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A day after her arrest was announced publicly by the U.S. Justice Department, Reality Winner, the 25-year-old alleged source of a leaked National Security Agency document detailing Russian hacking efforts, has found a vocal ally in the world's best known whistleblower of the contemporary era: Edward Snowden.
Snowden, who first made headlines around the world in 2013 when he went public as the source of a massive trove of NSA documents detailing the agency's global "collect-it-all" surveillance dragnet, released a statement Tuesday evening saying that while much remains unknown about the details of the case, the Justice Department's decision to file charges under the 'Espionage Act' is deeply troubling.
"This often-condemned law," he explained, "provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
Snowden further argues that Winner should be released on bail pending her trial and said that for the government to hold any "citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage" anyone concerned about the free press, whistleblower protections, or the public's right to know.
\u201cWhen asked to choose between a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, remember your history. https://t.co/ca7FTp4OSF\u201d— Edward Snowden (@Edward Snowden) 1496786586
Released on the website of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, a journalism advocacy group for which Snowden serves as board president, his statement follows in full:
The Justice Department released an indictment of twenty five year-old NSA contractor Reality Winner yesterday, just a few hours after the Intercept posted a story based on a top secret document that described how the NSA believes Russian actors tried to hack into US voting infrastructure. Much is unknown, as the public is made to depend upon the potentially unreliable claims of government prosecutors, while Winner is held in jail without any contact with the public.
What we do know is clear: Winner is accused of serving as a journalistic source for a leading American news outlet about a matter of critical public importance. For this act, she has been charged with violating the Espionage Act--a World War I era law meant for spies--which explicitly forbids the jury from hearing why the defendant acted, and bars them from deciding whether the outcome was to the public's benefit. This often-condemned law provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
The prosecution of any journalistic source without due consideration by the jury as to the harm or benefit of the journalistic activity is a fundamental threat to the free press. As long as a law like this remains on the books in a country that values fair trials, it must be resisted.
No matter one's opinions on the propriety of the charges against her, we should all agree Winner should be released on bail pending trial. Even if you take all the government allegations as true, it's clear she is neither a threat to public safety nor a flight risk. To hold a citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage us all.
Political revenge. Mass deportations. Project 2025. Unfathomable corruption. Attacks on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Pardons for insurrectionists. An all-out assault on democracy. Republicans in Congress are scrambling to give Trump broad new powers to strip the tax-exempt status of any nonprofit he doesn’t like by declaring it a “terrorist-supporting organization.” Trump has already begun filing lawsuits against news outlets that criticize him. At Common Dreams, we won’t back down, but we must get ready for whatever Trump and his thugs throw at us. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. By donating today, please help us fight the dangers of a second Trump presidency. |
A day after her arrest was announced publicly by the U.S. Justice Department, Reality Winner, the 25-year-old alleged source of a leaked National Security Agency document detailing Russian hacking efforts, has found a vocal ally in the world's best known whistleblower of the contemporary era: Edward Snowden.
Snowden, who first made headlines around the world in 2013 when he went public as the source of a massive trove of NSA documents detailing the agency's global "collect-it-all" surveillance dragnet, released a statement Tuesday evening saying that while much remains unknown about the details of the case, the Justice Department's decision to file charges under the 'Espionage Act' is deeply troubling.
"This often-condemned law," he explained, "provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
Snowden further argues that Winner should be released on bail pending her trial and said that for the government to hold any "citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage" anyone concerned about the free press, whistleblower protections, or the public's right to know.
\u201cWhen asked to choose between a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, remember your history. https://t.co/ca7FTp4OSF\u201d— Edward Snowden (@Edward Snowden) 1496786586
Released on the website of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, a journalism advocacy group for which Snowden serves as board president, his statement follows in full:
The Justice Department released an indictment of twenty five year-old NSA contractor Reality Winner yesterday, just a few hours after the Intercept posted a story based on a top secret document that described how the NSA believes Russian actors tried to hack into US voting infrastructure. Much is unknown, as the public is made to depend upon the potentially unreliable claims of government prosecutors, while Winner is held in jail without any contact with the public.
What we do know is clear: Winner is accused of serving as a journalistic source for a leading American news outlet about a matter of critical public importance. For this act, she has been charged with violating the Espionage Act--a World War I era law meant for spies--which explicitly forbids the jury from hearing why the defendant acted, and bars them from deciding whether the outcome was to the public's benefit. This often-condemned law provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
The prosecution of any journalistic source without due consideration by the jury as to the harm or benefit of the journalistic activity is a fundamental threat to the free press. As long as a law like this remains on the books in a country that values fair trials, it must be resisted.
No matter one's opinions on the propriety of the charges against her, we should all agree Winner should be released on bail pending trial. Even if you take all the government allegations as true, it's clear she is neither a threat to public safety nor a flight risk. To hold a citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage us all.
A day after her arrest was announced publicly by the U.S. Justice Department, Reality Winner, the 25-year-old alleged source of a leaked National Security Agency document detailing Russian hacking efforts, has found a vocal ally in the world's best known whistleblower of the contemporary era: Edward Snowden.
Snowden, who first made headlines around the world in 2013 when he went public as the source of a massive trove of NSA documents detailing the agency's global "collect-it-all" surveillance dragnet, released a statement Tuesday evening saying that while much remains unknown about the details of the case, the Justice Department's decision to file charges under the 'Espionage Act' is deeply troubling.
"This often-condemned law," he explained, "provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
Snowden further argues that Winner should be released on bail pending her trial and said that for the government to hold any "citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage" anyone concerned about the free press, whistleblower protections, or the public's right to know.
\u201cWhen asked to choose between a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, remember your history. https://t.co/ca7FTp4OSF\u201d— Edward Snowden (@Edward Snowden) 1496786586
Released on the website of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, a journalism advocacy group for which Snowden serves as board president, his statement follows in full:
The Justice Department released an indictment of twenty five year-old NSA contractor Reality Winner yesterday, just a few hours after the Intercept posted a story based on a top secret document that described how the NSA believes Russian actors tried to hack into US voting infrastructure. Much is unknown, as the public is made to depend upon the potentially unreliable claims of government prosecutors, while Winner is held in jail without any contact with the public.
What we do know is clear: Winner is accused of serving as a journalistic source for a leading American news outlet about a matter of critical public importance. For this act, she has been charged with violating the Espionage Act--a World War I era law meant for spies--which explicitly forbids the jury from hearing why the defendant acted, and bars them from deciding whether the outcome was to the public's benefit. This often-condemned law provides no space to distinguish the extraordinary disclosure of inappropriately classified information in the public interest--whistleblowing--from the malicious disclosure of secrets to foreign governments by those motivated by a specific intent to harm to their countrymen.
The prosecution of any journalistic source without due consideration by the jury as to the harm or benefit of the journalistic activity is a fundamental threat to the free press. As long as a law like this remains on the books in a country that values fair trials, it must be resisted.
No matter one's opinions on the propriety of the charges against her, we should all agree Winner should be released on bail pending trial. Even if you take all the government allegations as true, it's clear she is neither a threat to public safety nor a flight risk. To hold a citizen incommunicado and indefinitely while awaiting trial for the alleged crime of serving as a journalistic source should outrage us all.