May 2, 2024

White House Defends Tracking Fox Reporter

The White House on Monday defended President Obama’s support for aggressive investigations into national security leaks despite new disclosures about a 2009 case in which the Justice Department searched a reporter’s personal e-mails and attempted to track his movements.

Details of the government’s investigation of the reporter, James Rosen, the chief Washington correspondent for Fox News, emerged in a court affidavit obtained by The Washington Post. Without naming Mr. Rosen, the document describes the reporter as “at the very least, either as an aider, abettor and/or co-conspirator.”

The case involved a 2009 article by Mr. Rosen about North Korea that was published on FoxNews.com. Mr. Rosen reported that intelligence officials expected North Korea to respond to the passage of a United Nations Security Council resolution condemning its nuclear and ballistic missile tests by launching another missile. He quoted a source who described missile activity in North Korea, but Mr. Rosen said he was withholding some details “to avoid compromising sensitive overseas operations.”

The Justice Department subsequently investigated the leak and indicted a government adviser, Stephen Jin-Woo Kim. He has pleaded not guilty. The government used records tracking Mr. Rosen’s use of his security badge at the State Department, apparently trying to establish his connection to Mr. Kim.

Mr. Rosen was not charged with any crime. But the suggestion that he was a “co-conspirator” appalled many of his colleagues, some of whom rallied to his defense on Monday.

Michael Clemente, the executive vice president of news at Fox News, said network officials were outraged to learn that Mr. Rosen “was named a criminal co-conspirator for simply doing his job as a reporter.” Mr. Clemente called it “downright chilling” and added, “We will unequivocally defend his right to operate as a member of what up until now has always been a free press.”

The revelations may complicate what has been a contentious relationship between the Obama administration and Fox News, whose conservative talk show hosts are among Mr. Obama’s most vocal critics. Mr. Rosen works on the news side of Fox, not the opinion side; he did not comment publicly on the affidavit’s contents.

The details about Mr. Rosen’s case came just days after The Associated Press revealed that the government had seized two months of telephone records for some of its reporters in a similar leak investigation. Under intense questioning from reporters on Monday, Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, declined to comment on Mr. Rosen’s case, but emphasized Mr. Obama’s desire to investigate serious leaks of government information.

“The president believes, I think, as all of his predecessors believed, that it is imperative that leaks that can jeopardize the lives of American men and women serving overseas should not be tolerated,” Mr. Carney said.

He added that the president seeks balance when it comes to security and the right of reporters to pursue stories without fear of investigation.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/us/politics/white-house-defends-tracking-fox-reporter.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: CNN, Planning New Programming, Hires Jake Tapper From ABC

Jake Tapper in November on the set of ABC's Fred Lee/ABC Jake Tapper in November on the set of ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

8:57 p.m. | Updated CNN said on Thursday that it had hired Jake Tapper, the senior White House correspondent for ABC News, as new programming for the cable news channel was announced.

Mr. Tapper, widely seen as one of the most aggressive reporters in the nation’s capital, will be the anchor of an afternoon program for the channel and will be its chief Washington correspondent. The new program will start sometime next year.

Mr. Tapper’s talks with CNN predated the hiring of Jeffrey Zucker to be president of CNN Worldwide. But Mr. Zucker, who will start at CNN in January, was instrumental in getting the deal done, a spokeswoman for the channel said.

Mr. Tapper alluded to the prospect of working with Mr. Zucker in a statement on Thursday. “With CNN’s impeccable reporting during the elections and the exciting changes in the works for the network, this is a perfect time to join the CNN team,” he said.

CNN did not specify what time slot Mr. Tapper would be given. But the channel is expected to shrink the three-hour “Situation Room” back down to two hours, possibly to 5 and 6 p.m. Eastern, making room for Mr. Tapper’s program at 4 p.m.

Mr. Tapper has worked for CNN once before: he was a co-host of “Take 5,” a weekend panel program on CNN, in 2001.

Mr. Tapper has worked at ABC News since 2003, and has been stationed at the White House full time since the presidential election in 2008. His interest in hosting the network’s Sunday morning public affairs program “This Week” had been an open secret in Washington for some time. When George Stephanopoulos was renamed the host of the program (after a stint by Christiane Amanpour) in 2012, there was speculation that Mr. Tapper would look elsewhere. Last week, ABC confirmed that Mr. Stephanopoulos would remain the host of “This Week” in the new year.

In a memo about the changes on Thursday, Ben Sherwood, the president of ABC News, praised Mr. Tapper for building “a reputation as one of the most prolific and multitalented journalists on the beat, scoring scoop after scoop.” He said that Jonathan Karl would succeed Mr. Tapper at the White House. Mr. Karl is currently the senior political correspondent for the news division.

Additionally, the foreign affairs reporter Martha Raddatz, who gained attention in the fall for moderating a vice-presidential debate, will have the title of global foreign affairs correspondent. Ms. Raddatz will also be the primary substitute for Mr. Stephanopoulos on “This Week,” replacing Mr. Tapper in that role, ABC said.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/20/jake-tapper-leaves-abc-news-for-cnn/?partner=rss&emc=rss