“Thomas M. Tamm was entrusted with some of the government’s most important secrets. He had a Sensitive Compartmented Information security clearance, a level above Top Secret. Government agents had probed Tamm’s background, his friends and associates, and determined him trustworthy.
It’s easy to see why: he comes from a family of high-ranking FBI officials. During his childhood, he played under the desk of J. Edgar Hoover, and as an adult, he enjoyed a long and successful career as a prosecutor. Now gray-haired, 56 and fighting a paunch, Tamm prides himself on his personal rectitude. He has what his 23-year-old son, Terry, calls a “passion for justice.” For that reason, there was one secret he says he felt duty-bound to reveal.
In the spring of 2004, Tamm had just finished a yearlong stint at a Justice Department unit handling wiretaps of suspected terrorists and spies—a unit so sensitive that employees are required to put their hands through a biometric scanner to check their fingerprints upon entering. While there, Tamm stumbled upon the existence of a highly classified National Security Agency program that seemed to be eavesdropping on U.S. citizens. The unit had special rules that appeared to be hiding the NSA activities from a panel of federal judges who are required to approve such surveillance. When Tamm started asking questions, his supervisors told him to drop the subject. He says one volunteered that “the program” (as it was commonly called within the office) was “probably illegal.”
Tamm agonized over what to do. He tried to raise the issue with a former colleague working for the Senate Judiciary Committee. But the friend, wary of discussing what sounded like government secrets, shut down their conversation. For weeks, Tamm couldn’t sleep. The idea of lawlessness at the Justice Department angered him. Finally, one day during his lunch hour, Tamm ducked into a subway station near the U.S. District Courthouse on Pennsylvania Avenue. He headed for a pair of adjoining pay phones partially concealed by large, illuminated Metro maps. Tamm had been eyeing the phone booths on his way to work in the morning. Now, as he slipped through the parade of midday subway riders, his heart was pounding, his body trembling. Tamm felt like a spy. After looking around to make sure nobody was watching, he picked up a phone and called The New York Times.
That one call began a series of events that would engulf Washington—and upend Tamm’s life. Eighteen months after he first disclosed what he knew, the Times reported that President George W. Bush had secretly authorized the NSA to intercept phone calls and e-mails of individuals inside the United States without judicial warrants. The drama followed a quiet, separate rebellion within the highest ranks of the Justice Department concerning the same program. (James Comey, then the deputy attorney general, together with FBI head Robert Mueller and several other senior Justice officials, threatened to resign.) President Bush condemned the leak to the Times as a “shameful act.” Federal agents launched a criminal investigation to determine the identity of the culprit.”
I – and others – covered the FBI raid of Tamm’s resident last year. Again Mr. Tamm is a DOJ lawyer, a liberal, and whatever else he may think – a traitor. He has been the prime object of interest in the leak to the New York Times and may in fact be prosecuted at the end of the grand jury term (Note: The grand jury probe began in late 2005 and is now on it’s second extended term).
Unfortunately by the time he is formally charged the Obama administration would have taken over and both Obama and his AG appointee Eric Holder are critics of the legal NSA surveillance program. Note I said “legal” because it’s exactly what it was and is. Yet it will be interesting to see if Obama would prefer the early criticism he would receive for interfering in the prosectution of a traitor.
“Still, Tamm is haunted by the consequences of what he did—and what could yet happen to him. He is no longer employed at Justice and has been struggling to make a living practicing law. He does occasional work for a local public defender’s office, handles a few wills and estates—and is more than $30,000 in debt. (To cover legal costs, he recently set up a defense fund.) He says he has suffered from depression. He also realizes he made what he calls “stupid” mistakes along the way, including sending out a seemingly innocuous but fateful e-mail from his Justice Department computer that may have first put the FBI on his scent. Soft-spoken and self-effacing, Tamm has an impish smile and a wry sense of humor. “I guess I’m not a very good criminal,” he jokes.
At times during his interviews with NEWSWEEK, Tamm would stare into space for minutes, silently wrestling with how to answer questions. One of the most difficult concerned the personal ramifications of his choice. “I didn’t think through what this could do to my family,” he says.”
That’s just too bad. Perhaps you should have thought about it before you sold out your nation. Scott at Powerline rightly notes:
“Unfortunately, Newsweek doesn’t directly address the criminal component of the question posed in the article, but it’s not particularly difficult. Among other things, Tamm violated section 793 and section 798 of the espionage laws. The harder question is whether the New York Times should be prosecuted for violating these laws, a question I took up in the Standard column “Exposure.”
Ah, the New York Times. That’s Lichtblau and his partner Risen, both of whom may still follow the same fate.
2 Responses
retire05
December 14th, 2008 at 4:02 pm
1Of course Newsweek (one of the Obama apologist rags) never bothered to ask WHO we were wiretapping? Were they people like John Walker Lindh? Were the really U.S. citizens or just “citizens” in the generic term (such as citizens who are here on Visas)? Were they radical Islamic imams who are in American mosques?
What does it take for our media to realize what we are up against? Would a terrorist bomb going off in the Newsweek building, killing 90% of it’s staff, do the trick? If a IED flew into a Dallas school, would that do it? Somehow I don’t even think the sight of body parts from dead children would make our media realize that we are under attack from an enemy that really doesn’t give a damn that the media considers themselves liberals.
It never failed to amaze me that no one in the press could even connect the dots. What symbolism did 9-11 have? Perhaps a quick Google search would have allowed them to understand that was the date the Muslim hoards were defeated and their overtaking of Europe ended and Osama simply picked up where his ancestors had left off.
Say what you want, and I have had a lot of disagreements with him on domestic issues, but Bush had done his damn level best to prevent us from losing another 3,000+ “citizens” to those that want to see us subjugated or dead. I fear the next four years we will not be so lucky.
Terrence
December 15th, 2008 at 12:52 am
2The rag should really be called “NewsWEAK”.
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