Support Nicky Hager
Last
Thursday journalist Nicky Hager was raided by police in a blatant
attempt at intimidation for writing Dirty
Politics.
Now he faces a prolonged and expensive legal process to get his
computers, data and papers back. Newspapers have lawyers on staff to
deal with problems like this, but independent journalists don't. So a
friend of his has set up a GiveALittle
campaign to help pay for his legal costs:
A dear friend of mine is a good friend of Nicky's and suggested this fund as a way to show our support for Nicky and to send a clear message that we will fight misuse of power in our little democracy. We also need to set a legal precedent that this use of power against journalists is not acceptable. If the legal work is done pro-bono then donations will go to support the work Nicky does as an investigative journalist.
You can donate to it here.
Doing
over the witness
Russell
Brown
7
October, 2014
Whoever
compromised Cameron Slater’s computer and copied some of his
private communications almost
certainly committed a criminal offence.
The police should investigate Slater’s complaint about the incident
and, if they can confirm the identity of that person and have
sufficient evidence, mount a prosecution and let them make their case
in court.
What
the police absolutely should not have done in a democracy waswhat
they did last Thursday:
send five officers to Nicky Hager’s house when they knew he was
absent, and have them spend 10 hours doing it over, remove what he
described as “a
large collection of papers and electronic equipment belonging to my
family, including computers, drives, phones, CDs, an iPod and a
camera” – and then basically dare him to get his possessions and
documents back via the courts.
Let’s
be clear here: Hager is not the accused. He is a witness. And the
implications of what the police have done are very, very troubling.
It
seems extremely unikely that the police will find the identity of
“Rawshark”, the source for Hager’s book Dirty
Politics and
(presumably) the hacker, amid the property they have seized. Hager is
meticulous about source protection and will have been especially so
in this case.
But
Hager also typically works on several investigatve projects at once
(he referred recently to an ongoing project on secret tax havens).
It’s possible that the material taken could compromise sources, or
embarrrass the very authorities who have seized it. The very fact of
the search may deter future whistleblowers.
At
any rate, this seizure by the state will now make it more difficult
for Hager to work, and for members of his family to go about their
business. If it was not a deliberate attempt to intimdate a
journalist, it unquestionably functions as one.
Anyone
in any doubt about Hager’s legal position in using the material he
received in the public interest should bear in mind the comprehensive
failure of Slater’s civil action to retreive similar material from
the Herald, Fairfax and Mediaworks. Slater recently abandoned
the action altogether,
leaving himself on the hook for what may be substantial legal costs.
Even his one small win – an undertaking from the media companies
not to publish personal material – is now void. I gather the media
organisations involved will nonethless take the high ground – which
is a courtesy Slater’s victims have never enjoyed.
Those
who welcomed the raid on Hager’s house – Bill Ralston included –
are effectively saying that the state should now visit the same
punitive action on those media companies, whose journalists have also
made contact with the hacker. They should then ask themseves exactly
what kind of country they actually want to live in.
That
won’t happen, of course. Which makes what happened last Thursday
look all the more like intimidation.
The
police have also set themselves a potentially unfortunate standard
with respect to the criminal complaints made against Slater
– including those with respect to his accessing of private data
from a Labour Party computer and, more seriously, an apparent
conspiracy to undermine the Serious Fraud Office and the Financial
Markets Authority, and intimidate a witness with whom they were
dealing. Will the police now turn up and search, say, the Prime
Minister’s office?
If
Hager’s work has been impaired for the time being, the other
journalists will continue theirs. At least one of those journalists
has now completed a substantial post-election story based on Rawshark
material. It’s just a matter of when it will be published.
Slater
will, no doubt, continue to profess his virtue. His curious distance
from his own actions was captured neatly in his post on Whaleoil
yesterday:
Journalists call people they write stories about. Journalists give people a right of reply. Journalists tell the whole story, not massaged narratives that suit their politics.
Yeah,
really
$16,000 raised so far.
Cash
rolls in to Hager's legal battle fund,
ALDEN WILLIAMS/FAIRFA
8
October, 2014
Investigative
journalist Nicky Hager's legal battle against the police search and
seizure of belongings from his house has received a significant
financial boost.
Hager
is the author of Dirty Politics, a book based on emails and Facebook
posts hacked from WhaleOil blogger Cameron Slater's computer.
Dirty
Politics alleged links between Prime Minister John Key's office,
National politicians and party-linked figures, and Slater.
Slater
laid a complaint with the police over the hacking of his
communications, which were leaked online by the hacker who went by
the name Rawshark, and posted from the Twitter account WhaleDump.
Police
spent 10 hours searching Hager's house last Thursday, and removed
computers and related items under a search warrant as part of the
"ongoing investigation into alleged hacking of Mr Slater's
emails".
Hager
said he anticipated a legal fight over access to the material, and
expected pressure to reveal the identity of "Rawshark", his
source for the material Dirty Politics was based on.
"But
there is no way I will ever cooperate," he has said previously,
saying he would go to prison rather than reveal his source.
Fundraising
has begun online to support Hager's legal fight - with more than
$16,000 raised since the GiveaLittle page was set up yesterday.
The
page was set up by former Young Labour leader Meg Bates, who
described Hager as a "hero" who "exposed a twisted web
of power and influence in New Zealand politics and opened the
Government and its ministers up to scrutiny" through Dirty
Politics.
Hager
said he did not know the person who had set the page up, but he was
grateful to them and to everyone who had donated for their support.
Media
lawyer Steven Price would represent Hager in the legal challenge.
Price is Hager's long-term lawyer, and worked on all his previous
investigative books at no charge.
Hager
said he did not know what the arrangement with Price would be in this
case, because he did not know how large it would be.
Bates
said even if Hager's legal representation was conducted at no cost,
there would still be thousands of dollars in costs, and any money
raised above what was needed for legal fees would go to Hager's
future investigative journalism work.
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