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Journalists need lessons in freedom of the press![]()
Published: Friday, July 08, 2005
We can’t be surprised that judges, prosecutors and the public don’t care about sending a reporter to jail. But when journalists join the chorus of approval, we need to do some education in our ranks. In training and education programs for budding journalists and veterans alike, we need to explain what the First Amendment means and how important the free press is to our democracy and our society. We need to teach journalists their responsibility to understand and defend that freedom. The jailing of New York Times reporter Judith Miller damages freedom of the press, plain and simple. At a time when we are fighting wars in the name of freedom, a federal judge has sent a reporter to jail for exercising and defending one of our most precious freedoms. That outrage is compounded by journalists who have echoed the nearly gleeful rant of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, who urged Judge Thomas Hogan to send Miller to jail. “Miller is in jail because she promised confidentiality to a rat,”
wrote Don Wycliff, public editor of the Chicago Tribune. “She believes
that her job as a journalist exempts her from an obligation of citizenship that
applies to all but a few other Americans in a few special circumstances: to
testify truthfully when called as a witness before a duly constituted federal
grand jury.” University of Massachusetts journalism professor Bill Israel wrote in Editor & Publisher, “journalists as a community have been played for patsies by the president’s chief strategist, Karl Rove, and are enabling him to abuse the First Amendment, by their invoking it.” Journalists are not seeking special rights. To the contrary, courts have singled out journalists in denying the rights that are clearly implicit in freedoms guaranteed in the Bill of Rights. The First Amendment doesn’t explicitly promise clergy the right to protect confidential communication. But we universally recognize that right as implicit in the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of religion, rather than scolding priests and pastors for failing to meet their obligations of citizenship. The Sixth Amendment doesn’t explicitly promise attorneys the right to protect confidential communication with clients. But courts recognize that confidentiality as implicit in right to counsel, rather than imprisoning and ridiculing lawyers for concocting a right from their fertile imaginations. Marriage and therapy are not even mentioned in the Constitution, but courts have recognized the confidentiality of spouses and therapists. It is not a stretch to say that freedom of the press includes a similar right to protect confidentiality. Rather, it is an illogical affront to suggest that reporters alone have manufactured a right similar to rights that are widely protected and respected in other professions. Judith Miller was the most prominent reporter involved in the woefully inadequate reporting by the Times (and most of the news media) on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq prior to the U.S. invasion. That was clearly a low point in the free press’s history as a watchdog. She isn’t exactly the poster child journalists would choose to carry the banner for the First Amendment if we got to choose. But we didn’t choose this fight. A federal prosecutor and a federal judge chose the fight and the Supreme Court lacked the wisdom or courage to intervene. The suggestion by Wycliff and Israel that the source’s lack of virtue is an issue at all reflects shocking lack of understanding of the issue. The source is irrelevant here. The press is either free to gather and publish information or we’re not. In exercising that freedom, we gather information, reliable and un, from a variety of sources, reliable and un. We hope to refrain from publishing the unreliable information, but the freedom does not depend on the virtue of the source or the record of the reporter. If Miller’s critics ever did serious work as reporters, they have forgotten
how the job works. Sometimes a reporter has to promise confidentiality before
she can learn enough to know whether a source is a rat or not. Miller did not
publish whatever information she received from Rove, or whoever her rat was.
Perhaps she did not publish the information exactly for that reason. Perhaps
her errors in WMD coverage improved her judgment in using confidential sources.
Whatever the case, a reporter can’t withdraw the pledge of confidentiality
after the fact because she decides the source is a rat. If you don’t protect
the confidentiality of the rat, the virtuous whistleblower will never trust
you. And shouldn’t. Now we have the absurd situation of Judith Miller behind bars when we can’t put Osama bin Laden behind bars and can’t keep people like Joseph Edward Duncan III behind bars. As confusing as the world has become, it’s easy to lose sight of important
issues. We need to refocus on educating the public and our own colleagues about
the precious freedom that has been the foundation of American journalism and
a cornerstone of American democracy. We need to address this in seminars, conventions,
conferences, classrooms, blogs, journals, list-servs and private conversations.
Journalists can’t be confused or misinformed about the importance of freedom
of the press. This case is not about protecting Judith Miller or her rat. It’s about
protecting the would-be Deep Throat who now wonders if he or she dare blow the
whistle to a reporter.
sbuttry@americanpressinstitute.org Steve Buttry is a Director of Tailored Programs at the American Press Institute. Send e-mail to Buttry![]()
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