New documents released by the conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch, seem to suggest that in the weeks following the Osama bin Laden raid, the White House offered classified information to filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal, who are working on a movie about the mission. Buzzfeed correspondent and Rolling Stone contributor Michael Hastings started off the our “Now” panel discussion with a nod to two of Kathryn Bigelow’s other well-known films, “The Hurt Locker” and “Point Break,” but then turned seriously to what he called a “selective leaking campaign” by the Obama administration.
Judicial Watch reportedly obtained the documents using the Freedom of Information Act, and released 153 pages of Pentagon records and 113 pages of CIA records. These include emails and transcripts of meetings between the filmmakers and top officials at the Department of Defense and the CIA.
A transcript of a July 15, 2011 “background interview” with Bigelow and Boal reveals how Defense Undersecretary Michael Vickers offered up a SEAL Team 6 Operator and Commander involved from the beginning as a planner. But Vickers requests the filmmakers not reveal the man’s name because, “he shouldn’t be talking out of school.” Pentagon Press Secretary George Little told the Associated Press no meeting between the Team 6 planner and the filmmakers ever took place and, “We have never reviewed a script of the movie.”
Undersecretary Vickers is also seen promising full cooperation to the filmmakers by the CIA, but with a caveat. In an email dated June 13, 2011, he wrote, “At the direction of Director Panetta, CIA is cooperating fully (not obviously giving away anything they shouldn’t…) They would like to shape the story to prevent any gross inaccuracies, but do not want to make it look like the commanders think it’s okay to talk to the media….”









