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In the days prior to the commencement of the war against Iraq, U.S. officials
announced the rules for embedding journalists with the American troops during
the attacks. The measure represented a significant departure from the more restricted
access to all U.S. military actions since the Vietnam War. However, there is
growing concern for the safety of the journalists that are covering the war
in Baghdad. Several reports have denounced that the Iraqi government has forced
journalists to stay at the Al-Rashid hotel to utilize the journalists as human
shields, and all journalists for the television networks CNN and Fox News have
been expelled from Baghdad.
The effect of the war has caused American officials to tighten measures intended
to secure secrecy of government information through the new Homeland Security
Law whereas media groups have advocated for more access to the point of promoting
a bill called ”Restoration of Freedom of Information Act”. The government's
electronic surveillance of e-mail of individuals has also been a concern for
defenders of privacy and of due process for the growing number of “emergency
searches”.
Regarding homeland security, two American television networks, concerned that
a war with Iraq was imminent, removed their reporters from Baghdad in early
March. NBC News decided to pull its six-member television crew after comments
from the Bush administration indicating that a military conflict could begin
within days, network spokeswoman Allison Gollust told The New York Times.
There were 450 foreign journalists in Baghdad and it seemed that the number
has dwindled to 300. The Bush administration advised journalists to leave Baghdad,
but NBC and ABC would be the first major television networks to remove staff
voluntarily from the Iraqi capital. The Fox News Channel was expelled from the
city last month by the Iraqi government. NBC would likely still be able to get
coverage from Baghdad from Peter Arnett, the former CNN correspondent who now
reports for MSNBC, NBC's sister cable network. CNN’s four journalists
were expelled March 21.
In the week of March 12th, The Washington Post reported that "The embedding
program follows media complaints that reporters were kept too far from the warfront
in recent military actions. Pentagon officials, in their guidance paper, said
the effort is being made because “we need to tell the factual story --
good or bad -- before others seed the media with disinformation and distortions,
as they most certainly will continue to do,'" the Post reports.
Editor & Publisher's Joe Strupp reports that
few, if any, editors have complained about embedding rules for war correspondents
that allow for "security review" and flagging of "sensitive"
information. But many editors say they will watch how the rules are enforced.
"They are written in such a way that they could help people report the
story or be used to hurt the reporting," said
Colin McMahon, foreign editor of the Chicago Tribune, which has five embedded
reporters out of 15 overall in the region.
Meanwhile, Newsweek senior editor Jonathan Alter says that most of the ground
rules that embedded reporters must seem reasonable, like not carrying a sidearm,
not using flash photography at night and not reporting the unit's exact position.
Unlike the Gulf War in 1991, he says, this time there will be no censorship
of stories and TV scripts. The truth is, it's just not practical anymore. Wireless
communications has killed military censorship for good.
Washington Post ombudsman Michael Getler says the real test of the Pentagon's
plan to embed more than 500 journalists with troops will come in combat if things
go wrong. "On paper," Getler says, "the new guidance seems to
be a step forward -- in terms of access and timely transmission of reporting
-- from the restrictive policies and tactics the Pentagon has employed in every
conflict since Vietnam.”
Despite a new attitude from Attorney General John Ashcroft toward access, in
March a government-wide audit of federal responses to Freedom of Information
Act requests showed most agencies (17 out of 33) just forwarded copies of the
requested information to FOI Act officers without changing regulations, guidance
or training materials; and one summarized the prevailing feeling as "more
thunder than lightning." The Ashcroft memorandum replaced a Janet Reno
FOI policy which called for release of information, even if an exemption might
fit, unless foreseeable harm would occur. Ashcroft assured agencies that the
Justice department would defend almost any "solid basis" for denial.
Worried about leaks, the military is starting to clamp down on e-mail communications
between stationed troops and their loved ones at home. E-mail access, generally
open and greatly appreciated by service men and women, will likely be restricted
and/or monitored, according to a New York Times report. Military leaders are
particularly concerned that classified information, such as the location of
troops, could be disclosed inadvertently through digital photographs and Web
cameras.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) introduced in March, the "Restoration of Freedom
of Information Act" to combat requirements for secrecy in legislation establishing
the Department of Homeland Security, which Congress passed in November.
The widely criticized secrecy provisions of the new Homeland Security law criminalize
disclosure of "critical infrastructure" information voluntarily submitted
to the government by businesses, and grant businesses which share that information
with the government immunity from liability for wrongdoing that the information
may reveal.
Dubbed the "Restore FOIA" bill, the new proposal would still provide
businesses with assurance that actual communications about the vulnerability
of critical infrastructures would be protected, but it would narrow significantly
the range of secrecy protected by law and curb the criminal penalties for disclosure.
The new bill would not criminalize disclosure of critical infrastructure information
or preempt any whistleblower protections as does the current law, which could
punish whistleblowers by a fine and up to one year in jail if their disclosures
concerned the critical infrastructure. It does not prohibit use of the information
in civil court cases to hold companies accountable for wrongdoing or to protect
the public.
The United States' Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has come under criticism
in January from the Organization for Security and Co-operation's (OSCE) Media
Freedom Representative for investigating library records, newspaper subscriptions
and bookstore receipts under the pretext of anti-terrorism.
In a statement to the Permanent Council, the OSCE's decision-making body, Freimut
Duve said governmental prerogatives under the USA Patriot Act are "being
used in a way that might intimidate citizens from exercising their right to
freedom of expression." He asked for clarification from the U.S. government
and said he was also examining anti-terrorism legislation passed by European
countries.
The U.S. deputy chief representative at the OSCE Douglas Davidson said nothing
in the Patriot Act or the way it is enforced would allow the government to limit
access to materials protected under the U.S. constitution's First Amendment.
However, media organizations say journalists should be concerned about certain
provisions of the law, which grants broad new powers to government agents to
investigate terrorism. Under the Patriot Act, the FBI can seek a secret court
order to access books, papers, records and documents from anyone on the grounds
of their suspected involvement with international terrorism or "clandestine
intelligence activities,".
Their concern is, if a reporter contacts a foreign individual or political group
suspected of being an "agent of a foreign power" under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, their communications could be monitored.
Florida state senators were to be briefed privately
on March 7th, about a state database that tracks suspected terrorists, marking
"the first time in nearly four decades that the public has been barred
from attending a Senate committee meeting," according to a report in The
Miami Herald. Although Florida has one of the country's strongest freedom of
information laws, its record on access has increasingly become a casualty of
the War on Terror.
Media groups were concerned about the government's
electronic surveillance according to a Los Angeles Times story: "Atty.
Gen. John Ashcroft told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday he has authorized
more than 170 such emergency searches since the Sept. 11 attacks -- more than
triple the 47 emergency searches that have been authorized by other attorneys
general in the last 20 years."
Recently, the American Civil Liberties Union has
petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of North Jersey Media Group and
the New Jersey Law Journal to overturn a decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals
(3rd Cir.) upholding the closure of detainee INS deportation hearings. A similar
case reaching the opposite conclusion may also reach the court.
The Center for Public Integrity, which broke the story in February, said the
United States government has secretly drafted amendments to the USA Patriot
Act that would fundamentally jeopardize civil liberties afforded American citizens
by the Constitution –yet it had been virtually ignored by mainstream media,
reported the U.S. media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR).
Drafted by US Attorney General John Ashcroft's staff, the Domestic Security
Enhancement Act of 2003 (Patriot Act II) would weaken the Freedom of Information
Act by restricting public access to information about accused terrorists being
detained. The proposal has not yet been officially introduced.
There were several issues that occurred during the last six months in the defense
of the newsgathering process. Gary Gaynor, a photographer for the Tucson Citizen,
was arrested March 5 during a protest on the University of Arizona campus. Government
authorities on March 13, 2003 intercepted a package mailed between two Associated
Press reporters last September and, without a warrant and without notifying
the reporters, seized the contents, according to an AP report. The package contained
a copy of an unclassified FBI report from 1995 that had since become a public
record, the AP said.
AP reporter Jim Gomez in Manila sent the document to John Solomon in Washington
in connection with stories the two reporters were investigating on terrorism.
The AP said the FBI document in the package contained information that had been
previously disclosed in two court proceedings. The report contained copies of
evidence gathered in the terrorism cases of Abdul Hakim Murad and Ramzi Yousef.
Murad and Yousef were sentenced to life in prison for plotting to blow up 12
airliners bound for the United States. Yousef was also convicted of planning
the 1993 World Trade Center Bombing.
In March, Judge Jane Marum Roush denied a request made by 16 media organizations
to allow recording and telecast of sniper suspect John Lee Malvo's criminal
trial in Fairfax County Circuit Court Monday. Roush also denied a request for
still photographs, a request granted by the judge in the case of John Allen
Muhammad, the second sniper suspect who is being tried in Prince William County,
Va.
While Roush did not explain why she denied the request for camera coverage,
according to media law attorney Kathleen Kirby, Roush's questions led Kirby
to believe that the judge was concerned that electronic or still photographs
would taint the jury pool.
The U.S. Supreme Court refused in February to review a New Jersey Supreme Court
decision that upheld a trial court judge's order barring journalists from interviewing
discharged jurors after the jury failed to reach a verdict in the first trial
of a rabbi charged with arranging his wife's murder.
The Philadelphia Inquirer petitioned the Court to review the case, which it
argued was "an expansive prior restraint on the press." Rabbi Fred
Nuelander was convicted in a second trial in 2002. "The order barred the
press from contacting or attempting to interview discharged jurors for any reason,
regarding any subject, and even if the juror initiated such contact," the
Inquirer wrote in its petition to the Court.
Former Catholic priest Donald Wren Kimball was convicted in February of felony
assault, felony vandalism and misdemeanor battery by a Sonoma County jury for
shoving a news photographer's camera into her face while she was covering his
trial at the Sonoma County, Calif. courthouse. Though he has yet to be sentenced,
Kimball faces three to six years for the assault.
While on trial for child molestation in April 2002, Kimball shoved San Francisco
Chronicle photographer Penni Gladstone's camera into her face, breaking her
glasses, and snatched a digital camera out of her hand before throwing it toward
(Santa Rosa) Press Democrat reporter Clark Mason. Gladstone, 49, suffered cuts
and bruises under her right eye.
At oral arguments held in February, four news organizations requested that U.S.
Magistrate Judge James K. Bredar provide access to the juvenile court records
of 17-year-old accused sniper suspect John Lee Malvo now that he is being prosecuted
as an adult.
This is not the first time the media has come to Bredar for access to these
juvenile court records. In November, Bredar refused access to Malvo's case while
it was pending in federal juvenile court in the District of Maryland.
"The public interest in this proceeding is paramount, as the Defendant
has been accused of terrorizing our community," the media organizations
argued in their motion. "The proceedings before this Court implicated the
public safety, the administration of our criminal justice system, and the public's
desire for retribution and deterrence."
As the news organizations explained, any arguments
that existed to seal Malvo's juvenile court records no longer exist.
In January, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Boston (1st Cir.) invalidated Puerto
Rico's criminal libel statute, finding that the statute, which was adopted in
1974, failed to comport with basic First Amendment requirements. The case was
brought by Jesus Mangual, a reporter for the newspaper El Vocero de Puerto Rico,
who feared prosecution for articles he had published about government corruption.
Mangual's suit requested that the court declare Puerto Rico's criminal libel
law unconstitutional and take measures to protect Puerto Rican journalists'
right to free speech.
The United States Congress is considering a bill calling for the creation of
a special office to combat Internet censorship in authoritarian regimes around
the world, report International Journalists' Network (IJNet) and the Far Eastern
Economic Review (FEER).
However, several Internet advocates, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
worry that some of the new software available may not be effective enough in
protecting the identity of users from Chinese authorities, among others.
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