Stephen Kim, the former State Department contractor charged with leaking classified information to a Fox News reporter, has pled guilty to disclosing classified documents and will serve 13 months in prison.
Kim’s case drew national attention when it came out that the FBI had named Fox News reporter James Rosen as a possible “co-conspirator” in a search warrant. The outcry from media and civil liberties advocates after this revelation led Attorney General Eric Holder to issue new guidelines for investigating cases related to leaked information.
According to Stephen Kohn Executive Director of the National Whistleblowers Center, Friday’s ruling will almost certainly have a chilling effect on government employees and contractors.
“I think the crackdown concerning leaks has hit people who are classic whistleblowers and whose intent was unquestionably exposure of wrongdoing, and other persons who just leaked information,” Kohn told msnbc. “There are two problems: the first is that there’s a first amendment right [to disclose information to the news media], and the second is that the government controls the classifications, and the government officials regularly leak information that is classified when it serves their interest.”
Kim’s guilty plea brings to a close one more case in what has been an unprecedented war on leaks by the Obama administration. Kim was charged under the Espionage Act, the same law used to charge Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden. More people have been charged under the Espionage Act during Obama’s presidency than under all prior administrations combined.
“On June 11, 2009, Stephen Kim did what so many government officials do every day in Washington, DC: he talked to a reporter,” Kim’s lawyer Abbe Lowell said in a statement Friday. “Accordingly, Stephen pled guilty today to one count of disclosing this classified information to someone not authorized to receive it. Stephen takes full responsibility for his actions.”









