Eric Holder is in hot water. And the temperature is rising.
The attorney general green-lighted a controversial search warrant for Fox News reporter James Rosen’s private emails, a law enforcement official told NBC News.
The search warrant also labeled Rosen a “possible co-conspirator” in a leak investigation, which has alarmed critics who argue the government is overreaching and criminalizing investigative journalism. The latest revelation comes as the Justice Department is already coming under fire for seizing phone records of Associated Press journalists for an investigation into the leaking of information about a CIA operation in Yemen to stop a bomb plot.
President Obama, who has said he was unaware of the DOJ investigation on AP reporters, has carefully tried to strike a balance between being concerned about the country’s security while also demonstrating his commitment to a free press.
The president reasserted the need to protect classified information during a major speech on national security on Thursday, but also said he was “troubled” by the impact such leak investigations could have on journalism.
“Journalists should not be at legal risk for doing their jobs,” Obama said.
Holder was grilled by the GOP-led House Judiciary Committee on the AP case last week, although he insisted he recused himself from the matter and that it was his deputy, James Cole, who approved those subpoenas. In the Fox News case, however, it’s now clear that Holder was directly involved.
The DOJ case centers on Rosen, because he allegedly received classified information from Stephen Jin-Woo, a security adviser at the State Department, for a story about North Korea’s nuclear program.
The DOJ has charged Kim with violating the Espionage Act. Rosen has not been charged in the case but has been investigated after an FBI agent said he “asked, solicited and encouraged…(a source) to disclose sensitive documents and intelligence.”









