Prosecutors Still Won't Explain Why They're Subpoenaing Northwestern Journalism Students' Grades

KAREN HAWKINS | 11/ 8/09 01:52 PM | AP

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CHICAGO — A Northwestern University professor and journalism students who spent three years investigating the case of a man convicted in the 1978 killing of a security guard believe they have evidence that shows prosecutors put the wrong man behind bars. But in the quest to prove his innocence, they may have to defend themselves, too.

Cook County prosecutors have outraged the university and the journalism community by issuing subpoenas to professor David Protess seeking his students' grades, his syllabus and their private e-mails. Prosecutors claim since the team was made up of students, they may have been under pressure to prove the case to get a good grade.

It's a first for Protess and his investigative reporting students, who have helped free 11 innocent men from prison, including death row, since 1996. Their work also is credited with prompting then-Gov. George Ryan to empty the state's death row in 2003, re-igniting a national debate on the death penalty.

"Why are we talking about our grades when we should be talking about whether there's an innocent man in prison?" said Evan Benn, a former Protess student mentioned in the state's subpoena. None of the students has been individually subpoenaed.

The prosecutor's office – led by Anita Alvarez, who last year was elected Cook County state's attorney on a reputation for toughness – said it's just being thorough, and wants to determine if students may have skewed their findings to get a good grade.

"It's been framed as a witch hunt or a fishing expedition, and it's not," said Sally Daly, spokeswoman for Alvarez. "We're engaging in a discovery process as we would in any criminal investigation."

Northwestern's lawyers have filed a motion to quash the subpoenas, and the judge may act on that Tuesday, when a hearing is set to hear arguments about whether there should be a new trial in the case. In the prosecution's response, they argue that Protess and his students aren't journalists and therefore aren't protected by reporters' privilege.

John Lavine, dean of Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism, considers that argument chilling.

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"I don't think the prosecution in a criminal case ... or the defense ever ought to be able to say we decide who is a journalist," Lavine said. "They should never have that right."

Protess and his students spent three academic years investigating the case of Anthony McKinney, a suburban Chicago man serving a life sentence for killing a security guard in 1978. After interviewing witnesses and inspecting documents, they're convinced that McKinney had nothing to do with the murder.

Several witnesses told the students that they implicated McKinney in the murder only after they were beaten by police. Northwestern's legal clinic filed a petition seeking a new trial.

Prosecutors conceded a hearing was warranted but also sought all the students' notes, unpublished memos and reimbursements for their expenses. Daly insists the subpoenas are justified because of information that Alvarez's office has uncovered, but would not elaborate.

"It goes to the interest and the bias of the students," she said. "Did they receive a better grade in the class? Was there incentive for these students to develop additional information (about McKinney's innocence)?"

Protess and his students call that claim ridiculous – especially since the prosecutor's office has never asked for such records before relating to investigations by the Medill Innocence Project, founded by Protess in 1999. Legal experts also said it's a rare request.

"It's extremely unusual to go after that kind of background material about the investigators because none of that is legally relevant to guilt or innocence," said Frank LoMonte, executive director of the Arlington, Va.-based Student Press Law Center. "It is worrisome that the response of the justice system is not to interview the witnesses, but to investigate the investigators."

Protess and his students have investigated nearly a dozen high-profile cases, several involving men on death row – including the Ford Heights Four, who were exonerated by DNA evidence in a double murder, and Anthony Porter, who was exonerated roughly 48 hours before he was to be executed. In some of the cases, Protess' students found that police had bullied or coerced false confessions, and Illinois has paid out tens of millions of dollars to some of those who were wrongly convicted.

But in two cases they investigated in the last five years, students who found compelling evidence of prisoners' guilt still got As in his class, Protess said, so students had no reason to pad their findings in the McKinney case.

"Students are rewarded for advancing the cause of truth, regardless of where the facts lead them," he said.

The American Society of News Editors is asking Alvarez's office to reconsider the subpoenas, calling them "a wide-ranging, unfounded sweep for information" that violates the Illinois reporters' privilege statute. That statute protects reporters from having to reveal their sources and other information uncovered during newsgathering, including notes and e-mails.

Meanwhile, prosecutors have declined to release records of the police officers who were involved in McKinney's case, and have also rebuffed a Protess offer to release students' grades in exchange for prosecutors' performance reviews.

Benn, the former Protess student, said he thinks the prosecutors' motives are clear.

"The state's attorney's office is trying to save itself from the embarrassment of students finding another innocent man in prison," he said.

CHICAGO — A Northwestern University professor and journalism students who spent three years investigating the case of a man convicted in the 1978 killing of a security guard believe they have ev...
CHICAGO — A Northwestern University professor and journalism students who spent three years investigating the case of a man convicted in the 1978 killing of a security guard believe they have ev...
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- zombywulf I'm a Fan of zombywulf 16 fans permalink
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Procetutor tries to cover major screwup by blaming everyone else. Sounds about right, Old Will got it right, first we **** all the lawyers

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 11/10/2009
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Ah, and a good grade would prove...what exactly?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 11/10/2009
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"The prosecutor's office – led by Anita Alvarez, who last year was elected Cook County state's attorney on a reputation for toughness – said it's just being thorough, and wants to determine if students may have skewed their findings to get a good grade."

Of course, and it's not likely that prosecutors would gladly see an innocent man to prison as long as they get to mark the chalkboard with a win! The more successful you are, the more likely you may get that DA job, or appointed to the bench, or even run for governor!

Remember Mike Nafong?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 11/10/2009
- wewin I'm a Fan of wewin 3 fans permalink

Welcome to Chicago.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 11/10/2009

This is an obvious attempt by an historically corrupt prosecutor's office to intimidate the students, professor, and university.

An honorable judge would quash the subpoena, sanction the DA and her ADA minions, then refer all of them to the Disciplinary Commission for debarment/suspension proceedings. Unfortunately, though, most of the judges in Cook County are as corrupt as Anita Alvarez.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 11/10/2009

this is a farce and a waste of tax dollars on a surreptitious investigation... the students are not fabricating 'evidence' to secure a reversal and thus score a good grade... this is prosecutorial abuse of power whose principal aim is to intimidate the students, the instructor, and the school, to cease any such investigations...

this actually is a real-world lesson these students are earning thanks to the prosectors... usually this type of censorship / coercion isn't experienced / learned until AFTER graduation, when such prosecutorial intimidation is coupled with pressure by the editor / publisher to 'kill' the story, oftentimes exhibited by 'reassignment'...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 AM on 11/10/2009

They question that students may have been motivated by grades. No one questions that prosecutors and lawyers are motivated by money and advancement. There is no question. We know that they are.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 AM on 11/10/2009
- bangagong I'm a Fan of bangagong 3 fans permalink

One thing that might really motivate prosecutors is if there is a chance the students turned up evidence that the prosecutors could not have missed, but somehow never came to light.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 11/09/2009

This is clearly an egregious attempt at intimidation by the prosecutors, not only to obfuscate the present case but also to put a damper on future investigations by the professor and his class. We can only hope the prosecution will not get away with it, but it's up to the judge, and in Chicago, that can be problematic.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:37 PM on 11/09/2009
- JNV I'm a Fan of JNV permalink

Great idea. Let's subpoena the prosecutors' grades and how they got their job.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 11/09/2009
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Someone seems vested in not re-opening the case. Perhaps the prosecutors and sympathetic, involved parties should also be subpoena'd...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 11/09/2009

Perhaps Ms. Alvarez suspects that students would lie for a better grade as a result of personal experience...taking one to know one and all that. Not that I am saying for certain that she may have fudged a test or two any more than she is saying that the teacher and students colluded for grades. If it looks that way, it is only because I am being thorough.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 11/09/2009
- roald I'm a Fan of roald 17 fans permalink

I've seen it elsewhere, but it is important enough to repeat. How many prosecutors and police have been subpoenaed for information to determine whether their actions were based on the possibility of promotions?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 11/09/2009
- woody7 I'm a Fan of woody7 3 fans permalink
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Bingo, you win the prize!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 11/09/2009

But this is a little different. A free press is critical to a functioning democracy. That's why we have the reporters' privilege statute, and why these student journalists should be protected. I live in Illinois, and this program has done great things to advance the cause of making sure people are not wrongly jailed and/or executed.

I agree with the article that the prosecutors are just trying to divert attention and cover their rears.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 11/09/2009

Sorry - re-read your comment and realized I misunderstood. I agree... if you're going to subpoena one, subpoena all.

But my comment about the need for a free press still stands... we need someone who's willing to push for the truth, and sadly, I wouldn't say that's been much of a priority here in Cook County over the past couple of decades.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 11/09/2009

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