See Breaking News update at end of this blog. |
GUEST BLOG / By Jim
Kuhnhenn, member National Press Club, Washington DC / kuhnhenn.jim@gmail.com
Media shield laws,
designed to protect journalists from revealing confidential sources, can be a
reporter’s legal body armor. Too often, however, courts and law enforcement
officials act as if those safeguards provide no more protection than a piece of
frayed cloth.
Take
Bryan Carmody, a San Francisco freelance reporter whose case erupted this month
when police raided his home, seized his work tools and temporarily detained him
for refusing to reveal the source of a leaked police report -- even though
California has among the strongest shield laws in the land.
After
a media outcry, police officials said they would return all of Carmody’s
property. But the reporter, who police say was part of a conspiracy to steal an
internal police document regarding the death of a well-known public defender,
remained under investigation early this week.
“We
absolutely reject the actions of the San Francisco Police Department,” said
National Press Club President Alison Fitzgerald Kodjak. “The police raid
violated Bryan Carmody’s protections under California’s shield law, which
forbids searches to identify confidential sources. By claiming Carmody is a
suspect in a conspiracy, the police are trying to criminalize standard
journalistic practices.”
Carmody’s
case, while rare, is hardly a one-off. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of
the Press catalogued 26 high-profile instances in 2018 of journalists who faced
subpoenas or legal orders to testify or turn over their work product. Since
2017, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, a catalog maintained by leading press
freedom groups, has identified at least 35 instances of reporters being
subpoenaed or having their records seized. Sixteen of the subpoenas have been
dropped or quashed after being challenged on media shield grounds.
Among
the 35 cases:
In
March, a Nevada judge ordered online journalist Sam Toll to reveal his
confidential sources for stories about a local county commissioner. The judge
ruled that his web publication was not covered by Nevada’s shield law. The
order is pending a state Supreme Court review.
Teri
Buhl, an independent journalist, faced a lawsuit from a hedge fund manager who
wanted her to disclose a source in her reporting over possible securities
fraud. A judge, citing New York’s shield law, ultimately ruled Buhl did not
have to reveal her source.
Documentarian
Nora Donaghy, who was working on a series about hip-hop producer Suge Knight,
had her phone seized by Los Angeles County sheriffs armed with a warrant. She
was also subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury. The subpoena was quashed
after her lawyers invoked California’s shield law.
The
threat of court fights like these can put a damper on aggressive reporting. In
Carmody’s case, a strong state shield law such as California’s has not been
enough to protect him.
Indeed,
California is one of 17 states -- plus the District of Columbia -- with shield
laws that give sources absolute protection except for certain circumstances.
Twenty-three states have shield laws where the protections for sources are more
qualified. Courts in eight states have recognized a qualified privilege for
sources, according to a tally kept by the Reporters Committee. Only two states
– Hawaii and Wyoming – have no such journalistic protections.
A photo widely circulated by world media is from a surveillance camera at the home of Bryan Carmody, which was raided by San Francisco police last week. Photo by Bryan Carmody. |
For
all the privileges contained in shield laws, journalists appreciate their
responsibilities.
“Clearly
people in favor of a shield law, and I’m one of them, recognize that there are
still times when a balancing test is appropriate,” said Bernie Rhodes, the head
of the media law group at Lathrop Gage in Kansas City, Mo.
Rhodes
represented Kansas City television stations who earlier this year responded to
reports of shots fired near a school in the Kansas suburbs. Authorities
subpoenaed footage of an ensuing gun battle with police near the school. Kansas
has a shield law and Rhodes said the stations could have fought the subpoenas.
Instead, they posted the raw video on their web sites for public consumption
and then made it available to law enforcement.
In
another case, authorities subpoenaed unaired portions of a television interview
with the father of a child whose death was under investigation. “We said no,
we’re standing by the shield law here. Clearly if there was something highly
incriminating that he said, guess what? We would have put it on television.
That’s what we do. We don’t bury the lede.”
BREAKING NEWS:
MORE DEVELOPMENTS ON POLICE RAID. Click here
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