John Dean: Can Trump Stop the Leakers From Within?

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Donald Trump speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on January 28. John Dean writes that Trump knows so little about the American presidency, and even recent history, that he may not be aware that almost... Drew Angerer/Getty

This article first appeared on The Verdict site.

On February 16, President Donald Trump announced, "We're gonna find the leakers. We're gonna find the leakers. They're gonna pay a big price for leaking."

Initially, he was talking about the leak that exposed his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, as a liar, which forced the president to fire him. Trump amplified his thinking at his press conference later in the day, while declaring war on the press. More specifically, Trump was asked, "What will you do on the leaks?"

He responded, "We're looking at them very—very, very serious. I've gone to all of the folks in charge of the various agencies and we're—I've actually called the Justice Department to look into the leaks. Those are criminal leaks."

He explained he was referring not only to the leak of information about Flynn's conversations with the Russian ambassador, which had been routinely, albeit secretly, recorded by American counterintelligence. Trump was also upset that his conversations with the president of Mexico and the prime minister of Australia had been leaked.

He did not mention that he had appeared more like a buffoon than a president in both these conversations that had been leaked. Rather, he added he was also upset because his future conversations with North Korea or the Middle East could be leaked.

Because Trump knows so little about the American presidency, and even recent history, I have no idea if he is aware that almost every president has had to deal with leaks, and many of them have similarly tried to prosecute leakers, with some success. So a brief review of presidential attacks on leaking may be helpful.

Unlike many countries, particularly the United Kingdom, the United States has no "Official Secrets Act" making it a crime to leak information to the news media or others. But presidents have gotten around this problem by stretching other laws.

In short, Trump's predecessors have given him several tools with which to go after leakers, despite our First Amendment, although he has no way to effectively criminally prosecute the news media, which he would probably prefer.

Nixon's War on Leaks

No president went after leakers more aggressively than Richard Nixon, who was plagued with leaks from the outset of his presidency. Like Trump, he called his attorney general and said he wanted the leakers uncovered and prosecuted.

Accordingly, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover was tasked with uncovering the culprits, and some 17 wiretaps were installed on newsmen and Nixon's own staff at the National Security Council and White House. (Ironically, the Washington Field Office of the FBI was located at the Old Post Office Building, which is now the Trump Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue, only a few blocks from the White House.)

When Daniel Ellsberg leaked key parts of the so-called Pentagon Papers to The New York Times and other news organizations (some 7,000 pages of a comprehensive study of the origins of the war in Vietnam that showed Presidents Truman, Kennedy and Johnson had dissembled about the war), Nixon first tried to block the leak by enjoining publication of the material while simultaneously launching a criminal prosecution against Ellsberg. (Nixon considered taking criminal action against the Times and others that published the material, but the Justice Department discouraged this because of the First Amendment.)

Because there is no official secrets law, the Justice Department had only a very weak case against Ellsberg, under the Espionage Act of 1917, a law that when passed had expressly included an official secrets type provision, which had been rejected by Congress.

The combination of the difficulty of developing a case against Ellsberg, and the FBI's slow-walking of the investigation because Hoover was allegedly friendly with Ellsberg's father-in-law, resulted in Nixon creating a Special Investigations Unit in the White House, under the direction of his top domestic policy adviser, John Ehrlichman.

Today, we know that Nixon personally instructed this unit—which was dubbed "The Plumbers" because it was charged with searching for and fixing leaks—to operate outside the law. Nixon had this unit giving lie-detector tests to suspected leakers, demanding background files on suspects, instructing the CIA to prepare a psychological profile of Ellsberg and even undertaking break-ins to obtain information about leaks and leakers.

As Egil "Bud" Krogh, who ran the unit for Ehrlichman, later wrote (and testified), he understands today these activities were the precursors of Watergate. Indeed, it was these activities that drew the Nixon White House into covering up similar shenanigans at Nixon's re-election committee, which involved some of the same people. When the work of the Plumbers was revealed during Ellsberg's criminal trial, the judge ended the prosecution and dismissed the case.

Nixon's efforts to prosecute Ellsberg under the Espionage Act of 1917 were never tested, given that the case was dismissed on other grounds.

Reagan, Bush II and Obama Create Unofficial Official Secrets Act

As I have written on other occasions, it was the Reagan administration that effectively employed the Espionage Act to prosecute leaks. In July 1984, Samuel Morison—the grandson of an eminent naval historian with the same name—leaked three classified photos to Jane's Defence Weekly. The photos were of the Soviet Union's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, which had been taken by a U.S. spy satellite.

Although the photos compromised no national security secrets and were not given to enemy agents, the Reagan administration prosecuted the leak to make a point. The case raised the question: Must the leaker have an evil purpose to be prosecuted?

Reagan's Justice Department argued that the answer was no and that the leak of classified material alone was enough to trigger imprisonment for up to 10 years plus fines. The conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit agreed, holding that such a leak might be prompted by "the most laudable motives, or any motive at all," but would still be a crime. Morison went to jail.

Following Morison's conviction, the Reagan administration used it to threaten a number of news organizations—The New York Times, The Washington Post, Time—with criminal actions if they published classified information. At best, it stalled a couple of stories.

Today, the Espionage Act, though thrice amended, continues to criminalize leaks of classified information, regardless of the reason for the leak. In 2001, just before leaving office, President Bill Clinton pardoned Morison, who had already served his two-year sentence.

The Bush/Cheney administration fashioned an unofficial official secrets act. It was the product of its new attorney general, John Ashcroft, who told Congress he wanted a "comprehensive, coordinated, government-wide, aggressive, properly resourced and sustained effort" to deal with "the problem of unauthorized disclosures."

It's important to note Ashcroft's words. He said "unauthorized" disclosure—not, say, disclosures of classified information relating to national security, which would be a very different matter. Plainly, he was targeting anyone who leaked information the Bush Administration did not want made public—even when security was in no way at risk.

But Ashcroft did not get what he wanted. Rather than pushing for new legislation that might spark an uproar with the news media, he twisted and distorted laws already on the books to create the equivalent of such conduct.

He used laws that were never intended to criminally prosecute leaking to threaten leakers, and by cobbling together provisions from existing laws, Bush's Justice Department effectively created one of the world's most encompassing, if not draconian, official secrets prohibitions. Fortunately, it was little used, and there were few prosecutions for leaks by the Bush/Cheney Justice Department.

Surprisingly, it was President Barack Obama who went after leakers with more zeal than all his predecessors, using the Espionage Act. Here is his record, which shows the proficiency of his Justice Department in prosecuting leakers:

In short, if the FBI can find the leakers, there are no shortage of tools that, to use Trump's words, can be employed to make them "pay a big price for leaking."

But I know of no president who has ever solved the problems of leaks, particularly when large numbers of federal employees disagree with that president, which is the situation Trump now faces.

John W. Dean was a counsel to President Richard Nixon.

Uncommon Knowledge

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