45 months under the Espionage Act for his trouble. At sentencing he insisted his real crime was his work for the Air Force. âI am here because I stole something that was never mine to take â precious human life,â he said.
The case against the onetime liberal hero Julian Assange boils down to one half-assed charge of allegedly agreeing to help (but never following through) source Chelsea Manning crack a hash to protect her identity, wrapped around 17 insane charges under the Espionage Act. I wrote at the time his indictment was âthe work of attorneys who probably thought the Sedition Act was good law.â A list of the charges:
Count 1: Conspiracy to Receive National Defense Information. Counts 2-4: Obtaining National Defense Information. Counts 5-8: Obtaining National Defense Information. And so on. The indictment is an insane tautology. It charges Assange with conspiracy to obtain secrets for the purpose of obtaining them. It lists the following âoffenseâ:
âTo obtain documents, writings, and notes connected with the national defense, for the purpose of obtaining information respecting the national defenseâŚâ
The Espionage Act is an embarrassment that would make Marcos or Suharto squeamish, but itâs of course not completely impossible thereâs an actual espionage offense in Trumpâs case somewhere (just as obviously, no evidence of this has been produced). Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were tried under the Act for giving bomb secrets to the Soviets, as Michael Beschloss and Michael Hayden just helpfully reminded us. However, in modern times, the Espionage Act is more associated with talking to the Times, ABC, The Guardian and The Intercept than with actual spying. The defendants are more often conscience-stricken heroes like Hale than villains.
Thatâs the problem with this law. âInformation relating to the national defenseâ can essentially be anything the government decides, and they can put you in jail a long time for âmishandlingâ it, which in Assangeâs case included merely having it. Trump or no Trump, if you think thatâs okay, youâre an asshole. Itâs totally un-American, which is why Robert Reich shouldnât be surprised if Donald Trump acts proud of being investigated for it. This law is more infamous than he is, and everyone but a handful of blue checks can see it.