The Justice Department ordered four New York Times journalists to testify before a federal grand jury after they reported security lapses on President Donald Trump's new Qatari-donated Air Force One.
The Justice Department ordered four New York Times journalists to testify before a federal grand jury after they reported security lapses on President Donald Trump's new Qatari-donated Air Force One.

The U.S. Justice Department subpoenaed four New York Times journalists Friday to testify before a federal grand jury, escalating a confrontation over a story detailing security deficiencies on President Donald Trump's new Qatari-donated Air Force One.
"The appearance of federal law enforcement agents on the doorstep of news reporters should shock the conscience of any American who believes in the constitution and the press freedom it protects," David McCraw, a lawyer for the New York Times, said in a statement.
The subpoenas, delivered by agents to the journalists' homes, require testimony within five days. The Times reported this month that the $400 million aircraft — a gift from Qatar — lacked antimissile systems and other protective features standard on older presidential jets, prompting Trump to fly part of the return leg from a NATO summit in Turkey on an older Air Force One at the Secret Service's request.
The move marks the Trump administration's most aggressive action against a news organization since returning to office, threatening a First Amendment principle that has shielded reporters from compelled testimony about confidential sources for decades.
The Justice Department said in a statement that "reporters are not the targets, those leaking classified information are," adding that it would "not ignore the law and stop investigating the people who work in the administration and think it's OK to leak classified information impacting national security." A senior FBI official had contacted the Times before publication and asked the paper to withhold the story for national security purposes, according to the newspaper, but declined to provide specific details.
The four journalists — Julian E Barnes, Eric Lipton, Tyler Pager and Eric Schmitt — were among those who received subpoenas for grand jury testimony, the Times reported. The newspaper's reporting, which cited anonymous sources, said the new Air Force One lacked antimissile capabilities and other protective features that older models carry. White House spokesperson Steven Cheung denied the security concerns, calling the aircraft "state-of-the-art" and suggesting Trump's decision to fly only partway home from Turkey on the older plane was a "misdirection" against potential threats.
Escalating Legal Pressure on the Press
The subpoenas follow a pattern of the Trump administration targeting journalists and news organizations. In June, the Justice Department subpoenaed reporters from the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post in separate national security leak investigations but withdrew those subpoenas after the outlets contested them in sealed court filings. In January, a federal grand jury in Maryland indicted a U.S. military contractor on charges of leaking classified documents, a case that led to an FBI raid on a Washington Post reporter's home. That same month, the administration pursued criminal charges against journalists Don Lemon, Georgia Fort and photographer Junn Bollman for covering a protest at a Minnesota church.
Press freedom advocates condemned the latest subpoenas. The National Press Club said the decision "should alarm every American because it threatens the public's constitutional right to an independent press" and called on the Justice Department to withdraw them immediately. Seth Stern, director of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, said in a statement that "when the government claims it needs to investigate journalists to protect national security, it really means its own reputational security."
The confrontation carries implications for media stocks and the broader governance landscape. The New York Times Co. faces potential legal costs and reputational risk from a protracted First Amendment battle, while the administration's willingness to compel reporter testimony could chill coverage of national security matters across the industry. The last time the Justice Department pursued a similar escalation against a major news outlet — the 2022 seizure of phone records from Washington Post and CNN reporters — it triggered bipartisan backlash and prompted internal DOJ policy changes that the current administration has since reversed.
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