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Trump's federal indictment: What is the Espionage Act?

Donald Trump's federal indictment includes charges under the Espionage Act, according to one of his former lawyers. Learn more about the wartime law that has been used to prosecute spies and whistleblowers, and has often been a source of controversy.

Century-old law getting renewed attention amid former president's handling of classified documents

A man in a suit is seen in closeup sitting down.
Former U.S. president Donald Trump sits in a New York City courtroom on April 4, after being indicted on charges brought by the Manhattan District Attorney. Trump now faces a federal indictment as a result of a classified documents investigation. (Seth Wenig/The Associated Press)

Donald Trump has been indicted on federal criminal charges related to a two-year saga during which he allegedly possessed and did not return classified documents after leaving the White House, even after receiving a subpoena.

Trump faces 37 felony charges which include alleged violations of the Espionage Act, according to an indictment unsealed on Friday.

Here's more about that century-old law:

The origins

The Espionage Act was enacted in 1917 during Woodrow Wilson's administration to counter German spying within the U.S. Historians consider it to have been applied overzealously during the First World War to include a host of administration critics and dissidents, with even a member of Congress, Richard Pettigrew, embroiled in an case after telling a newspaper reporter the war was a capitalist scheme. Pettigrew's charges were ultimately dropped.

Section 793 of the act deals with the improper retention or dissemination of national defence information — defined as "any document, writing, code book, signal book, sketch, photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map, model, instrument, appliance, or note relating to the national defence, or information relating to the national defence which information the possessor has reason to believe could be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of any foreign nation."

The maximum prison sentence under the law is 10 years, and offenders can also be fined.

While Trump has made the debatable claim that he declassified the documents found at this Florida estate, the classification status of a document is not mentioned in the act, and is therefore likely irrelevant.

The famous cases

The most momentous Espionage Act case involved Ethel Rosenberg and her husband Julius who, in 1953, were executed after being convicted of giving atomic bomb secrets to the Soviets. 

Both insisted they were innocent. And historians and lawyers who have reviewed documents and transcripts released since have been left with many questions about the case. Some believe she was framed in an overzealous prosecution while her husband, an Army Signal Corps engineer who belonged to the U.S. Communist Party, seems to have played a central role in a spy ring.

A man and a woman are shown in two joined, black and white photographs.
These undated file photos show Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the husband and wife who were convicted in an infamous Cold War atomic spying case. They were both executed. (The Associated Press)

The act has been utilized in the recent past in more clear-cut cases involving Russian spying, including that of former CIA officer Aldrich Ames, currently serving a life sentence, and former FBI agent Robert Hanssen who died this week afer spending more than two decades in prison.

In the 1970s, Defence Department consultant Daniel Ellsberg copied and leaked documents that revealed U.S. strategy in the Vietnam War. He faced charges in what became known as "the Pentagon Papers" case including conspiracy and violations of the Espionage Act.

President Richard Nixon's aides hired burglars who broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, and his case ended in a mistrial when evidence surfaced about the government-ordered break-ins and wiretapping.

WATCH | Ellsberg looks back:

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With the internet allowing freer flow of information, the act's use has picked up in recent years in cases involving government and military employees and contractors. Such defendants have included Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, Reality Winner and Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange.

The cases involving Assange and Snowden have yet to be concluded, as they are overseas and out of the reach of U.S. authorities.

The criticisms

Justice John Marshall Harlan II, who sat on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1955 to 1971, once described the act as a "singularly opaque document" and its use in prosecutions beyond the world of traditional spycraft has engendered criticism and calls for reforms.

The Justice Department during the Obama administration prosecuted more people under the law — for leaking sensitive information to the public — than all previous administrations combined.

A man in a suit is shown speaking into a microphone while gesturing with his hand.
Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, seen on March 16 on Capitol Hill in Washington, is among the current members of Congress who would like to see the Espionage Act reformed. (Jacquelyn Martin/The Associated Press)

As part of those efforts, the Obama administration obtained records of phone lines and reporters' cell phones at The Associated Press, as part of an investigation into the disclosure of information about a foiled al-Qaeda terrorist plot. Then-Fox News journalist James Rosen was similarly tracked and briefly named internally as a possible criminal conspirator in the probe of a news leak related to a North Korea story.

During the last session of Congress, Democrats Ron Wyden and Ro Khanna, along with Republican Thomas Massie, introduced a bill that pushed for reform of the Espionage Act.

The act "currently provides the executive branch with sweeping powers that are ripe for abuse to target journalists and whistleblowers who reveal information some officials would rather keep secret," Wyden said in a 2022 statement.

In the news

National guardsman Jack Teixeira was indicted with Espionage Act violations in recent weeks after allegedly sharing classified documents online with members of a Discord group.

There are other current cases where the act has been in play.

A posed photograph of a young person in a military uniform in front of an American flag is shown.
A photo illustration shows the Discord logo and suspect Jack Teixeira, a young national guardsman suspected of being behind a major leak of sensitive U.S. government secrets. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images)

Former CIA software engineer Joshua Schulte, who has yet to be sentenced, was convicted last year after a second trial related to the leak of so-called Vault 7 agency hacking tools to Wikileaks.

Former CIA officer Alexander Yuk Ching Ma is scheduled for a 2024 trial. Ma, who worked for the CIA from 1982 to 1989, is accused of revealing sources and operational tradecraft to Chinese intelligence officers in Hong Kong in 2001.

Trump precedents?

The original act was soon extended to incorporate an ultimately short-lived Sedition Act component. Socialist Party of America leader and labour organizer Eugene Debs was convicted of sedition after publicly promoting resistance to the military draft and U.S. involvement in the First World War.

He ran for president in 1920 while in prison, earning 3.4 per cent of the vote. Months later, his sentence was commuted and he was freed. Debs, 70, died in 1926.

There is still nothing to prevent a presidential candidate from running while behind bars, though with just 18 months until the election, that's an unlikely scenario for Trump if he wins the Republican nomination.

Recently, according to The Washington Post, charges under the Espionage Act were considered when Gen. David Petraeus, a former CIA director, mishandled classified documents. Federal prosecutors and Petraeus's lawyers worked out a deal to avoid trial, and he was spared both Espionage Act charges and prison time.

Trump, however, may face a more serious slate of charges, and his defiance and refusal to admit fault — unlike his former vice-president Mike Pence in a recently settled classified documents incident — make the prospects of a plea deal doubtful.

Read the indictment:

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With files from The Associated Press