Peter Maass, Destroyed by the Espionage Act. Stephen Kim spoke to a reporter. Now he’s in jail. This is his story. The Intercept, 18 February 2015. “On the morning of June 11, 2009, James Rosen stepped inside the State Department, scanned his building badge and made his way to the Fox News office in the busy press room on the second floor. It was going to be a hectic day. Like other reporters working the phones that morning, Rosen was looking for fresh news about the latest crisis with North Korea.”
February 18, 2015
Destroyed by the Espionage Act. Stephen Kim spoke to a reporter. Now he’s in jail. This is his story.
February 18, 2015 Filed Under: Criminal Justice, Ethics, Journalism/Media, Law, National Security Tagged With: abbe lowell (lawyer), colleen kollar-kotelly, dennis blair (director of national intelligence), espionage act, fbi, james rosen (fox news), john herzberg, metadata, non-custodial questioning, north korea and nuclear tests, sensitive compartmented information facility (scif), stephen bosworth, stephen kim, steven aftergood (project on government secrecy), sung kim
November 1, 2013
NSA Files: Decoded: What the Edward Snowden revelations mean for you
Ewen MacAskill and Gabriel Dance, NSA Files: Decoded. The Guardian. 1 November 2013. “The story in a nutshell: The Snowden files reveal a number of mass-surveillance programs undertaken by the NSA and GCHQ. The agencies are able to access information stored by major US technology companies, often without individual warrants, as well as mass-intercepting data from the fibre-optic cables which make up the backbone of global phone and internet networks. The agencies have also worked to undermine the security standards upon which the internet, commerce and banking rely.”
November 1, 2013 Filed Under: NSA/GCHQ and the Snowden Revelations Tagged With: american civil liberties union, electronic frontier foundation, foreign intelligence surveillance act of 1978-fisa, general keith alexander-director of the nsa, glenn greenwald, government communications headquarters-gchq, jameel jaffer, james clapper-u.s. director of national intelligence, jeremy scahill, metadata, ron wyden