Court Hears Arguments on Government Access to Times Reporters' Phone Records
By ADAM LIPTAK
Published: January 20, 2005
A federal prosecutor argued yesterday that the government should be allowed to examine the telephone records of two reporters for The New York Times to identify their sources for several articles about Islamic charities.
"We want to find out who leaked national security information," the prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, said in a federal court hearing in New York.
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In an unrelated case involving confidential sources, a federal judge in Washington has ordered Ms. Miller jailed for refusing to name her sources to a grand jury investigating the disclosure of the identity of a covert C.I.A. officer, Valerie Plame. Ms. Miller, who did not write about the Plame matter, is free pending the ruling of the federal appeals court in Washington. Mr. Fitzgerald is the prosecutor in both cases. In the case argued yesterday, Mr. Fitzgerald said he was investigating the disclosure of impending government action against two Islamic charities, Holy Land Foundation of Texas and Global Relief Foundation in Illinois in 2001. Before the assets of the charities were blocked and their offices raided, Mr. Fitzgerald said, a Times reporter called each charity for comment, alerting them to the coming actions.Whoever told the reporters about the government plans might have violated the law, Mr. Fitzgerald said. He said the reporters were not themselves targets of his investigation.
In court papers, the reporters disputed the assertion that they had tipped off the charities. They said the charities had long been subjects of government scrutiny and knew the government planned to act. The reporters added that seeking comment from the subjects of news articles is standard journalism practice.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/20/national/20leak.html