Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00552R000605810007-6
Body:
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/30: CIA-RDP90-00552R000605810007-6
.~:A PAGE
WASHINGTON TIMES
9 May 1986
White House shuns
Casey's proposal
to prosecute press
By Jeremiah O'Leary
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Attorney General D. Lowell Jensen, who oversees the
Justice Department's criminal division.
Although Justice Department sources remain of-
ficially silent, one source said the department was
acting "like a dog trying to shake itself loose from a
swarm of fleas"
Mr. Speakes said Mr. Casey had a private conversa-
tion with Benjamin C. Bradlee, executive editor of the
Post, and Leonard Downie, Jr., the managing editor,
parts of which were printed Wednesday in The Post.
The CIA director was said to be angry that The Post
printed U.S. intelligence intercepts of Libyan commu-
nications about terrorist acts between Tripoli and Eu-
ropean embassies.
Mr. Casey was said to have threatened to take action
against The Post if it published material relating to the
Ronald Pelton spy case.
Mr. Speakes said the president knew nothing of the
matter until he returned to Washington on Wednesday
from Japan.
He reminded reporters "that a gentleman at the
Defense Department ended his service there rather
abruptly here about three or four days ago."
The reference was to Michael E. Pillsbury, former
assistant undersecretary of Defense for policy plan-
ning, who was fired after failing a polygraph test. The
government was in search of the source of a leak to the
Post about a U.S. decision to supply Stinger anti-
aircraft missiles to Angolan rebels.
gton Times and The Washington Post, Newsweek and
ime magazines - and by some accounts, The New
ork Times - to a meeting last week with n
Mr. Casey carried his complaints against The Wash-
cur, and the CIA director makes a recommendation
o the Justice Department, then the Justice Depart-
nent, not the White House, would decide whether to
rosecute.
an
Larry Speakes. He said the president has not discussed
the matter with Mr. Casey.
The White House yesterday put considerable dis-
tance between President Reagan and any attempt to
prosecute the press for printing leaks.
"I basically just know what I read in the paper, and
we're not involved in it;' said White Houses kesm
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/30: CIA-RDP90-00552R000605810007-6