A pair of Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday urged the Biden administration to revamp Justice Department guidelines to stop surveillance of journalists as a way to identify their sources.
The call came in a letter sent by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) to Attorney General Merrick Garland in which they urged the administration to seize the “opportunity to voluntarily leave behind the thuggish and Orwellian abuses of power of the last administration, and stand up as a world leader for press freedoms.”
The letter points to revelations by the Washington Post earlier this month that former President Donald Trump’s Justice department, in early 2017, secretly seized phone records and tried to get email records of three Post reporters covering Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Biden’s Justice Department defended the seizure and attempted seizure, the Post reported, with department spokesperson Marc Raimondi asserting the targets of the investigations were not the journalists “but rather those with access to the national defense information who provided it to the media and thus failed to protect it as lawfully required.”
Wyden and Raskin noted that “in years past, the government would often attempt to force journalists to reveal their sources by dragging them into court.”
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