DENVER – The journalist who broke the first stories about the National Security Agency’s global spy program is set to speak to a group of reporters from around the Americas who have gathered in Denver.
Glenn Greenwald, an American reporter based in Rio de Janeiro, will speak Monday via teleconference from Brazil at the 69th General Assembly of the Inter American Press Association. He broke his stories for Britain’s Guardian newspaper.
Get breaking National news
READ MORE: Brazil senators ask federal police to protect journalist reporting on NSA
Former NSA contactor Edward Snowden told Greenwald earlier this year about the vast communications-monitoring programs carried out by the agency and its international counterparts. The revelations have sparked a debate about the scale of surveillance and the erosion of privacy in the digital age.
MORE: NBC host riles Guardian’s Greenwald by asking why he shouldn’t be charged with a crime
Snowden received asylum in Russia in August.
The Miami-based Inter American Press Association has about 1,400 member news organizations and promotes press freedoms throughout the Americas.
- Boy kidnapped from California park in 1951 found more than 70 years later
- Trump was target of ‘assassination attempt,’ Florida suspect said in note: feds
- Airline bans couple after reclined seat spat turns into harassment, slurs
- After false claims about Haitian immigrants, what’s happening in Springfield, Ohio?
Comments