Sunday, May 19, 2013

FOXNews.com: DOJ subpoenas are 'unconstitutional,' hurt press, AP president says

FOXNews.com
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DOJ subpoenas are 'unconstitutional,' hurt press, AP president says
May 19th 2013, 16:31

Published May 19, 2013

FoxNews.com

  • AP Phone Records_Cala.jpg

    In this Sunday, May 19, 2013, photo provided by CBS News, Gary Pruitt, the President and CEO of the Associated Press, discusses the leak investigation that led to his reporters' phone records being subpoenaed by the Justice Department on CBS's "Face the Nation" in Washington. Pruitt says DoJ's seizure of AP journalists' phone records was "unconstitutional", and that the secret subpoena of reporters' phone records has made sources less willing to talk to AP journalists. (AP Photo/CBS, Chris Usher)

Associated Press President Gary Pruitt said Sunday the Justice Department sent a strong – and negative- message to future sources that the government would go after them if they spoke to the press. It's a move Pruitt called not only unconstitutional, but said it damaged the ideal of a free press in the country.

"It will hurt," he said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "We're already seeing some impact. Officials are saying they're reluctant to talk."

The Justice Department sought phone records for a two-month period from more than 20 phone lines in four bureaus,including Washington and New York.  

"Their rules require them to come to us first," Pruitt said.

But the Justice Department maintains that telling the AP would have posed a threat to their investigation.

Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder faced aggressive questioning at a hearing by the GOP-led House Judiciary Committee amid the outcry over the gathering of phone records.

Holder said he had recused himself from the AP investigation and that it was Deputy Attorney General James Cole's decision to authorize the subpoena. Holder had said he supported the decision and said that the department had seized the phone records in an effort to find out who leaked confidential information about a foiled terror attack in Yemen.

The DOJ went a step further and said the AP's actions put Americans at risk, something the news organization strongly refuted.

"Rather than talk to us in advance, they seized these phone records in secret, saying that notifying us would compromise their investigation," Pruitt said in a statement on the AP's website.

Sen. John Cornyn, who was also on "Face The Nation," called for Holder's resignation. "I think it's time for him to go," he said.

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