- New York Times v. United States Full Program
- The Pentagon Papers - 25 Years After
- Case Preview
- Fighting for the Press
- The Pentagon Papers Case - 35 Years Later
- Publication of Classified Information
- Secrecy
- National Security and the Press
- Debate on Confidentiality of Sources
- Daniel Ellsberg Oral History Interview
- Daniel Ellsberg Oral History Interview
- Katharine Graham
- Hedrick Smith Interview
- Nixon Tapes: Reaction to the Pentagon Papers
- Nixon Tapes: Nixon on Prosecuting Ellsberg
- Nixon Tapes: Reaction to Supreme Court Decision
New York Times v. United States, better known as the “Pentagon Papers” case, was a decision expanding freedom of the press and limits on the government's power to interrupt that freedom. President Richard Nixon used his executive authority to prevent the New York Times from publishing top secret documents pertaining to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. In a 6-3 decision, the Court ruled that the President’s attempt to prevent the publication was a violation of First Amendment protections for press freedom.
Daniel Ellsberg was a part of a top secret study conducted by the Department of Defense about the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Ellsberg leaked the study to a New York Times reporter, Neil Sheehan, who published part of the leaked information on the New York Times Sunday edition June 13, 1971. The headline read “Vietnam Archive: Pentagon Study Traces 3 Decades of Growing U.S. Involvement.”
Because of the sensitive information contained in the study, the government feared it would compromise relationships with other nations and claimed it posed a threat to national security. The government claimed the publication violated the Espionage Act and President Nixon ordered further publications halted. In a matter of days, the case had reached the Supreme Court.
The Court ruled that the intent of the publication was not to put the U.S. in danger but to educate the American people about the Vietnam War. By preventing the New York Times from publishing the material, the reporters' 1st Amendment rights were being violated. Many historians now credit the publishing of the “Pentagon Papers” with helping to end the Vietnam War.