Anonymous ID: c59a6b July 29, 2018, 12:30 p.m. No.2341307   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1334

DOJ warns the media could be targeted in crackdown on leaks

By Jonathan Easley - 08/04/17 11:32 AM EDT

 

Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Friday announced a government-wide crackdown on leakers, which will include a review of the Justice Department’s policies on subpoenas for media outlets that publish sensitive information.



 

At a press conference with Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, Sessions announced that the Justice Department, FBI and government intelligence agencies will direct more resources into the investigations of government leaks and would prioritize prosecuting those that pass sensitive information along to the press or foreign officials.



 

Sessions said he had empowered his deputy director Rod Rosenstein and incoming FBI director Christopher Wray to oversee the classified leaks investigations and to monitor the progress of each case.

 

The national security division of the Justice Department will prioritize cases involving unauthorized disclosures, Sessions said, and the departments “will not hesitate to bring lawful and appropriate criminal charges against those who abuse the public trust.”



 

Sessions said his Justice Department has already tripled the number of active leak investigations over the previous administration, and that the FBI would create a new counterintelligence unit to manage the cases.

 

In addition, Sessions said that after meeting with FBI and intelligence investigators, the Justice Department would review its policies affecting media subpoenas.



 

“We respect the important role the press plays and we’ll give them respect, but it’s not unlimited,” Sessions said. “They cannot place lives at risk with impunity. We must balance the press’ role with protecting our national security and the lives of those who serve in the intelligence community, the Armed Forces and all law-abiding Americans.”

 

President Trump has been pushing Sessions to be more aggressive in prosecuting illegal government leaks, which have bedeviled the administration from the start.



 

There have been a torrent of government leaks since Trump took office, leading to accusations from the right that rogue “deep state” actors are conducting a silent “coup” against the president.

 

Sessions said there had been “dramatic growth” in the number of unauthorized disclosures since Trump had taken office and that his office had seen an “explosion” of referrals for potential investigations.

 

The attorney general would not give details about specific investigations, but said four individuals had already been charged with the unlawful release of sensitive government information.

 

“I have this message for our friends in the intelligence community: The Justice Department is open for business,” Sessions said. “And I have this warning for potential leakers: Don’t do it.”

 

Coats, the director of national intelligence, sent a direct message to leakers, would-be leakers and the media outlets that have printed sensitive information.

 

“If you improperly disclose classified information, we will find you, we will investigate you and we will prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law,” Coats said. “You will not be happy with the result.”

 

The details of the myriad probes into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, currently underway in the House, Senate, at the FBI and through the special counsel, have consistently found their way into the press through anonymous sources.

 

The flow of leaks has frustrated the White House, which has been dealing with the cloud of investigation since before the president’s inauguration.

 

Coats noted that not all of the leaks originate from the intelligence community, saying that they also come from the Executive Branch and Congress and that his office would not discriminate in its pursuit of those that break the law.

 

“Any disclosure outside of authorized channels is a criminal offense and we will simply not tolerate the illegal release of classified information,” Coats said.

 

Some of the leaked stories have proven to be untrue, giving the Trump administration political ammunition in its attacks against the press. Many of the stories have been attributed to former administration officials, which has raised suspicions on the right that they are coming from holdovers from former President Obama’s government.

 

Earlier this year, Trump fired his national security adviser Michael Flynn after his name was unmasked in a surveillance report that detailed his conversation with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

 

Trump’s feud with former FBI director James Comey also spilled into the press after Comey passed personal memos detailing his encounters with Trump along to a friend.

More:

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/345316-justice-to-review-media-subpoenas-policy-in-crackdown-on-leaks

Anonymous ID: c59a6b July 29, 2018, 12:42 p.m. No.2341517   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1572

Meet the Mueller team

 

By Marshall Cohen, Tal Yellin, Caroline Kelly and Liz Stark

 

Special counsel Robert Mueller assembled a team of at least 17 lawyers for his investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election and potential collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia. The investigation has already led to charges against 22 people and entities, including four associates of President Donald Trump. Mueller brought on private-sector attorneys and prosecutors from the Department of Justice. Here are biographies of the 17 lawyers known to be working on Mueller’s team.

 

https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2018/politics/meet-the-mueller-team/index.html

Anonymous ID: c59a6b July 29, 2018, 1:10 p.m. No.2341951   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Dershowitz questions Avenatti over ethics of alleged communication with Cohen

John Bowden

1 day ago

Paulina Gutierrez Alonzo, a 26-year-old Guatemalan who was deported back to her country, shows a picture of her daughter, Antonia, 7, who remained in an immigration center in Arizona.

Inside the Chaotic Effort to Reunite Migrant Families

TOPSHOT - An inmate firefighter pauses during a firing operation as the Carr fire continues to burn in Redding, California on July 27, 2018. One person has died and at least two others have been injured as wind-whipped flames tore through the region. / AFP PHOTO / JOSH EDELSONJOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images

Calif. wildfire responsible for 5 deaths continues to grow

 

Legal analyst Alan Dershowitz sparred with Michael Avenatti, the attorney representing Stormy Daniels, on CNN Friday over whether and when Avenatti had conversations with Michael Cohen, President Trump's former longtime attorney.

 

In a CNN segment, Dershowitz questioned how Avenatti could speak with Cohen without first consulting Cohen's counsel after reports that Avenatti told Cohen the two men should work together against Trump during a chance dinner encounter last week.

 

"He did, according to press reports, have a conversation with Mr. Cohen at a restaurant, and that raises some questions, because you know you're not supposed to speak to somebody who's counseled, as a lawyer, and ask him whether you want to get together and hurt Trump," Dershowitz said.

 

"I don't know if that occurred, but if it did occur, [I think] Michael has to do some explaining," he added.

 

Avenatti responded, rebuking Dershowitz for speaking about conversations Avenatti said Dershowitz had no knowledge about.

"Alan, you really need to start talking only about things that you know about as opposed to things you have no knowledge about," Avenatti said. "You have no knowledge of the communications that went on between me and Michael Cohen's representatives … long before that restaurant meeting."

 

Cohen's attorneys reportedly also raised ethical concerns about Avenatti's reported chance meeting in court this week, according to ABC News.

 

Avenatti pressed on in the CNN debate, referencing Dershowitz's claim that he had been uninvited from dinner parties in Martha's Vineyard over his stance on the special counsel investigation. Dershowitz claimed in an op-ed for The Hill earlier this month that his calls for Robert Mueller's investigation to end had made him an outcast among his liberal friends.

 

"You just make it up as you go along," Avenatti added. "You need to go back and concentrate on what invites you get at Martha's Vineyard, since that appears to be what you are really good at."

 

Avenatti previously told MSNBC that he would be interested in representing Cohen against Trump if he were willing, and has reportedly urged Cohen to turn on the president.

 

"If he was prepared to do the right thing, come clean, and basically turn state's evidence, I would absolutely consider it," Avenatti said last week. "Michael Cohen and I actually had the chance to converse."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/dershowitz-questions-avenatti-over-ethics-of-alleged-communication-with-cohen/ar-BBLb5Go