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In a "filmmaker statement" posted on the "POV" website in connection with "The Oath," Poitras said she intended to create an "on-the-ground record that can help us understood this history as time passes. I believe the world will be grappling with the tragedy of 9/11 and America's reaction to the attack for generations to come." She's on the board of directors of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, which describes itself as helping to defend and support journalism "focused on exposing mismanagement, corruption, and law-breaking in government." Her fellow board members include foundation co-founder Daniel Ellsberg of 1970s Pentagon Papers fame and the Guardian's Greenwald, who interviewed Snowden for the online videos. Greenwald, a former contributing writer for Salon, told the website that Poitras is "easily one of the bravest and most brilliant people I've ever met." She shares with the reporter a distrust of government intrusion. He's the author of three books in which he argues the government has trampled on personal rights in the name of protecting national security. Poitras joined the foundation in part because "she felt her own journalism was being chilled by the fact that his surveillance had happened to her. ... She's suffered at the hands of unnecessary and overbearing government surveillance herself," said Trevor Timm, foundation executive director and co-founder. For more than six years, since starting her 9/11-related work that often took her to the Middle East, Poitras has said that she's been repeatedly questioned by U.S. officials here and abroad. "I've actually lost count of how many times I've been detained at the border, but I think it's around 40 times," she said in an April 2012 appearance on "Democracy Now!", an independent news program that airs on public broadcasting TV and radio stations and elsewhere. When she was questioned by Department of Homeland Security officials in London around that time, "I told them I was a journalist and my work was protected and I wasn't going to discuss it," she said on the news program. In a statement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it is prohibited from discussing specific cases due to privacy laws. U.S. citizens returning from foreign travel cannot be denied entry into the country and are not considered "detained" unless there's an outstanding warrant for their arrest. Travelers can be referred for further inspection "for a variety of reasons to include identity verification, intent of travel, and confirmation of admissibility," the agency said. "She was incredibly patient with the process until the people who were questioning her started to (imply) it didn't matter if she would answer or not: they would get their answers electronically," said her colleague, Johnson. For Poitras, that was a deep infringement, she said. An interview request emailed this week to Poitras' New York-based Praxis Films generated what appeared to be an automatic reply from her account: "I'm traveling and don't have regular email access. Thanks for your patience." "She's an incredibly warm person, soft-spoken, very smart, but she's a private person and doesn't like to be out in front of the camera," Timm said. "She doesn't like to make the story about her. I can understand why she's been hesitant to talk." In online interviews given before the surveillance story broke, Poitras comes across as low-key and cautious despite her willingness to put herself at risk for her work. In a 2010 clip posted by the New York Times she recounts how the prospect of meeting with bin Laden's former bodyguard in Yemen came with "'danger' flashing signs." And while she is dogged in her pursuit of information that doesn't mean she has an agenda, said Kilmurry of "POV." "I think she's really driven by curiosity about the issues in which she gets involved rather than having a particular perspective or narrative at the end," he said. "She's open to where the story takes her and having her own perspective challenged or changed, as she hopes the audience is, too." Johnson, who is working with Poitras on her final Sept. 11 film about surveillance and whistleblowers, can't predict when it will be finished. "There's no timeline. That's what's remarkable about her. She really does let the story lead her," Johnson said. ___ Online: http://www.robertgreenwald.org/
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