Deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein set off alarms with a veiled rebuke of intelligence leaks
The statement said Americans should think twice "before accepting as true any stories attributed to anonymous 'officials.'"
"Americans should be skeptical about anonymous allegations. The Department of Justice has a long-established policy to neither confirm nor deny such allegations."
Trump, conservative lawmakers, and his surrogates have made the subject of intelligence leaks their prime focus amid a broad FBI investigation of Russia's interference in the 2016 election. The investigation, headed by special counsel Robert Mueller is examining whether the Trump campaign colluded with the Kremlin to help get Trump elected.
Changing the Russia narrative
That inquiry has taken multiple twists and turns since it was first launched nearly one year ago. Along the way, news outlets have reported on elements of the Russia probe, often citing unnamed US government officials. Trump has frequently railed against such anonymous sources, at times calling them "fake," or "phony," and - as recently as Thursday - referring to the Russia investigation itself as a "witch hunt."
Trump surrogates have followed the president's line of criticism, which has propagated across cable news and conservative publications.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions decried such leaks in Senate testimony he gave on Tuesday. He said during his opening statement: "These false attacks, the innuendo, and the leaks, you can be sure, will not intimidate me."
Nevertheless, the tone of Rosenstein's statement sparked some pointed questions and analysis on social media:
Pursuing leakers
Trump administration officials have vowed to pursue people who leak information to reporters. One of the first examples of that came last week when a 25-year-old NSA contractor named Reality Winner was charged with leaking top secret information to journalists.
Trump at one time called former FBI Director James Comey a "leaker" after Comey testified to the Senate Intelligence Committee last week that he shared with a friend a memo he wrote documenting an encounter with Trump.
That friend, a Columbia professor shared the memo - which revealed Trump's apparent attempts to sway the FBI's Russia investigation - with The New York Times. Comey said he believed that, once public, the memo would prompt the appointment of a special counsel
It did. Robert Mueller was appointed to oversee the investigation soon after. Trump has continued to condemn it and, earlier this week signaled that he might fire Mueller.