Donald Trump's Justice Department also subpoenaed Microsoft to access congressional staffer's email account in a bid to expose leaker, tech giant reveals a day after DoJ's demands to Apple were exposed
Donald Trump's Justice Department secretly subpoenaed Microsoft to access a congressional staffer's email account in a bid to expose the leakers of classified information to the press.
Microsoft's disclosure comes a day after it was revealed that Apple had received a grand jury subpoena to seize communication records for at least two members of Congress as well as members of the press.
Microsoft said in a statement to The New York Times that the company received a subpoena in 2017 related to a personal email account, and later learned the person was a congressional staffer. That staffer has not been identified.
Like Apple, Microsoft was under a gag order to keep the subpoena a secret and recently notified the customer that their data had been handed over after the gag order expired, the outlet reported.
A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed the news in a statement to DailyMail.com.
'In 2017 Microsoft received a subpoena related to a personal email account. As we've said before, we believe customers have a constitutional right to know when the government requests their email or documents, and we have a right to tell them,' the statement to DailyMail.com reads.
'In this case, we were prevented from notifying the customer for more than two years because of a gag order. As soon as the gag order expired, we notified the customer who told us they were a congressional staffer.'
The Microsoft spokesperson said the company then provided a briefing to the representative's staff following that notice.
'We will continue to aggressively seek reform that imposes reasonable limits on government secrecy in cases like this,' the statement reads.
Trump and his administration were infuriated after detailed conversations between his aides and the Russian ambassador to the US were leaked shortly after he took office in January 2017.
The new revelations show the extent of former President Donald Trump's obsession over such leaks and the extraordinary lengths his administration would go through to investigate them.
His administration's probe was started under former Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Sessions' successor Bill Barr ordered the probe continue well into 2020, after accusing his own investigators of deliberately dragging their feet over the investigation.
Apple revealed in a statement to DailyMail.com that the subpoena it received had 'provided no information on the nature of the investigation' after the company unknowingly handed over data relating to Democratic Reps. Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell - two of Trump's political nemeses.
We regularly challenge warrants, subpoenas and nondisclosure orders and have made it our policy to inform affected customers of governmental requests about them just as soon as possible,' a spokesperson for Apple told DailyMail.com.
The company said that the subpoena was issued by a federal grand jury and included a nondisclosure order signed by a federal magistrate judge.
'[The subpoena] provided no information on the nature of the investigation and it would have been virtually impossible for Apple to understand the intent of the desired information without digging through users' accounts,' the spokesperson said.
'Consistent with the request, Apple limited the information it provided to account subscriber information and did not provide any content such as emails or pictures.'
Apple received the federal grand jury subpoena seeking 'customer or subscriber account information' that came with the nondisclosure order on February 6, 2018.
1/2
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9678379/Justice-Department-subpoenaed-Microsoft-access-congressional-staffers-email-account.html