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Scaramucci still seethes that he was recorded without permission. We didn’t need it, magazine retorts

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Then White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci talks with reporters and members of the media outside the West Wing at the White House on July 25. Photo: Washington Post photo by Jabin Botsford
Associated Press

Anthony Scaramucci says his profanity-laced phone call that preceded his ouster as White House communications director was recorded without his permission.

But a representative for The New Yorker on Thursday notes that reporter Ryan Lizza wasn’t required by law to get Scaramucci’s consent to record the conversation.

US federal law permits taping telephone conversations if one party consents to the taping — in this case, Lizza. Some places require consent of both parties, but not Washington, DC, where Lizza took the call.

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Scaramucci called Lizza last month and insulted White House aides using vulgar language during the phone interview. The former Wall Street financier was fired July 31 after only 11 days on the job.

Scaramucci used #lowlife to describe Lizza on Twitter on Wednesday.

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