
(Tom: Seems like less of a justice system and more of an enforcement arm for the deep state. Accumulated injustices weaken the social fabric and lead to the destruction of a society so injustice must be rejected at every opportunity.)
The CIA admitted his book contained zero secrets. Then they took every dollar he earned from it. Gagged him for the rest of his life. And the Supreme Court agreed without even letting his lawyers speak. His name was Frank Snepp. And his only crime was telling the truth without asking permission.
So was he a hero? Or a traitor? Read this and decide.
They sent him to Vietnam. Saigon. He became the CIA’s chief strategy analyst there. He studied the enemy. Interrogated high-level prisoners. He was one of the best they had.
He believed in the mission. He served his country.
Then came the end.
April 30, 1975. Saigon fell. North Vietnamese tanks rolled into the city. Helicopters lifting people off rooftops. Total chaos.
Frank was there for all of it. One of the very last Americans pulled off the embassy roof as the city collapsed around him.
For his service, the CIA gave him a medal. The Intelligence Medal of Merit.
But Frank couldn’t celebrate. Because he had seen something that haunted him.
In the panic, America abandoned its own people. South Vietnamese who had worked for the CIA. Informants. Allies. People who risked their lives trusting America. They were left behind. Their files left behind. Left to face the communists alone. Some would be imprisoned. Some would die.
It was a betrayal. A preventable disaster caused by bad leadership.
Frank thought someone should answer for it. He asked the CIA to study what went wrong. An honest accounting. So it would never happen again.
They didn’t want to hear it.
So Frank resigned in 1976. And he decided to write the truth himself.
His book was called Decent Interval. The real story of how Saigon fell, and how America abandoned the people who depended on it.
Now here’s the part that matters.
Frank was careful. Incredibly careful. He had signed a secrecy agreement. He knew the rules. So he protected the secrets.
He named no sources. No spies. No methods. He scrubbed the book clean of anything classified. He went out of his way to endanger nobody.
He was telling a story about failure. Not giving away America’s secrets.
And here’s the stunning part. The government agreed.
When they took him to court, they conceded it. For the purpose of the lawsuit, they admitted the book contained no classified information.
Read that again. The CIA’s own case said the book had no secrets in it.
So what was the crime?
He hadn’t shown it to them first.
That was it. His contract said he had to submit anything he wrote for prepublication review. He hadn’t. So CIA Director Stansfield Turner came after him. Not for leaking secrets. There were none. For publishing a book that embarrassed them, without permission.
And the punishment they wanted was total.
Not a fine. They asked the court to take every penny the book ever earned. The advance. The royalties. All of it. Forever.
The court gave it to them.
Frank appealed. He fought. The ACLU backed him. The Authors League backed him. This was about whether the government could seize a man’s book and silence him for telling an unclassified truth.
It went all the way to the Supreme Court.
Then came one of the strangest moves in the Court’s history.
They ruled against Frank Snepp without ever hearing him. No oral arguments. No chance for his lawyers to stand up and speak. They decided the whole thing in 1980 on the paperwork alone. Almost unheard of for a case this size.
They ruled for the CIA. They handed the government every dollar of Frank’s profits. And they ordered that for the rest of his life, anything Frank Snepp ever wrote about intelligence had to be submitted to the CIA first.
A lifetime gag. On a man who had revealed no secrets.
The government seized nearly $200,000 of his money. For a while he couldn’t even get work as a journalist.
The Court said his book caused “irreparable harm.” Even though his lawyers had been blocked from making the government prove a single specific harm.
But here’s why this should matter to you.
It didn’t end with Frank.
The case is called Snepp v. United States. And it is still the law today.
Because of Frank, every CIA, NSA, and intelligence officer in America must submit their writing for government review for the rest of their lives. Even unclassified writing. Under threat of losing everything.
This is why you almost never hear the truth from inside the system. That wall was built on Frank Snepp’s back. His own name became the leash on everyone who came after him.
There’s no movie about him. He didn’t get rich. He didn’t get a Hollywood ending.
But he refused to let the story die. He became an investigative journalist anyway. Won a Peabody Award. Kept telling the truth. Even wrote a second book, about what they did to him.
They took his money. They took his silence. They turned his name into a law.
But they never got him to say the truth wasn’t worth it.
So what do you think. Hero who told the truth? Or traitor who broke his oath?