As part of its criminal investigation into who may have
leaked information contained in a May 7, 2012, AP story about a foiled terror
plot in Yemen, the department "issued a secret subpoena for the phone toll
records for 21 AP phone lines and these were phones lines for reporters, direct
lines, cell phones, home phones but also the office numbers," Pruitt
explained.
"So over 100, approximately a hundred journalists used these telephone lines as part of newsgathering and over the course of the two months of the records that they swept up, thousands upon thousands of newsgathering calls were made.
"...Under their own rules, they are required to narrow
this request as narrowly as possible so as to not tread upon the First
Amendment," he went on. "And yet they had a broad, sweeping
collection, and they did it secretly. Their rules require them to come to us
first but in this case they didn't, claiming an exception, saying that if they
had it would have posed a substantial threat to their investigation. But they
have not explained why it would and we can't understand why it would."
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