Leaks and the Law: The Story of Thomas Drake
The former NSA official reached a plea deal with the government, but the case still raises questions about the public’s right to know
- By David Wise
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
“I did not take an oath to support and defend government illegalities, violations of the Constitution or turn a blind eye to massive fraud, waste and abuse,” Drake said in accepting the award, his first public comment on his case. (He declined to be interviewed for this article.) His oath to defend the Constitution, he said, “took precedence...otherwise I would have been complicit.”
The Justice Department has taken a different view. When Drake was indicted, Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer issued a statement saying, “Our national security demands that the sort of conduct alleged here—violating the government’s trust by illegally retaining and disclosing classified information—be prosecuted and prosecuted vigorously.”
Drake’s case marked only the fourth time the government had invoked the espionage laws to prosecute leakers of information related to national defense.
The first case was that of Daniel Ellsberg, who in 1971 leaked the Pentagon Papers, a secret history of the Vietnam War, to the New York Times. Two years later, Judge William Byrne Jr. dismissed the charges against Ellsberg due to “improper government conduct,” including tapping Ellsberg’s telephone and breaking into his psychiatrist’s office in search of damaging information about him. The Nixon White House also tried to suborn Judge Byrne, offering him the job of FBI director while he was presiding over the trial.
Next came the Reagan administration’s prosecution of Samuel Loring Morison, a Navy intelligence analyst convicted in 1985 and sentenced to two years in prison for leaking—to Jane’s Defence Weekly, the British military publication—three satellite photos of a Soviet ship under construction. After Morison was released from prison, he was pardoned by President Bill Clinton.
And in 2005, the Bush administration charged Lawrence A. Franklin, a Pentagon official, with leaking classified information on Iran and other intelligence to two employees of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the pro-Israel lobby. Franklin was convicted and sentenced to more than 12 years in prison, but in 2009 that was reduced to probation and ten months in a halfway house after the Obama administration dropped its case against the two AIPAC officials.
Tom Drake, who is 54, married and the father of five sons, worked in intelligence for most of his adult life. He volunteered for the Air Force in 1979 and was assigned as a cryptologic linguist working on signals intelligence—information derived from the interception of foreign electronic communications—and flying on spy planes that scoop up such data. He later worked briefly for the CIA. He received a bachelor’s degree in 1986 from the University of Maryland’s program in Heidelberg, Germany, and in 1989 a master’s degree in international relations and comparative politics from the University of Arizona. Beginning in 1989, he worked for several NSA contractors until he joined the agency as a senior official in the Signals Intelligence Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland. His first day on the job was September 11, 2001.
The NSA, which is so secretive that some joke its initials stand for “No Such Agency,” collects signals intelligence across the globe from listening platforms under the sea, in outer space, in foreign countries, on ships and on aircraft. Technically part of the Defense Department, it receives a sizable chunk of the $80 billion annual U.S. intelligence budget and has perhaps 40,000 employees, although its exact budget and size are secret. In addition to collecting electronic intelligence, the agency develops U.S. codes and tries to break the codes of other countries.
Despite the NSA’s secrecy, it was widely reported that the agency has had great difficulty keeping up with the vast pools of data it collected—billions of e-mails sent daily; text and voice messages from cell phones, some of which are encrypted; and the millions of international telephone calls that pass through the United States each day.
Developing the ability to cull intelligence from so much data became even more critical after 9/11. With the secret authorization of President George W. Bush, Air Force Gen. Michael V. Hayden, then the NSA director, initiated a program of intercepting international phone calls and e-mails of people in the United States without a warrant to do so. The program was launched even though the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) provided for a special court to approve wiretap warrants and the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. The Bush administration said it relied on the president’s constitutional power as commander in chief of the armed forces when it authorized the secret eavesdropping. It also said the wiretapping was justified by a Congressional resolution passed after 9/11 authorizing the president to use “all necessary and appropriate force” against those responsible for the attacks.
The warrantless wiretapping was disclosed in 2005 by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau of the New York Times. They received a Pulitzer Prize for their reporting, and the government began investigating the source of the leak. Several months after the Times wiretapping story appeared, USA Today disclosed that the NSA was collecting the records of billions of domestic telephone calls with the cooperation of major telecommunications companies. (A 2008 revision of the FISA law has expanded the executive branch’s authority to conduct electronic surveillance and reduced court review of some operations.)
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Comments (4)
Thank you for David Wise's article "Leaks and the Law." In this era when government spending must be brought under control, it makes no sense to prosecute whistleblowers like Thomas Drake, who expose the wasteful, incompetent, irresponsible venal and self-aggrandizing (or worse) behavior of a few bureaucrats. When elected, Pres. Obama promised an era of openness in government, and stated "whistleblowing by government employees was an 'act of courage and patriotism.'" How does this square with the assertion that the Obama Administration "has brought more leak prosecutions than all previous Presidential Administrations combined?" It is no wonder that so many citizens are becoming increasing cynical about the Federal Government's claim to be acting in the best interests of all Americans.
Posted by John N. Bilderbeck on July 7,2011 | 12:54 PM
This case has some resemblance to the suppression of dissent in China. Someone appears to be covering up their own misdeeds or malperformance (?a new word. Actual injury to our national defense does call for justice, but revelation of corruption and waste calls for justice against the perpetrator.
Posted by Robert Forbes on June 27,2011 | 04:43 PM
This is the most important story that no one is talking about. It is a one of those rare cases in which a person of integrity, courage, and conscience has not been punished for doing the right thing. He was, however, pilloried. It will be interesting to see what happens now with the Manning case.
Posted by Morton Winston on June 11,2011 | 05:36 AM
HOORAY FOR HIM!
It is always those whose misdeeds are revealed that scream for the prosecution of whistle blowers. The idea of an open government is allowed only so far. Assange and his web site was sorely demonized because of its revelations. Bush and Cheney effectively closed the doors to an open government, supposedly, as is always the excuse, for national security.
Posted by Gordon Sutton on June 10,2011 | 07:13 PM