United States v. Franklin explained

United States v. Franklin, Rosen, and Weissman
Court:United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
Citations:Not specified
Judge:T. S. Ellis III
Subsequent Actions:Franklin sentenced to community service and halfway house
Opinions:Judge T. S. Ellis III delivered notable opinions regarding the Espionage Act

United States v. Franklin, Rosen, and Weissman was an early 21st century court case from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The government prosecuted one Department of Defense employee (Franklin) and two lobbyists (Rosen & Weissman) for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) for allegedly disclosing national defense information to persons "not entitled" to have it, a crime under the Espionage Act of 1917 . It is one of the few Espionage Act cases of its kind, targeted not at traditional espionage or sedition, but at the practice of information leaking in Washington DC. The cases against Rosen and Weissman were also unusual because this aspect of the Espionage act had rarely (if ever) been used against non-government individuals. Franklin pleaded guilty, but all charges against Rosen and Weissman were dropped.

Background

See main article: Lawrence Franklin espionage scandal.

Larry Franklin worked for the Department of Defense at the Pentagon. Steve J. Rosen and Keith Weissman were lobbyists for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a lobbyist group. Rosen had worked at RAND Corporation and began work for AIPAC in 1982. Weissman started AIPAC work in 1993 and was an Iran expert. Franklin met Rosen and Weissman circa 2002 and they began exchanging information.

By 2003 the FBI had been investigating Rosen for a long time. The government flipped Franklin some time before 2003; he became convinced by the FBI that Rosen and Weissman were doing bad things. Franklin started wearing wires to get evidence against Weissman and Rosen, including a 2003 meeting where he leaked fake information about a planned killing of Israelis, which Rosen took and gave to Israeli diplomats and the media. In 2004 the government raided AIPAC offices. The government alleged the information the three transferred was related to the national defense and otherwise violated .

Indictment timeline

The indictment contains a timeline of events it alleges to have occurred; a description of the conspiracy that it claims happened. From 1999 to 2004, it details occasions and circumstances in which Franklin gave information to Rosen & Weissman, and also in which Rosen & Weissman then gave information to several people. The people are referred to in code, as well as in general terms. These include "Foreign Official 1", 2, and 3, "AIPAC employees", "a foreign national", "foreign nation A", "a member of the media" (multiple occasions), "an employee of a think tank" etc. It also lists occasions where Rosen and Weissman allegedly gave false statements to the FBI about Franklin.

Indictment

Government lawyers: James L Trump, Paul J. McNulty (US Attorney), Kevin V Di Gregory (US Attorney, Criminal Division), Neil Hammerstrom (US Attorney, Terrorism and National Security), Thomas Reilly (US DOJ). Later, Dana Boente.

Larry Franklin counsel: Plato Cacheris, John Francis Hundley

Rosen counsel: Erica Emily Paulson, Joseph John McCarthy

Weissman counsel: John N Nassikas, III, Baruch Weiss

Legal principles

Several legal principles were expounded upon regarding the relevant sections of the Espionage Act. Judge T. S. Ellis III had several notable opinions:

Other notable features:

Result

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. See Ellis' decisions