2. FROM CENSORSHIP TO CLASSIFICATION: The Evolution of the Espionage Act

2019 ◽  
pp. 45-68
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

The Economic Espionage Act of 1996 was intended to address both the generalneed for a federal criminal deterrent against trade secret theft as well asthe apparent threat from foreign state-sponsored industrial espionage. Thisarticle examines the background of this new law, provides critical analysisof its most important terms, describes the process involved in a referenceof trade secret theft to the federal authorities, and suggests practicalstrategies for businesses to take advantage of this resource as well as toavoid exposure to liability for the mishandling of information belonging toothers.


Author(s):  
Jameel Jaffer

The legal, political, and technological developments of the past twenty years have rendered us more reliant on whistleblowers even as the developments have made whistleblowing more difficult and more hazardous. To promote informed public debate about national security and to preserve the connection between democratic consent and government policy in this sphere, we should extend legal protection, in some circumstances, to government insiders who responsibly disclose official secrets without authorization. Affording leakers a “public value” defense against prosecution would have benefits beyond those usually cited. It would, among other things, reduce the disincentive to socially beneficial leaks, lend legitimacy to Espionage Act prosecutions, more closely align our legal regime with widely shared intuitions about moral responsibility, and restore the courts to an appropriately central role in protecting the public’s access to an essential channel of information.


2021 ◽  
pp. 45-66
Author(s):  
Steven Casey

In the first months of 1942, the navy exerted tight control over its war correspondents. While allowing them access to ships, it placed so many restrictions on what they could write about that a group of them, led by Robert Casey of the Chicago Daily News, began to complain vociferously. Stanley Johnston of the Chicago Tribune ultimately became the biggest troublemaker. After escaping from the USS Lexington before it sank during the Battle of the Coral Sea, Johnston used the slow journey home not only to write about this experience but also to learn that the navy had received advanced knowledge of the Japanese attack on Midway. His stories on both battles created a major sensation. With the navy convinced that the Tribune had divulged its secret codebreaking operation, the Roosevelt administration even made a failed bid to prosecute it under the Espionage Act.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document