James
Risen's Risk of Prison Means Journalism is Being Criminalized
That
a New York Times national security reporter may be jailed for
refusing to name a source is a total affront to press freedom
by
Lindsey Bever
New
York Times reporter James Risen. (Photograph: AP)
12
July, 2013
New
York Times reporter James Risen has been ordered to testify in the
criminal trial of former Central Intelligence Agency official Jeffrey
Sterling, who has been indicted under the Espionage Act of 1917 –
for leaking classified information to Risen for publication in his
book, State of War. Last month, the US court of appeals for the
fourth circuit in Richmond, Virginia, ruled that Risen could not
claim a reporter's privilege under the first amendment to win
exemption from being compelled to testify.
In
effect, the court has ruled that the journalist must reveal his
source. That sets a dangerous precedent now applicable in Maryland
and Virginia, home to the NSA and CIA – the very states in which
national security journalism matters most. If a reporter cannot
guarantee confidentiality to an important source willing to provide
information that may be of vital public interest, the job of
journalism itself has been criminalised. If a reporter like Risen
refuses to co-operate and name names, he himself may face time behind
bars.
Indeed,
like a dedicated few before him, Risen has vowed to go to prison
rather than break his vow of confidentiality in the courtroom.
Although there will almost certainly be an appeal, the court's ruling
is a potentially devastating blow to investigative journalism. Given
its significance, it is shocking how little publicity the
Risen/Sterling case has yet received from major media outlets with a
direct interest in its outcome.
The
Obama administration's war on whistleblowers coupled with the court's
ruling against watchdog reporters highlight the federal government's
efforts to curb the flow of information from both ends. No one
disputes that at times journalists have a duty of care when entrusted
with secret information with possible national security implications,
but Risen is critical of how government officials will use this
argument cynically to delay or suppress a story. He said recently:
I've
been an investigative reporter for a long time, and almost always,
the government says that ['you can't publish that because of the
national security risk'] when you write a story. And then they can
never back it up. They say that about everything. And it's like the
boy who cried wolf. It's getting old.
Stephen
Engelberg, editor-in-chief of the investigative nonprofit news
organisation ProPublica, said the fourth circuit's ruling was
"extremely unfortunate – given the criminalisation under this
government of officials talking to reporters". He stressed the
need for a federal version of the "shield law" that already
exists in many states and safeguards journalists' right to protect
sources.
Even
Obama's own chief law officer, Attorney General Eric Holder, recently
affirmed that right when he announced new Justice Department
guidelines for investigations involving journalists. But Holder
himself conceded that his own guidelines would still fall short, and
that press freedom needs guarantees from Congress. New York Senator
Chuck Schumer and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham have
introduced a media shield law, but their bill does not provide
absolute privilege.
One
problem is that it's often hard to mobilize widespread public support
for civil liberties issues. In a survey released last month by the
First Amendment Center, 80% of those polled agreed that it's
important for a democracy to have watchdog reporters, but only 14%
named freedom of the press as a key right.
We
take too much in our democracy for granted – for journalists cannot
successfully hold government accountable in a society that does not
recognise a reporter's right to exercise discretion with his sources
and the information they provide. This administration has an
atrocious record for prosecuting whistleblowers. Can it really get
away with jailing the reporters who talk to them, too?
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