IRS Whistleblowers Claim Political Interference in Hunter Biden Investigation
Out with the old corruption and in with fresh scandals.
Out with the old corruption and in with fresh scandals.
The Pentagon Papers leaker risked prison to reveal that American military officials were lying to Congress and the public about Vietnam. He died today at age 92.
The Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs author and former Reason staffer reports back from post-privacy America.
Intelligence-gathering “fusion centers” repeatedly abuse civil liberties without making us safer.
A law to protect people engaged in journalism from having to reveal sources gets blocked by Sen. Tom Cotton.
A senator and two congressmen team up to help protect whistleblowers from vindictive prosecution.
"The kind of values I've always embraced are heard more on Fox than on CNN and MSNBC, where they're not welcome."
The WikiLeaks founder faces espionage charges for publishing classified U.S. information, a prosecution with serious implications for all our First Amendment protections.
The IRS isn’t just a powerful federal agency, it’s a weapon against the public.
In a significant threat to the free press, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange faces decades in federal prison for leaking classified documents.
When "protecting users' safety" actually means the opposite
Too often, the government punishes citizens who reveal the state's true behavior to their fellow Americans.
Federal espionage laws are used once again to punish a whistleblower.
She was sentenced to more than five years for revealing how Russia tried to hack the 2016 election.
Jones has been accused of fabricating her COVID-19 cover-up claims. Now she says she's running for Congress.
What went wrong at the outlet he co-founded, what's wrong with the ACLU, and what might go wrong in the Biden administration
Oscar-winning filmmaker Bryan Fogel fought Saudi censorship to make his new documentary, The Dissident.
If Trump isn’t interested, maybe the Biden administration could get started with a few acts of mercy.
U.S. officials claim their espionage laws apply to the world, but constitutional protections do not.
Fears of contracting COVID-19 in prison are not enough, Justice Department says
She was imprisoned for a year as she resisted a grand jury's investigation of WikiLeaks.
She’s nearly three years into a five-year sentence for releasing classified documents showing Russian attempts to hack U.S. election systems.
Plus: Jeff Sessions and Michael Bloomberg won't go quietly, Facebook's forbidden emojis, a win for raw milk sellers, and more...
Yes, Trump (and everybody else) has a right to face their accusers when they’re charged with crimes. But that hasn’t actually happened.
Plus: Intent "doesn't matter" on social media?, an interesting productivity experiment, prostitution arrests, PragerU's lawsuit, internet access progress, and more...
The House Ways and Means Committee is investigating evidence that Trump may have attempted to influence the mandatory IRS audit conducted on sitting presidents.
The president's threats might prevent future whistleblowers from coming forward to expose executive abuse.
Plus: Trump slashes number of refugees allowed in next year, big cities are shedding millennials, and more...
Lawmakers can’t outsource presidential oversight responsibilities to the executive branch.
Plus: how Paul Manafort may be involved, the Crowdstrike conspiracy theory, and more...
Partisans, to your battle stations!
The police conducted two searches in two days to track down who is leaking things leaders don’t want the public to know.
Another intelligence analyst who leaked important information to the public is treated like a traitor.
The House report will make you feel sorry for TSA employees against your will.
The Australian government previously banned Snoop Dogg for failing to meet the standards of a character test.
The woman who leaked a report showing Russian attempts to infiltrate voting systems gets the longest sentence ever imposed for her offense.
Trump extends Obama's war on leakers, jeopardizing a free press.
Would she have gotten a better deal if she hadn't been denied bail?
Our terrible federal espionage laws won't let her argue the leak served the public's interest.
Daniel Ellsberg on nukes, leaks, and the lost documents he copied along with the Pentagon Papers
Imprisoning people who reveal top-secret reports has become business as usual. Should it be?
Whistleblower who helped make WikiLeaks famous freed after seven years.
America's score drops while Trump administration considers charges against WikiLeaks.
Yes, they're even spying on the president.
When transparency and government corruption can come from the same mechanism.
The 'fake news' fight a way to try to downplay embarrassing information coming from within.