Stop the FBI from Retaliating Against Journalists Who Expose Government Abuse


Stop the FBI from Retaliating Against Journalists Who Expose Government Abuse
The Issue
The Federal Bureau of Investigation opened an inquiry into a New York Times reporter — not because she broke the law, but because she reported the truth.
Reporter Elizabeth Williamson wrote a story about FBI Director Kash Patel using taxpayer-funded Special Weapons and Tactics personnel to provide his girlfriend with a full-time personal security detail — accompanying her to singing performances and a hair appointment. When the story was published, instead of answering for that misuse of government resources, the FBI turned its investigative power on the journalist who exposed it.
Agents interviewed Patel's girlfriend, searched federal databases for information on Williamson, and recommended moving forward with a preliminary investigation under federal stalking laws. The conduct they flagged as "stalking"? Contacting sources. Sending emails. Asking for comment. The same things every journalist does every day.
This is not a gray area. Those are normal, protected reporting practices — and using the FBI to punish a journalist for them is a violation of the First Amendment.
The only reason this inquiry stopped is because officials at the Department of Justice determined there was no legal basis to proceed. There was no public accountability, no congressional intervention, and no action from Patel's office. The bureau investigated a reporter for exposing its own director, and the public only found out about it months later.
Americans deserve to know when their government is being used to silence the press. And journalists deserve to do their jobs without fear that reporting on a powerful official will result in a federal investigation.
We call on Congress to immediately investigate the FBI's inquiry into Elizabeth Williamson, demand a full accounting of how bureau resources were used, and pass clear protections ensuring that standard newsgathering practices can never be prosecuted as criminal conduct.
A free press only works if reporters can do their jobs. That freedom is not negotiable.
269
The Issue
The Federal Bureau of Investigation opened an inquiry into a New York Times reporter — not because she broke the law, but because she reported the truth.
Reporter Elizabeth Williamson wrote a story about FBI Director Kash Patel using taxpayer-funded Special Weapons and Tactics personnel to provide his girlfriend with a full-time personal security detail — accompanying her to singing performances and a hair appointment. When the story was published, instead of answering for that misuse of government resources, the FBI turned its investigative power on the journalist who exposed it.
Agents interviewed Patel's girlfriend, searched federal databases for information on Williamson, and recommended moving forward with a preliminary investigation under federal stalking laws. The conduct they flagged as "stalking"? Contacting sources. Sending emails. Asking for comment. The same things every journalist does every day.
This is not a gray area. Those are normal, protected reporting practices — and using the FBI to punish a journalist for them is a violation of the First Amendment.
The only reason this inquiry stopped is because officials at the Department of Justice determined there was no legal basis to proceed. There was no public accountability, no congressional intervention, and no action from Patel's office. The bureau investigated a reporter for exposing its own director, and the public only found out about it months later.
Americans deserve to know when their government is being used to silence the press. And journalists deserve to do their jobs without fear that reporting on a powerful official will result in a federal investigation.
We call on Congress to immediately investigate the FBI's inquiry into Elizabeth Williamson, demand a full accounting of how bureau resources were used, and pass clear protections ensuring that standard newsgathering practices can never be prosecuted as criminal conduct.
A free press only works if reporters can do their jobs. That freedom is not negotiable.
269
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Petition created on April 22, 2026