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- Claim Text
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The statute also says the act of possessing the material itself cannot be that criminal offense by the reporter, but it lists two exceptions: a law against child sexual abuse imagery or the Espionage Act, which criminalizes the unauthorized retention and dissemination of national security information.
- Simplified Text
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Statute also says act of possessing material itself cannot be criminal offense by reporter but lists two exceptions law against child sexual abuse imagery or Espionage Act which criminalizes unauthorized retention and dissemination of national security information
- Confidence Score
- 1.000
- Claim Maker
- The author
- Context Type
- News Article
- Context Details
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{ "exceptions": [ "law against child sexual abuse imagery", "Espionage Act" ], "Espionage Act": "criminalizes the unauthorized retention and dissemination of national security information" } - Subject Tags
- UUID
- a1162e35-79f7-4763-9dcd-e57ac3a42aa2
- Vector Index
- ✗ No vector
- Created
- February 15, 2026 at 2:39 PM (2 months ago)
- Last Updated
- February 15, 2026 at 2:39 PM (2 months ago)
Original Sources for this Claim (1)
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Completed
News
252
claims
🔥
2 months ago
https://nytimes.com/live/2026/02/09/us/president-trump-news
Ghislaine Maxwell, associate of Jeffrey Epstein, refused to answer questions during a deposition before the House Oversight Committee, invoking her Fifth Amendment right. Lawmakers are investigating Epstein's crimes and potential co-conspirators. The Justice Department is also releasing unredacted Epstein files.
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