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Trump Administration Subpoenas New York Times Reporters

Trump Administration Subpoenas New York Times Reporters

Federal investigators have subpoenaed four New York Times journalists just days after the publication reported on security vulnerabilities regarding a luxury jet gifted to President Donald Trump by the Qatari government. The move marks a sharp escalation in the administration’s ongoing friction with independent news organizations.

The subpoenas demand that Tyler Pager, Julian Barnes, Eric Schmitt, and Eric Lipton testify before a Manhattan grand jury next week. While the documents do not explicitly cite the Qatari jet story as the catalyst for the probe, the timing follows a request from an FBI official who had urged the paper to suppress the report, citing unspecified national security concerns.

David McCraw, the Times' top newsroom attorney, condemned the legal action as a fundamental threat to the Constitution. He argued that the presence of federal agents at the homes of reporters serves only to intimidate the press and prevent public scrutiny of government affairs. This incident mirrors a pattern of recent administrative pressure; in June, the Department of Justice attempted to subpoena reporters from The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal, though those efforts were abandoned following legal challenges.

Prominent voices outside the Times have also criticized the administration's approach. Rick Stengel, a former Obama-era under secretary of state, maintained that the reporting on taxpayer-funded security upgrades is protected speech. Similarly, Fox News national security correspondent Jennifer Griffin described the use of subpoenas to compel journalist testimony as an alarming development for press freedom.

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