Obama’s
media shield law makes prosecuting journalists even easier
United
States President Barack Obama is encouraging Congress to take up a
media shield law that was abandoned at the start of his
administration, but critics of the bill say it might make it even
easier for journalists to be subpoenaed by the government.
RT,
17
May, 2013
After
the Associated Press revealed on Monday that they are the target of a
US Department of Justice probe, Obama asked lawmakers to consider a
would-be media shield law that fell apart in Washington after the
start of his first presidency in 2009.
The
AP wrote this week that the Justice Department subpoenaed two months
of phone records likely in an attempt to try and find out with whom
the news agency spoke with before publishing a May 2012 article that
exposed a Yemeni terror plot foiled by the Central Intelligence
Agency. Attorney General Eric Holder called the disclosure of
classified information to the AP one of the biggest leaks ever
suffered by the US and said publically that it put the American
people at risk. On Thursday, Pres. Obama commented that "leaks
related to national security can put people at risk," but
suggested that reviving a media shield law that died in Congress
could perhaps strike the balance between the public’s right to know
and the safety of the nation.
"So
the whole goal of this media shield law that was worked on, and
largely endorsed by folks like the Washington Post editorial page and
prosecutors, was finding a way to strike that balance appropriately,"
said the president. "And to the extent this case … has
prompted renewed interest about how do we strike that balance
properly, I think now is the time for us to go ahead and revisit that
legislation. I think that's a worthy conversation to have and I think
that's important."
Now
as the White House shifts focus from one scandal to another, free
speech advocates are concerned that the shield law, as written,
wouldn’t do much more than current legislation in terms of
thwarting future subpoenas sent to journalists. Trevor Timm, an
activist with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a board member
of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, wrote in a blog post this
week that the media shield law touted by Pres. Obama during his days
as a senator in Illinois failed to take shape after he secured his
spot in the Oval Office.
“As
a Senator, Obama was a vocal supporter of a robust shield law; he
co-sponsored a bill in 2007 and campaigned on the issue in 2008,”
Timm wrote. “But when the Senate moved to pass the bill as soon as
Obama came into office, his administration abruptly changed course
and opposed the bill, unless the Senate carved out an exception for
all national security reporters.”
When
Obama entered the White House in early 2009, he walked away from a
Senate where a shield law he advocated for had just started to take
shape. Before long, though, his own administration asked for Congress
to make adjustments before it ended up on the president’s desk.
That original law would, in theory, put in place safeguards that
would help prevent journalists from being compelled to testify who
their sources are. Once in the White House, though, Obama did an
about face.
In
September 2009, Charlie Savage wrote for the New York Times that
those safeguards “would not apply to leaks of a matter deemed to
cause ‘significant’ harm to national security.”
“Moreover,
judges would be instructed to be deferential to executive branch
assertions about whether a leak caused or was likely to cause such
harm, according to officials familiar with the proposal,” Savage
wrote.
One
of the bill’s authors, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-New York), had sharp
words for the president at the time. “The White House’s
opposition to the fundamental essence of this bill is an unexpected
and significant setback. It will make it hard to pass this
legislation,” the senator said. Sen. Arlen Specter
(D-Pennsylvania), a co-sponsor, called the changes “totally
unacceptable.”
“If
the president wants to veto it, let him veto it,” Sen. Specter told
the Times in 2009. “I think it is different for the president to
veto a bill than simply to pass the word from his subordinates to my
subordinates that he doesn’t like the bill.”
Ultimately,
the Senate Judiciary Committee approved the shield law after some
minor tweaking in December 2009, but as Savage explained in the Times
this week, “a furor over leaking arose after WikiLeaks began
publishing archives of secret government documents, and the bill
never received a vote.”
Speaking
to the Washington Post about what the passing of that version would
have done in regards to the AP probe, Sen. Schumer said, “at
minimum, our bill would have ensured a fairer, more deliberate
process in this case.”
"While
it is unclear whether the bill would change the outcome in the AP
phone records case since a national security exception may have
applied, the bill would have set up a legal process for approving the
subpoenas that would guarantee consideration of the public’s
interest in protecting the freedom of the press," Schumer
weighed in. "Prosecutors would have to convince a judge that the
information at issue would “prevent or mitigate an act of terrorism
or harm to national security.”
For
the Freedom of the Press Foundation, Timm wrote this week that the
latest version of the shield law wouldn’t do much more. Under the
Sept. 2009 request sent from the White House, the shield law once
supported by Pres. Obama would include an exception where journalists
could be subpoenaed if it means national security is at risk.
“Now,
it’s important to remember: virtually the only time the government
subpoenas reporters, it involves leak investigations into stories by
national security reporters. So it’s hard to see how this bill will
significantly help improve press freedom,” wrote Timm. “Worse,
there’s a strong argument that passing the bill as it ended in 2010
will weaken rights reporters already have and make it easier for the
government to get sources from reporters.”
“The
difference is that instead of DOJ unilaterally making that
determination,” the Justice Department would “have to convince a
judge that this was the case,” University of Minnesota Law
Professor Jane Kirtley explained to the Post.
On
Thursday, Sen. Schumer and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina)
announced they would co-sponsor a media shield bill — but that the
national security exemption ordered by Obama in 2009 was once again
present.
“The
government has a legitimate interest in preventing and investigating
leaks of classified information," Graham and Schumer wrote. "At
the same time, the public has a legitimate interest in a robust free
press.”
“This
bill strikes a fair and reasonable balance between those interests,
and we urge you to join us in advancing it,” they wrote
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