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Evansville Courier & Press — EDITORIAL: Right to know
- By: ASNE staff
- On: 08/05/2008 15:34:31
- In: Shield law editorials
The Issue: Protection for reporters, sources denied.
Our View: Bring it back early next year.
Evansville (Ind.) Courier & Press
August 4, 2008
Unfortunately, an unrelated Senate dispute over an energy bill appears to have killed a federal shield l
The Issue: Protection for reporters, sources denied.
Our View: Bring it back early next year.
Evansville (Ind.) Courier & Press
August 4, 2008
Unfortunately, an unrelated Senate dispute over an energy bill appears to have killed a federal shield law for journalists. The Senate fell nine votes short of overriding Republican objections to bring up the shield bill ahead of the energy measure. Had it come to a vote, the bill would have passed easily despite Bush administration objections as usual without specifics that it would harm national security. The House earlier passed its version, 398-21.
There is an outside chance the bill could come up in September, but given the crowded and shortened election year calendar, that seems unlikely. Instead, the bill's sponsors, who include several prominent Republicans, among them Indiana's Richard Lugar, will have to start from scratch next year. Rep. Mike Pence, another Indiana Republican, has championed the measure in the House.
The bill would have come at an especially timely moment for journalists. Given the cash-strapped state of the news business, many news organizations might back away from a costly legal fight to protect a subpoenaed reporter.
Our government is based, in theory, on openness and transparency, but in practice that's not always the case, and a reporter's ability to protect a confidential source is critical to the free flow of information. It is no stretch at all to say the public's right to know about its business is hindered when news sources are discouraged from talking to journalists.
Several recent celebrated cases underscored the need for the law. For awhile it looked like the only people who might go to jail in the Barry Bonds steroid scandal were the two San Francisco Chronicle reporters who revealed it. They averted jail only when their source spoke up voluntarily. A former USA Today reporter faced jail and ruinous fines for refusing to testify in a suit against the Justice Department. She was spared when the department settled. And a New York Times reporter did go to jail in the special prosecutor's CIA leak investigation that resulted in the conviction of the vice president's top aide, Scooter Libby.
The proposed law is less controversial than its critics make it sound. Forty-nine states have shield laws, and this legislation basically codifies the Justice Department's strict existing guidelines for subpoenaing reporters. (The special prosecutor in the Libby case was not subject to those guidelines.) The bill makes exceptions for cases involving terrorism or imminent harm.
It is frustrating to have come so close and fallen just short. Congress should make it an early order of business next year.