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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump's DOJ secretly obtained phone and text message logs of 43 congressional staffers and 2 members of Congress
Seeking to investigate leaks of classified information, the Trump Justice Department in 2017 and 2018 secretly obtained phone and text message logs of 43 congressional staffers and two members of Congress in a far broader probe than previously known, according to a new report by the departments internal watchdog.
The report by Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that the DOJ didnt act with political motives, but failed to take sufficient account of constitutional separation of powers by seizing communications records of staffers and lawmakers and making them subjects of a criminal investigation only because they had lawful access to state secrets through their jobs.
Prosecutors obtained the records using subpoenas and other legal processes to third-party providers, including Apple, and attached gag orders to prevent the companies from notifying the customers. The fact of the seizures had previously been reported, but the IG revealed new details about the broad scope of the effort.
Separately, the IG report released Tuesday found that the Justice Department violated its own policies in the way it secretly obtained phone and text records from reporters in the same leak investigations, which related to the FBIs probe of suspected Trump campaign coordination with Russia.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/trumps-doj-secretly-obtained-phone-text-message-logs-43-congressional-rcna183610
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Will anyone have the guts to be a whistleblower in the orange turd's second term?

bucolic_frolic
(48,966 posts)Look under the lid, Donnie!
Stargazer99
(3,176 posts)Didn't our shrinks warn us about this? But apparently many in our nation are as demented and evil as he is
Stargazer99
(3,176 posts)underpants
(188,971 posts)stopdiggin
(13,380 posts)We can certainly have valid discussion over whether far too much information is classified under current practices - and additionally whether dissemination is (sometimes, and with a good deal of hesitancy) a public service. What really doesn't stand up to much debate - is whether the government has authority to 'investigate' such leaking. Correct? And, sorry, but that clearly does include the executive and legislative. Invoking 'separation of powers' here is rather specious ...
Redleg
(6,352 posts)to look into other things. I wouldn't put it past Trump. I would trust that the DOJ and FBI would have pushed back on unethical and/or illegal requests from Trump. I don't have the same faith with Trump 2.0 and the dildos he is going to put into key position in DOJ.