NEW YORK While much of the
press continues to focus on the titillating Hollywood aspects of the
sensational Anthony Pellicano case in Los Angeles, the threat to not
just movie stars, but journalists, seems to be growing day by day.
For one thing, there’s a new federal probe: The influential legal
publication Los Angeles Daily Journal has revealed that the U.S.
Justice Dept. and the FBI are considering mounting an investigation
into who leaked FBI summaries of witness interviews to the New York
Times.
A court hearing is scheduled for Monday, at which the leak to the Times is expected to be come up.
The Times, which has been covering the case closely, often on the front
page, published another story Wednesday, which included references to
those summaries, “which were given to attorneys involved in the case
under a court order that they not be disclosed,” as Variety put it
today.
Earlier, the Times cited the interview summaries in stories about
Pellicano's involvement with famed ex-agent Michael Ovitz, Paramount
studio boss Brad Grey, and billionaire Ron Burkle (whose Yucaipa firm
is bidding for the Knight Ridder papers still for sale).
The Times' latest story, by David M. Halbfinger and Allison Hope
Weiner, opens: "A divorce lawyer-to-the-stars who frequently hired the
private detective Anthony Pellicano was aware of at least one instance
of his illegal wiretapping, an F.B.I. agent has said in a confidential
investigative summary seen by The New York Times. In addition, Mr.
Pellicano told his girlfriend last year that the divorce lawyer 'had
received wiretap information' from him in another case, an F.B.I. agent
wrote after interviewing her."
As Variety reviewed the terrain today, “The summaries were given on
April 5 to attorneys for Pellicano and the six other defendants
indicted in February on 112 counts of conspiring to wiretap and collect
information from confidential law enforcement databases.
“However, the judge in the case, Dale Fischer, issued a protective
order on April 3 barring prosecutors and the defense teams from
revealing the information to anyone else ‘in order to protect the
legitimate privacy interests of the individuals whose Confidential
Information is contained in the discovery materials.’”
The New York Times published its first story citing the summaries on
April 14, and three days later, Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Saunders
filed notice with the court that the protective order had been violated.
At her popular LA Weekly blog, Deadline Hollywood, Nikki Finke observed
on Wednesday: “Pellicano's lawyer Steven Gruel strenuously denies he
was the leaker&hellip.Oh yeah, subpoenas are definitely in the
futures of NYT's Pellicano probers David Halbfinger and Allison Hope
Weiner. I'm baking cakes with saws hidden inside for them.”
Finke asserted last week that the New York Times has surprisingly
topped the home team, the Los Angeles Times, in its Pellicano coverage:
“The NYT is winning and the LAT is losing. In fact, this is shaping up
as not even a fair fight.”