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US Justice Department subpoenas four New York Times journalists in a grand jury leak probe tied to their coverage of security concerns about Trump's Qatari-gifted Air Force One

The US Justice Department issued subpoenas to at least four New York Times reporters on July 11, compelling them to testify before a grand jury investigating leaks tied to the paper's coverage of alleged security concerns with the Boeing 747-8 gifted to President Trump by Qatar and now serving as Air Force One; federal agents delivered the subpoenas at the journalists' homes, the Times reported

법원·정상· active 누가 결정하는가·그들이 말하지 않는 것 ·6 시각 · ·rbtfl 업데이트 2026년 7월 12일
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보도의 갈림

같은 뉴스를 각국 뉴스룸이 어떻게 전했는지. 인용문은 출처와 원문 링크를 밝힙니다.

United States

CBS News

“The subpoenas were issued after the New York Times reported on alleged security concerns with the new Qatari-gifted Air Force One.”

US broadcast network; first specific-time verified report, identifying the Air Force One reporting as the trigger원문 보기 ↗

United States

CNN

“Four New York Times journalists who reported on security concerns surrounding a Qatari-gifted jet serving as the new Air Force One have been subpoenaed by the Justice Department.”

US cable news; adds the "early Saturday" timeline and the Qatari-gifted jet's status as official Air Force One원문 보기 ↗

United States

NPR

“Federal agents turned up on the doorsteps of several of its journalists to force grand jury testimony next week.”

US public radio; emphasis on the manner of delivery, agents appearing at journalists' homes원문 보기 ↗

게시

Summary

The US Justice Department subpoenaed at least four New York Times journalists on July 11 in a grand jury probe tied to their coverage of alleged security concerns with the Boeing 747-8 gifted to President Trump by Qatar and now serving as Air Force One. Federal agents delivered the subpoenas at the journalists' homes, compelling testimony the following week. The Times reported the subpoenas on early Saturday. The administration has framed the action as a leak investigation; press freedom advocates are likely to characterise it differently.

Why it matters

US federal subpoenas of reporters seeking to identify government sources are rare and contested. The US Supreme Court's reporter privilege doctrine is limited, meaning journalists can potentially be compelled to testify. The Air Force One Qatari gift has drawn prior controversy; the subpoenas suggest the administration is pursuing the sources who raised security concerns about it publicly.

What to watch

  • Whether the journalists comply with or challenge the grand jury subpoenas in court
  • Any New York Times legal response or formal statement on the scope of the probe
  • Reaction from US press freedom organisations including the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
  • Whether additional outlets' journalists covering the same story receive subpoenas

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