The man wanted by the United States for leaking details of National
Security Agency intelligence gathering says journalists have been misled
into printing false claims about his legal situation, The Huffington Post reported Thursday.
In an e-mailed statement
to the news organization, Edward Snowden distanced himself from his
father, Lon Snowden; his father's attorney, Bruce Fein; and Fein's
associates, saying "they do not possess any special knowledge regarding
my situation."
"None of them have been or are involved in my current situation, and this will not change in the future," the statement said.Big bucks for former Snowden employer
"I ask journalists to
understand that they do not possess any special knowledge regarding my
situation or future plans, and not to exploit the tragic vacuum of my
father's emotional compromise for the sake of tabloid news."
The statement was released the same day The Wall Street Journal reported that Lon Snowden's legal team does not trust his son's closest advisers: WikiLeaks and Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald.
"I would like to correct
the record: I've been fortunate to have legal advice from an
international team of some of the finest lawyers in the world, and to
work with journalists whose integrity and courage are beyond question,"
Snowden said in the statement.
Snowden stepped forward
publicly in June to claim responsibility for leaking to the media,
including The Guardian, that the NSA had secretly collected and stored
millions of phone records from accounts in the United States. The agency
also collected information from U.S. companies on the Internet activity
of overseas residents, he said.
Snowden, a former NSA
contractor, fled first to Hong Kong and then to Russia, where he was
granted temporary asylum despite pressure from the Obama administration
to return him to the United States to face charges.
He has been charged with three felony counts, including violations of the U.S. Espionage Act, for the leaks.
The Huffington Post
reported that the American Civil Liberties Union confirmed that the
e-mailed statement was from Snowden. The ACLU has lauded Snowden's
actions as a "service" to the country, and it reportedly is helping
coordinate the former intelligence contractor's defense in the United
States.






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