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Showing posts with label Reporters Privilege. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reporters Privilege. Show all posts

Jun 18, 2021

Government Accessing Electronic Communications to Identify Sources: It Can Happen to You

 

 The revelations that the U.S. Justice Department secretly sought information on reporters’ e-mail, phone and other communications has sent shock waves through media and political circles in Washington, D.C. The Justice Department sought the information directly from communication providers in order to identify the sources of various leaks of government information. It also obtained gag orders barring editors and lawyers at the reporters’ news organizations and the communications providers from informing the reporters that their information was being pursued.

The disclosures led President Biden and Attorney General Merrick Garland to pledge that the federal government would no longer do this, even though both the Trump and Obama administrations also used this technique. But while reporters, editors and publishers both inside and outside of Washington who are concerned about press freedom may view these events with concern, for those beyond the Beltway it likely seems a faraway issue involving high-stakes reporting on national security matters and the like, which isn’t like the local news coverage they do.

But they would be wrong. For there have been numerous instances where local law enforcement have used similar methods to investigate leaks of information with way less apparent importance than national security.

Subpoenas seeking information from the media are not uncommon: the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker counts at least 106 journalists who have been subpoenaed or had their records seized since 2017, and each instance raises serious First Amendment concerns. Many states, including South Carolina, have passed shield laws that limit when courts can issue such subpoenas.

But modern technology offers a work-around alternative to seeking information about sources from reporters: investigators can get the information from reporters’ messaging, e-mail and phone service providers. Under the U.S. Supreme Court’s “third party doctrine,” when a reporter uses a provider to send and receive phone calls, e-mail or other communication, the government can obtain from that provider without confronting any shield laws or privacy issues. After all, the reporter has already “willingly” shared her communications with the provider, so there is no privacy issue. There are other legal loopholes that allow government access in other ways.

Jan 14, 2021

Free Speech Issues Abound After Capitol Hill Riot

My new South Carolina Press Association column:

The riot at the Capitol building on Jan. 6 and its aftermath have raised several serious concerns about American politics and society. These events also raise several questions and dilemmas regarding First Amendment law and freedom of speech generally.

Aug 20, 2020

Jun 20, 2018

Source secrecy in the modern era

My June column for the South Carolina Press Association:

The Justice Department’s accessing of reporter Ali Watkins’s email and phone records as part of a leak investigation is just one of several recent incidents in which the federal government has obtained the digital and other information about journalists’ activities in order to identify confidential sources.

Jan 18, 2017

What Trump can do to thwart the press

My latest column for the South Carolina Press Association discusses actions that Donald Trump and his administration can take unilaterally – without assent from any other branch of government – against the press, or at least the news media’s ability to collect and disseminate information.

Jul 7, 2016

My Debut in Communication Law and Policy

While I was in Asia, a leading peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of communications law -- Communication Law and Policy -- published my article examining whether academics can assert an "academic privilege" akin to the "reporters privilege" that journalists often assert to avoid revealing information from confidential sources.