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03/10/2005
Reporters
and judges: A longtime relationship shifts, suggesting trouble
for the press
Journalists-Jail
With Journalists-History
By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal judge sentences a TV reporter
to six months of home confinement. His crime? Refusing to
reveal a confidential source.
In a trend that is making the news media nervous, a small
but growing number of reporters are ensnared in the legal
system for defying judicial demands to disclose where they
got their information. At least 16 reporters and 14 news organizations
are involved in legal fights in courthouses from New York
and Washington to San Francisco.
"I've gone through 35 years of files on this issue and
by almost any measure, things have gotten out of control,"
said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee
for Freedom of the Press.
The squeeze on reporters is coming from two directions: prosecutors
trying to plug government leaks and private attorneys suing
on behalf of clients who contend their reputations were tarnished
by unidentified government sources.
Facing what they regard as hostility in the courts, the news
media are turning to another branch of government for help.
Proposed shield laws in Congress would restore the protection
that reporters feel they're losing in the courtroom.
Too often journalists don't make the point with readers and
viewers "that we're working for them," said Deanna
Sands, president of the Associated Press Managing Editors
and managing editor of the Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald. "The
reason we fight so diligently on the issues of access and
the protection of sources of information is that we know how
important it is to have a free flow of information."
Media-sponsored campaigns such as Sunshine Week which begins
Sunday are an effort to tell the public about a need for transparency
in government. Spearheaded by the AP and more than 50 other
news outlets, journalism groups, universities and the American
Library Association, the effort will include stories, editorials
and cartoons on the subject.
In a separate initiative, APME is launching community forum
pilot programs at four newspapers in which the public and
the press will exchange views on privacy issues.
One flashpoint for the current faceoff between reporters and
judges was a federal appeals court decision in Chicago in
2003 that journalists should be subject to subpoenas just
like any other witnesses.
Twenty-six media organizations filed court papers calling
the ruling "a stunning break" from long-standing
precedent.
More trouble followed.
A federal judge found Judith Miller of The New York Times
and Matthew Cooper of Time magazine in contempt. They are
refusing to disclose their sources to prosecutors who are
trying to find who in the Bush administration leaked the identity
of an undercover CIA officer.
Five reporters including one from The Associated Press were
found in contempt for refusing to name their sources in a
lawsuit by former nuclear physicist Wen Ho Lee. Lee alleges
government leakers named him as a suspect in an investigation
of possible theft of secrets from Los Alamos National Laboratory
in New Mexico.
In Rhode Island, TV reporter Jim Taricani is serving his home
confinement sentence for refusing to say who gave him a videotape
showing a former Providence city hall official taking a bribe
from an undercover FBI informant.
In a bright spot for the media, a judge ruled The New York
Times had a right to keep its phone records confidential in
certain instances in order to protect sources.
The ruling came as a Chicago grand jury looked into the leak
of information to the Times about a planned FBI raid on an
Islamic charity.
The leaking of the identity of CIA officer Valerie Plame is
a story that has received wide publicity, but the issue of
reporters and their relationship to the courts extends everywhere
as the media go about gathering the news.
In Colorado, parents whose daughter was slain a decade ago
say reporters for the AP and The (Grand Junction) Daily Sentinel
have information important to their civil rights lawsuit against
authorities.
A federal judge threw out subpoenas against the two news organizations
and a federal appeals court upheld the decision. Now the parents
are asking the Supreme Court to take the case.
___
On the Net:
Sunshine in Government Initiative: http://www.sunshineingovernment.com
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Journalists-History
Cases of journalists
jailed or fined
By The Associated Press
A recent history
of journalists who have gone to jail or faced fines rather
than reveal information demanded by the courts:
-- 1994: Lisa Abraham,
a newspaper reporter from Warren, Ohio, jailed for 22 days
for refusing to testify before a state grand jury about a
jailhouse interview.
-- 1996: Minnesota
Daily, a university newspaper, fined $500 for refusing to
turn over photos.
-- 1996: Bruce Anderson of Ukiah, Calif., editor of Anderson
Valley Independent, jailed for 13 days for refusing to turn
over original letter to the editor received from a prisoner.
After a week, he tried to comply, but the judge refused to
believe it was the original letter because it was typed. After
another week, the judge accepted that it was the original.
-- 1996, Miami Herald
reporter David Kidwell of Palm Beach County, Fla., sentenced
to 70 days and fined $500 for refusing to testify about a
jailhouse interview. He served 14 days before being released.
-- 2000, Sacramento
Valley Mirror editor and publisher Timothy Crews of Red Bluff,
Calif., served a five-day sentence for refusing to reveal
his confidential sources in a story involving a state patrol
officer's sale of an allegedly stolen firearm.
-- 2001, Author
Vanessa Leggett of Houston, jailed for 168 days by federal
judge for refusing to disclose her research for a crime book
and the identities of her sources to a federal grand jury
investigating a murder. Leggett was freed after the grand
jury's term expired. A subsequent grand jury indicted the
key suspect in the murder without her testimony.
-- In Washington,
a federal judge last year held five journalists in contempt
for refusing to reveal sources who gave them information about
Wen Ho Lee, a scientist who was once suspected of spying.
The judge fined each of them $500 per day, a punishment put
on hold pending appeals from the news organizations, including
The Associated Press, The New York Times and the Los Angeles
Times. An ABC reporter, who worked for CNN when the stories
were reported, also is appealing.
-- In Providence, R.I., Jim Taricani of WJAR-TV, is serving
a sentence of six months in home confinement for refusing
to reveal the name of a confidential source who provided a
videotape showing a former city hall official taking a bribe
from an undercover FBI informant.
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