How the Justice Department screws with a reporter
As you know, the Justice Department served me with a subpoena commanding me to be in Tacoma, Washington at 9:30 am on Monday, April 2, 2001: http://www.mccullagh.org/subpoena/ Because of the judge's schedule, Jim Bell's trial was pushed back one day, so now I need to be there Tuesday, April 3, 2001. Last Wednesday or Thursday, I booked a flight with the Justice Department's "Worldtravel" agency, which instructions attached to the subpoena require me to do. The flight left from Washington early Monday morning and arrived at the Sea-Tac airport at midday PT. I didn't want to risk a later flight because of possible weather delays, etc. When I called United a few minutes ago to make sure the flight was on time, I found out that Worldtravel had moved my flight to a Tuesday departure that would get into the city that afternoon, *after* the proceedings had begun. That could (understandably) piss off the judge -- I'd be violating a court order -- not to mention make me miss our motion Tuesday morning to quash the subpoena. Neither the Justice Department, the IRS, the U.S. Attorney's office, nor Worldtravel notified me about the change in my schedule. Worldtravel indicated they believe Jeff Gordon -- the IRS agent who is the chief investigator in this case -- is the guy who phoned them and moved my flight to Tuesday. That makes sense; he seems to be playing travel agent, based on his earlier mail to me: http://www.mccullagh.org/subpoena/gordon.030901.txt This really isn't a huge deal. If I showed up at the airport and couldn't get on (what I thought was) my flight, I likely would have been able to get on another one later in the day Monday. But at least one of the remaining flights is sold out, so it's not a sure thing. What this episode does show is that IRS agents and prosecutors like to screw with reporters, and a subpoena and travel arrangements are just another petty way of doing it. -Declan
participants (1)
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Declan McCullagh