President Barack Obama's administration, embattled on several fronts, now faces a barrage of criticism that the step undermined freedom of the press.
Attorney General Eric Holder hit back yesterday, defending the action in which the Justice Department secretly took two months of telephone logs from news operations of the Associated Press.
He said this was done as part of a probe into a security breach which had put the American people at risk.
"That's not hyperbole. Puts the American people at risk. And trying to determine who is responsible for that, I think, required very aggressive action," he declared.
The investigators' action is believed to be linked to a probe into a story on a foiled terror plot, which they suspect contained leaked information.
The AP said its story disclosed details of a CIA operation in Yemen that stopped an al-Qaeda plot in 2012 to detonate a bomb on an airplane bound for the United States.
A Justice Department statement said that since Holder's recusal in June 2012, the investigation "has been conducted by the FBI under the direction of the US Attorney and the supervision of the deputy attorney general."
The White House sought to deflect criticism that it was targeting the news media in its war on leaks.
Obama spokesman Jay Carney said the White House was not involved in the decision to seek AP records and the Justice Department operates independently.
The AP protested the seizure Monday in a letter to Holder saying "there can be no possible justification for such an overbroad collection."
In a reply to the AP, Deputy Attorney General James Cole said the probe into leaked "classified information" began last year and warned "such disclosures can risk lives and cause grave harm to the security of all Americans.
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