FBI Says ABC Said That Saudi Intelligence Told Them Iraqi Special Services Sent Seven Afghani Soldiers Out of Pakistan To Carry Out The Oklahoma City Bombing
Funny title, but it's true:
A once-classified FBI memo reveals that the bureau treated a senior ABC News journalist as a potential confidential informant in the 1990s, pumping the reporter to ascertain the source of a sensational but uncorroborated tip that the network had obtained during its early coverage of the Oklahoma City bombing.
The journalist, whose name is not disclosed in the document labeled “secret,” not only cooperated but provided the identity of a confidential source, according to the FBI memo — a possible breach of journalistic ethics if he or she did not have the source’s permission.
The ABC employee was even assigned a number in the FBI’s informant database, indicating he or she was still being vetted for suitability as a snitch after providing “highly accurate and reliable information in the past” and then revealing information the network had obtained in the hours just after the 1995 terrorist attack by Timothy McVeigh.
The journalist “advised that a source within the Saudi Arabian Intelligence Service advised that the Oklahoma City bombing was sponsored by the Iraqi Special Services who contracted seven (7) former Afghani Freedom Fighters out of Pakistan,” an April 17, 1996 FBI memo states, recounting the then-ABC journalist’s interview with FBI agents a year earlier on the evening of the April 19, 1995 bombing. (The Iraqi connection, of course, never materialized.)
The memo recounts multiple contacts between the FBI and the journalist over a one-year period in 1995-96 but does not name the network insider, instead using the informant number NY290000-SI-DT and a simple description as “a senior official employed by ABC News for over 15 years.”
ABC News told the Center for Public Integrity that it is not certain about the identity of the journalist involved in the 1995-96 episode, but does not believe he or she still works for the network. Spokesman Jeffrey Schneider said the FBI description of its interactions with the reporter raises serious concerns about intrusions on the First Amendment.
“If true, it would certainly be of grave concern to us that the FBI would have created an informant file based on information gleaned from a reporter,” Schneider said. “It certainly would be very troubling for the FBI to recruit a news employee as a confidential source.”
“It can create a perception of collusion between the government and the news organization. It would put journalists everywhere at risk if people believed that journalists are acting as government agents. And it could raise the specter of the government trying to spy on a news organization,” he added.
3 comments:
“It certainly would be very troubling for the FBI to recruit a news employee as a confidential source....
It can create a perception of collusion between the government and the news organization. It would put journalists everywhere at risk if people believed that journalists are acting as government agents. And it could raise the specter of the government trying to spy on a news organization,”
Is this guy serious? Does he not think Joe Public doesn't recognize the collusion of major networks with the Obama camp? with the unions? with Soros & company?
Continuing:
"...It would put journalists everywhere at risk if people believed that journalists are acting as government agents."
The msm risked losing credibility. A risk they obviously were and are continually willing to take.
Collusion? What collusion?
Get Obama on the phone. This guy is overstepping the bounds of his free speech.
But remember, this is the single contemporary example of so-called "Christian extremism" that everyone and their dog holds up to give weight to the otherwise silly declaration that:
"Well, every religion has its violent extremists."
Otherwise, all the murdered abortion doctors in the history of the universe don't add to a single day of typical Islamic "extremist" violence.
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