Snowden flouts court ruling with paid speeches, Substack: ‘He’s above the law’

Iowa State University paid $35,000 for Edward Snowden to make a digital appearance earlier this year, Yahoo Finance has learned, and the exiled leaker started a newsletter despite a court ruling that placed a permanent injunction on similar paid speeches and writings without authorization from his former government employers.

The situation creates a dilemma for the U.S. government: Move to enforce the terms of the Sept. 29, 2020 court ruling, which would raise complicated legal issues, or allow a fugitive former intelligence official to loudly snub requirements to pre-clear certain written or broadcast material with the relevant Prepublication Classification Review Board (PCRB).

“He's above the law, and that is... an extremely intriguing concept to some of the younger generation,” Karim Hijazi, a former contractor for the U.S. intelligence community and CEO of the cybersecurity firm Prevailion, told Yahoo Finance. “That's the concerning part about this: The more [the government goes] down these normal paths, the more that he's going to win over a younger generation. … I don't know that there's an easy solution here.”

(Iowa State University Book Store/Facebook)
Iowa State University sold Snowden's memoir around the time that the school paid $35,000 for Snowden to speak to students on March 4, 2021. (Iowa State University Book Store/Facebook)

The 38-year-old former CIA technician and NSA contractor, who has been living in Russia since June 2013, launched a newsletter on Substack in June that costs $50-$150 per year for subscribers (though no paid posts have been published yet). The newsletter recently published an excerpt of his autobiography, "Permanent Record," which was an impetus of the civil case that led to the ban on unauthorized speeches and writing. Substack did not respond to a request for comment.

“This is a very clear expression by Snowden of his view that no part of his former legal obligations matter to him,” Bradley Moss, an attorney at the Law Office of Mark S. Zaid, P.C., which specializes in national security issues and whistleblower law, told Yahoo Finance when asked about the Substack.

A CIA spokesperson referred Yahoo Finance to the agency's PCRB rules, which state: “Current and former CIA officers and contractors who have signed the standard CIA secrecy agreement are required to submit to the PCRB any and all materials they intend to share with the public that are intelligence related, such as materials that mention the CIA or intelligence activities, or that concern topics on which they had access to classified information while employed at or performing contractual work for CIA.”

A spokesperson for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, where the civil case was adjudicated, declined to comment. (The civil case was separate from criminal charges against Snowden, which were filed in the same district court but have not been adjudicated since Snowden has avoided arrest.) A Department of Justice spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.