Journalists, author to explore Obama administration's 'war on leaks,' 6:30 pm May 1

A panel of noted journalists and writers, plus a former spokesman for the Justice Department, will discuss the Obama administration's crusade against leaks of government secrets -- and against some of the journalists who report them-- at 6:30 p.m. on May 1 at the National Press Club.

The discussion is co-sponsored by the Overseas Press Club of America and the National Press Club.

Online registration is available here. Tickets are free for National Press Club and Overseas Press Club members and cost $10 for guests of members and non-members. NPC members must log in to press.org to get the discount code.

The administration, which took office vowing to protect whistle-blowers, has repeatedly cracked down on leakers, invoking the Espionage Act in six cases. Several journalists have been threatened with prosecution for publishing what whistle-blowers have told them, and James Risen of The New York Times has been repeatedly subpoenaed to testify against an accused leaker.

Risen will appear on the panel with James Bamford, author of "The Puzzle Palace," a book about the National Security Agency; and Matthew Miller, who served as the Justice Department's public affairs director for the Obama administration's first two years.

Jake Tapper of ABC, who challenged the administration's policy on leaks at a White House press briefing in February, will moderate.

Risen's subpoena to testify in the case against Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA officer who is accused of leaking details about efforts to sabotage the Iranian nuclear program, was dismissed by federal judge Leonie Brinkema.

She said Risen was entitled to protect his sources and that the government had not shown that his testimony was needed to make the case. The government is appealing that ruling.

Bamford's book was partially based on documents he got through the Freedom of Information Act. He was twice threatened with prosecution for failing to return them after the NSA had the documents "reclassified" as top secret.

More recently, Bamford was instrumental in collapsing the Espionage Act case against Thomas Drake, a former NSA official who was charged with 10 felony counts for telling a reporter that an NSA software monitor program was both intrusive on privacy and ineffective.

Bamford showed that the alleged secrets Drake told were actually unclassified, and the case was settled as a misdemeanor with no penalty.

Miller, who defended the Drake case, has since called it "ill-considered,” though he has argued the administration’s overall record in prosecuting officials over leaks is important to protecting national security.

Tapper challenged White House spokesman Jay Carney on the administration's apparent double standard on reporting. Carney had said the late foreign correspondents Marie Colvin and Anthony Shadid had died "in order to bring truth."

But Tapper replied that the U.S. government seemed to believe that "the truth should come out abroad; it shouldn't come out here." Carney did not reply directly.