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01/04/07
Family relieved FBI dropped quest for
late columnist's documents
By LARA JAKES JORDAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The family of investigative reporter Jack
Anderson is expressing relief that the government is no longer
seeking to recover government documents that had been leaked
to the late columnist during his long career.
According to Anderson's biographer, George Washington University
journalism professor Mark Feldstein, he and family members
had told the FBI there was no classified material in the hundreds
of boxes holding Anderson's files.
The documents, which officials said might have contained classified
information, were among the late columnist's confidential
papers. They touched off a dispute between the FBI and the
journalist's family and biographer.
"It was dusty old stuff that I couldn't imagine would
be relevant to a criminal probe," Feldstein said.
The revelation that the government was backing off came in
a letter dated Nov. 30, from Acting Associate Attorney General
James H. Clinger, which was posted Wednesday on the Web site
of the Federation of American Scientists.
Clinger's letter was addressed to outgoing Senate Judiciary
Chairman Arlen Specter, R-Pa. It did not explain why the FBI
had dropped the probe, and a Republican aide to the committee
said Wednesday that was also unclear to lawmakers.
In response to questions posed by the committee, Clinger wrote:
"The FBI met with the Anderson family in an effort to
review the files with their consent. At this time, the FBI
is not seeking to reclaim any documents."
An FBI spokesman declined to comment Wednesday evening.
"We've been holding our breath, wondering if they were
going to come after us further," Feldstein said. "I'm
relieved to hear they have backed away from what I think was
a pretty egregious overreach, to be going after papers of
a dead reporter for classified documents from decades ago."
Anderson died at age 83 in December 2005, after a career in
which he broke several big scandals and earned a place on
former President Nixon's "enemies list." Authorities
on several occasions tried to find the source of leaked information
that became a staple of his syndicated column.
Not long after his funeral, FBI agents called Anderson's widow
to say they wanted to search his papers.
At the time, the FBI confirmed it wanted to remove any classified
materials from Anderson's archives, located at George Washington
University, before they are made available to the public.
An FBI spokesman said then that the bureau had determined
that some of Anderson's papers contained classified information
about sources and methods used by U.S. intelligence agencies.
Anderson's son and his biographer said they were questioned
by agents who expressed interest in documents that would aid
the government's case against two former lobbyists for the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee who have been charged
with disclosing classified information.
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The letter can be found at: http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2006(underscore)hr/fbi-qfr.pdf
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