The news on Friday morning was clearly a disaster for Roger Stone. The longtime Republican operative was taken into FBI custody and charged with obstruction, giving false statements, and witness tampering. That said, the news wasn’t exactly great for Donald Trump and his team.
The Stone indictment alleges that senior Trump campaign officials contacted the operative in 2016, inquiring about WikiLeaks’ distribution of materials stolen by Russia. The same indictment specifically points to a senior Trump campaign official who was “directed” to communicate with Stone about the matter.
Yesterday, in her first briefing of 2019, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders fielded a question about the allegations.
Q: [Republican Sen. Marco Rubio] said over the weekend that working with WikiLeaks should be considered a crime. Does the president agree?
SANDERS: Look, I think every single outlet that are — that you all represent looked for and searched for information that WikiLeaks was providing, including reporting on it. So I think there is a responsibility by members of the media.
This is a bad argument.
We can certainly have a conversation about whether professionals in the political media were too quick to embrace leaked stolen materials, playing the role of pawn in a larger game. If media critics or journalism professors are prepared to make such a case, they can serve as the basis for an interesting lecture.









