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10/25/05
AP
president supports shield law for journalists
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal law to protect journalists from
having to reveal their confidential sources is necessary no
matter what, Tom Curley, president and CEO of The Associated
Press said Tuesday.
"It's nuts
to see reporters going to jail for upholding professional
standards," he said at the National Press Club. "We're
not asking for an exception just for us. We're asking for
an exception that already exists."
Congress is debating legislation that would protect journalists
in many cases from being forced to reveal their news sources.
Similar laws exist in most states.
"We need it at the federal level," Curley said.
He stuck up for The New York Times, which supported one of
its reporters who spent 85 days in jail before divulging the
name of her source regarding a possibly illegal leak of a
CIA operative's identity.
"They deserve more credit than they are getting in terms
of their dedication to the news," he said. "If there
is a problem at The New York Times, they will fix it."
The event was hosted by Marvin Kalb, a former television journalist
who is now a senior fellow at Harvard University's Joan Shorenstein
Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy. The Kalb
Report was aired live on satellite and local radio and taped
for broadcast on Bloomberg Television and WHUT-TV, channel
32 in Washington.
Dipping third quarter profits from many major news outlets
and the changing nature of news amid new media -- such as
Web logs, or blogs -- do not scare Curley, who says organizations
like the AP are more necessary than ever to serve as standard
bearers.
He also said that while the AP aims to break news by reporting
quickly, the organization earns trust by waiting for certainty.
"You have to have the courage to hold if you're going
to maintain standards," he said.
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On the Net:
The Kalb Report: http://www.gwu.edu/kalb/
The Associated Press: http://www.ap.org
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