Obama administration’s war on leaks has chilling effect on journalism, whistle-blowers
Downie interviewed numerous reporters and editors, including a top editor at The Associated Press, following revelations this year that the government secretly seized records for telephone lines and switchboards used by more than 100 AP journalists. Downie also interviewed journalists whose sources have been prosecuted on felony charges
Those suspected of discussing classified information are increasingly subject to investigation, lie-detector tests, scrutiny of telephone and email records and now surveillance by co-workers under a new Insider Threat Program that has been implemented in every agency.
Theres no question that sources are looking over their shoulders, Michael Oreskes, the APs senior managing editor, told Downie. Sources are more jittery and more standoffish, not just in national security reporting. A lot of skittishness is at the more routine level. The Obama administration has been extremely controlling and extremely resistant to journalistic intervention.
To bypass journalists, the White House developed its own network of websites, social media and even created an online newscast to dispense favorable information and images. In some cases, the White House produces videos of the presidents meetings with major figures that were never listed on his public schedule. Instead, they were kept secret a departure from past administrations, the report noted.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/report-obama-administrations-war-on-leaks-has-chilling-effect-on-journalism-whistle-blowers/2013/10/10/fc0462cc-31b4-11e3-ad00-ec4c6b31cbed_story.html