FBI QUESTIONS JOURNALISTS ABOUT LARRY FRANKLIN
By Michelle Malkin malkin@comcast.net
May 14, 2005 07:31 AM

http://www.michellemalkin.com/
FBI agents have begun asking reporters about conversations they had with
former Department of Defense analyst Larrry Franklin, the New York Times
reports:
The interviews by the Federal Bureau of Investigation are starting with four
reporters, among them at least one newspaper journalist and others whose
work has been published on the Internet, the officials said. They would not
identify any of the journalists and said the number could increase.
The interviews represent the latest twist in a convoluted inquiry that
appears to be evolving from a spy case into a broader investigation into the
possible disclosure of classified information by the analyst, Lawrence A.
Franklin.
The journalists whom the agents want to question wrote articles that
investigators are said to believe are based on classified information that
Mr. Franklin obtained while he was working at the Defense Department.
If the reporters refuse to answer all of the FBI's questions, a subpoena
could be issued. In that case, the Franklin investigation would begin to
resemble the controversy involving journalists who refuse to answer
questions about who outed CIA officer Valerie Plame.
As noted earlier this week, the FBI's interest in speaking to journalists
was first reported by Newsweek. The Newsweek article mentions that bloggers
may be among those questioned.
The Times article contains new details about the evidence to be used against
Franklin:
At one point last summer, Mr. Franklin had agreed to help the government
with the investigation before ending his cooperation when it became evident
that prosecutors wanted to charge him with a crime. During that time, he
made several telephone calls to possible subjects in the case, including one
to Mr. Weissman, according to people who have been officially briefed on the
case. The call was surreptitiously monitored and recorded by F.B.I. agents.
In the conversation with Mr. Weissman, Mr. Franklin said he had learned that
Iran was seeking to encourage or engage in attacks against Israelis in
northern Iraq, people who have been officially briefed on the case said.
They said that Mr. Weissman told Mr. Rosen of the conversation and that the
two men are believed to have passed the information to an Israeli official
who was an intelligence officer. It is not clear whether the information was
based on actual information or was fabricated to lure the two Aipac
officials into incriminating themselves.
So: if the Times' sources are to be believed, two men employed by AIPAC (a
group that is not registered as an agent for a foreign government) are
suspected of giving classified information to an Israeli intelligence
officer. Think any of the speakers will mention this at next week's AIPAC
conference?
http://www.michellemalkin.com/
[LEAKGATE] Protecting Your Sources
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BEST LIST OF BLOG'S ON THE NET:
BLOG TRAFFIC IN BULL MODE FOR FIRST QT. OF 2005
Due to popular demand and some complaints, particularly from some fellow
bloggers,
HundredPercenter has revised it's study of blog traffic to include the first
quarter of '05
http://www.hundredpercenter.com/Q105BlogTrafficStats_001.html
-----------------------
Net Center Must Read I
http://www.netctr.com/mustread1.html
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, it expects what never was and
never will be...
The People cannot be safe without information." -- Thomas Jefferson
http://disc.server.com/Indices/149495.html
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