‘Nation’s Top Censorship Officer': Targeted NYT Journalist

NOVANEWS

Rebukes Eric Holder Over Press Freedoms

James Risen, dragged through the mud by the Department of Justice, offers a bold counter to AG’s record on whistleblowers.
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James Risen, Pulitzer Prize winning reporter with the New York Times, addresses a luncheon at the Associated Press Media Editors conference in Chicago. Dec. 12, 2014. Photo: Charles Rex Arbogast/AP

Persecuted New York Times journalist James Risen accused U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder of being the “nation’s top censorship officer” in a searing rebuke to comments made by Holder on Tuesday that the way his department handled the case of the now-imprisoned CIA whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling should exemplify “how the Justice Department can proceed.”
Holder made the comments at the National Press Club on Tuesday when answering a question about the DOJ’s crackdown on leaks and whistleblowers. After years of doggedly pursuing Risen’s testimony against Sterling, the DOJ finally dropped their case after Risen vowed he would go to jail rather than reveal his source. The prize-winning journalist has previously described the Obama administration as “the greatest enemy of press freedom in a generation.”
“If you look at the last case involving Mr. Risen,” Holder said, “the way in which that case was handled after the new policies were put in place [is] an example of how the Justice Department can proceed.”
During his comments, Holder further argued that the Department of Justice has been lenient on government whistleblowers, despite the fact that his office under the Obama Administration has overseen more prosecution of such leaks under the Espionage Act than every other administration combined.
“We have tried to be appropriately sensitive in bringing those cases that warranted prosecution,” Holder said. “We have turned away, I mean, turned away substantially greater number of cases that were presented to us where prosecution was sought.”
After the comments were made public, Risen took to Twitter and unleashed a series of comments exposing what he said was Holder’s “true legacy on press freedom.”

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