Ali Watkins[3] is an American journalist who writes for The New York Times.[4] Along with two colleagues, she was a finalist for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for a body of work consisting 10 articles spanning from March 3, 2014, to July 14, 2014.[5][6] Watkins has worked for a number of publications, including BuzzFeed, Politico, McClatchy,[7]The Huffington Post,[8] and the Philadelphia Daily News.[9]
In 2014, while she was still a senior in college, Watkins broke a national story about the Central Intelligence Agency monitoring United States Senate computers while the Senate Intelligence Committee was preparing a report on the CIA's detention and interrogation program.[12][13] For their work on the story, Watkins and two other journalists were named as finalists for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting.[5] Watkins' scoop was at the core of the 2019 movie The Report, but her role was "elided."[14]
Watkins' career progression has been characterized as "meteoric" by The Times of London[15] and "stunning" by The Washington Post,[16] and she has been called a "hotshot" by Fox News.[17] In April 2017, in what The New York Times called "a scoop that other news organizations scrambled to match" and The Washington Post said was a "big story," Watkins broke a story about the 2013 meetings between CIA asset Carter Page and a Russian spy.[18][19]
For several years, Watkins' beat was the Senate Intelligence Committee. At The New York Times, where she was hired in December 2017,[18] Watkins covered national security[20] and law-enforcement agencies from its Washington, D.C. bureau until July 2018.[21]
In July 2018, the Times reassigned Watkins to the New York office,[22][23] where she covers crime and law enforcement in New York City at the Times Metro desk.[24][25] The Times explained the reasons for her reassignment: "We are troubled by Ali's conduct, particularly while she was employed by other news organizations [...] For a reporter to have an intimate relationship with someone he or she covers is unacceptable."[26] Watkins relocated to New York.[27]
Wolfe case
From December 2013 to December 2017, Watkins was in a romantic relationship with the former head of security for the Senate Intelligence Committee, James A. Wolfe.[28][29][30] The FBI opened an investigation into Wolfe after an April 2017 article by Watkins described contacts between Russian spies and Donald Trump policy adviser Carter Page, who had not been publicly identified in relation to those contacts and who was working for the CIA at the time of the meetings.[31][32][33] On October 15, 2018, Wolfe pleaded guilty to one count of lying to the FBI about his relationship with Watkins.[34][32] Prosecutors alleged that Wolfe leaked to Watkins and three other reporters.[35] Watkins denied that Wolfe ever provided her classified information.[36] Watkins disclosed the relationship to her employers BuzzFeed News, The New York Times,[37][38] and Politico;[39] however, McClatchy editors said they were ignorant of the relationship while Watkins was an intern and employee from mid-2013 through 2014.[40] Following the Wolfe relationship, Watkins dated another Senate Intelligence Committee staff member, which Politico, her employer at the time, has said she failed to disclose.[41]
Former New York Times editor Jill Abramson said “I hate the whole situation more than I can say,” because she had spent her whole career trying to combat the notion that successful female journalists sleep with their sources.[42]The Sydney Morning Herald reported that the case "bears a strong resemblance to the television drama House of Cards," of which it said Watkins was a fan.[43] In 2019, Erik Wemple of The Washington Post compared Watkins to Amanda Macias,[44] as did Stephen L. Miller of The Spectator.[45]
Operation Whistle Pig
In 2017, Jeffrey Rambo, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent working for the National Targeting Center, investigated Watkins, other journalists including Martha Mendoza, and NGOs while on an assignment to combat forced labor in the Congo. The operation was called "Whistle Pig" and in addition to its own database trawling[46] it got the CBP’s Counter Network Division to provide information about Watkins' mother and brother and links to their public profiles, as well as details of Watkins’ domestic and international travel. Rambo met Watkins under the fictitious name Jack Bentley, but Watkins obtained his real name from a credit card receipt. Watkins perceived Rambo's approach as a threat.[47]
In 2021, Watkins said: “I’m deeply troubled at the lengths CBP and DHS personnel apparently went to try and identify journalistic sources and dig into my personal life.”[48] A few days later, CBP launched an investigation.[49]
^ ab"Finalist: Marisa Taylor, Jonathan Landay and Ali Watkins of McClatchy Newspapers". The Pulitzer Prizes. The Pulitzer Prizes – Columbia University. Retrieved June 10, 2018. For timely coverage of the Senate Intelligence Committee's report on CIA torture, demonstrating initiative and perseverance in overcoming government efforts to hide the details.
^Tau, Byron (December 20, 2018). "Ex-Senate Staffer Accused of Lying to FBI Gets Jail Time". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on June 4, 2020. Retrieved June 4, 2020. Ali Watkins, the New York Times reporter ensnared in the case, was reassigned from her job as a national security reporter in Washington, D.C., to a new position in New York City after it was revealed in the indictment that she'd had a yearslong relationship with Mr. Wolfe [...] the relationship still constituted a breach of ethics, the paper's top editor concluded.
^"Ali Watkins". The New York Times. Archived from the original on February 28, 2020. Retrieved March 5, 2020. Ali Watkins is a reporter on Metro desk at The New York Times, where she covers crime and law enforcement in New York City.
^JOSH GERSTEIN; MATTHEW CHOI (December 20, 2018). "Ex-Senate aide gets 2 months in prison for lying to FBI". Politico. Retrieved June 19, 2020. after being confronted with photographs of himself and Watkins, he acknowledged having a personal relationship with her for several years
^Michael M. Grynbaum; Scott Shane; Emily Flitter (June 24, 2018). "How an Affair Between a Reporter and a Security Aide Has Rattled Washington Media". The New York Times. Retrieved June 25, 2018. In the fall, Ms. Watkins started dating a different staff member from the committee. She told others that she had informed a Politico editor who did not object. But Mr. Dayspring, the Politico spokesman, said: "Politico editors were not made aware of this relationship."
^Stephen L. Miller (December 11, 2019). "Why is everyone pretending reporters never sleep with sources?". The Spectator. Archived from the original on January 3, 2020. Retrieved February 24, 2020. Watkins and Macias are still employed by the Times and CNBC. Not only does it appear the practice of sleeping with sources for information is more than a mere trope, it seems it's something not punished by newsrooms