Reporter Shield Law: White House, Senate Reach Compromise On Reporter Protections

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JIM ABRAMS | 10/30/09 05:29 PM | AP

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WASHINGTON — The White House, key senators and media representatives have reached a compromise on legislation to protect reporters from being forced to disclose their confidential sources in federal court.

Senate supporters of the so-called media shield bill said Friday that the deal gives the government authority to override those rights in certain national security cases.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the agreement "strikes the right balance between national security concerns and the public's right to know." He said it would preserve a strong defense for reporters trying to protect sources while making sure the government can do its job of protecting citizens.

The Senate Judiciary Committee could take up the altered legislation next week.

Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and a member of the media team involved in the negotiations, said they were strongly recommending that the larger media coalition backing reporter protections endorse the agreement.

"I think it is a compromise we can live with and it seems to be a compromise the White House can live with. It's certainly better than the status quo," Dalglish said.

The House passed its version of a media shield bill last March, but the measure has stalled in the Senate and took a step back last month when the administration unexpectedly sought to broaden government authority to compel testimony. Dalglish said that approach was "quite honestly a slap in the face."

Schumer met with Attorney General Eric Holder last month to try to find common ground, Schumer's office said.

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The original bill centered on the idea that a balancing test should be applied under which a federal judge would weigh the public's right to know versus national security claims made by the government. The administration wanted to eliminate that balancing test in many cases involving terrorism and other security cases.

Under the compromise, the balancing test would be eliminated in classified leak cases where the government can show that disclosure of a source's identity is necessary to prevent or mitigate an act of terrorism or substantial harm to national security. But the government would also have to provide specific facts: it could not make a national security claim and then withhold most of the details.

The balancing test would be in order for cases not involving classified leaks, but in criminal cases the burden would be on the journalist to show clear and convincing evidence that guarding the anonymity of sources is in the public interest.

In non-criminal cases the government would bear the burden in proving that compelling the divulging of a confidential source outweighs the public interest in newsgathering.

"The negotiated compromise creates a fair standard to protect the public interest, journalists, the news media, bloggers, prosecutors and litigants," said Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., a co-sponsor of the Free Flow of Information Act.

The revised bill would also extend protections for freelance or citizen journalists by defining a journalist by the nature of activity engaged in rather than by the organization that employs the reporter.

Protections in the bill apply not only to information held directly by reporters, but also to reporter information such as phone and e-mail records held by third-party service providers.

White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said the Obama administration was the first in history to support media shield legislation and that the compromise was one the White House, Senate sponsors Schumer and Specter, and a broad-based media coalition support. "We expect this proposal to move forward with bipartisan support, and the president looks forward to signing it into law," LaBolt said.

Media shield legislation has been supported by more than 70 journalism organizations including The Associated Press. It would apply only to federal courts and leave intact state protections for journalists and their sources.

The American Society of Newspaper Editors praised the agreement: "while not perfect, this is a huge stride forward from the administration's prior position and provides statutory protection that far exceeds that which is currently available to a reporter who is served with a subpoena in a federal proceeding," it said in a statement.

WASHINGTON — The White House, key senators and media representatives have reached a compromise on legislation to protect reporters from being forced to disclose their confidential sources in fed...
WASHINGTON — The White House, key senators and media representatives have reached a compromise on legislation to protect reporters from being forced to disclose their confidential sources in fed...
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- edwcorey I'm a Fan of edwcorey 20 fans permalink

The only things that the government has claimed to be of national security interest, and therefore to be kept quiet, are government crimes. The government should be held to higher standards of truth, and our representatives should be subject to harsher penalties for crimes, because they make the laws in the first place.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 AM on 11/02/2009
- jimmygee I'm a Fan of jimmygee 12 fans permalink
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Get all the freedom of the press you can! National security is one thing but hauling a reporter to court or putting them in jail for criticisms and reporting the truth of our government workings is another.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 11/01/2009
- raker I'm a Fan of raker 95 fans permalink

It is inappropriate to use Judith Miller's photo in connection with this issue. Judith Miller wasn't working as a journalist, she was a co-conspirator.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 PM on 11/01/2009
- RTIII I'm a Fan of RTIII 108 fans permalink

This is a horrific article. I thought, "who wrote this propaganda?" Then I saw it was from the AP - that explains it.

...THERE IS NO EXISTING SHIELD LAW.

This article makes it sound like there is.

AND THIS IS NOT ABOUT THE GOVERNMENT INTERVENING TO STOP TERRORISTS.

It is absolutely false to put this about any kind of supposed balance of National Security and the "public's right to know".

BE CAREFUL, people. The real issue - the REAL balance to be struck - is that we want to encourage whistle blowers but do not want to shield crime IN ORDINARY, NON NATIONAL SECURITY CASES.

Legal protections exist for your Doctor and Lawyer, yet NEITHER ONE is absolute. If there is a crime investigation or prosecution underway then your Dr or Lawyer CAN be compelled to testify / share data under certain circumstances. DO YOU WANT TO GIVE "REPORTERS" MORE RIGHTS TO PRIVACY THAN _you_ HAVE?!

This is insane. Just Say No! Reporters can keep their mouths shut but MAY find themselves in court, under oath, at risk of perjury, and compelled to testify about information necessary to uncover CRIMES.

ORDINARY crimes, like, say pollution of a river or lake, corruption of a government official, corruption of a corporate official, drug trafficing, and the like. WE THE PEOPLE LOSE IF THERE IS A SHIELD LAW! ...Judges and prosecutors ALREADY have discretion in such prosecutions.

THE SYSTEM IS FINE AS IT IS.

IF THE SYSTEM IS CHANGED, WE THE PEOPLE WILL

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 11/01/2009
- RTIII I'm a Fan of RTIII 108 fans permalink

IF THE SYSTEM IS CHANGED, WE THE PEOPLE WILL LOSE!

(don't know how it cropped the post!)
.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 11/01/2009

We need protection for Whistleblowers. This law is simply to enable the prosecution of them.
Once our rights are gone, we will never get them back.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 11/01/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 201 fans permalink

So we "sorta" believe in freedom of the press. Unless it matters. One more act of cowardice, surrendering essential freedoms for the illusion of security.

This is truly disgusting.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 10/31/2009
- alysheba 3 I'm a Fan of alysheba 3 51 fans permalink

I certainly hope that there is an inclusion in that piece for the journalists to only print the truth and to be forced to reveal "anonymous sources" for the current lies being put out by the media.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 10/30/2009
- Tom Payned I'm a Fan of Tom Payned 95 fans permalink
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It sounds like under your amendment, FAUX News could be in big trouble.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 10/30/2009
- alysheba 3 I'm a Fan of alysheba 3 51 fans permalink

Trouble can be avoided by telling the truth. Even my kids at 5 and 6 knew that.

Fox needs to grow up.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 AM on 10/31/2009

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