It is not a great time to be a journalist in America.
The
assault on the First Amendment by militarized police in Ferguson, Mo.,
continues unabated, and the press is not spared. Since the start of
protests against the August 9 killing of Michael Brown, journalists in
Ferguson have been arrested, fired on, threatened, and assaulted.
After
more than a week of heavy-handed police violence -- through the use of
tactics and weapons better suited for a warzone than an American suburb
-- freedoms of speech and the press were dealt a major legal blow on
Tuesday. A federal court denied
a motion from the ACLU of Missouri for an emergency order to prevent
police from enforcing a ban on standing in place for more than five
seconds. The "keep-moving mandate" (also known as the five-second rule)
remains in place, criminalizing constitutionally protected activity and
placing a dangerous barrier on the ability of the media to bring us
stories from this city under siege. As Tony Rothert, the legal director
of the ACLU of Missouri, told MSNBC, "In many ways, the First Amendment has been suspended in Ferguson."
This defeat came on the heels of an earlier victory, in which the ACLU of Missouri reached an agreement
with the police, stating that members of the public and the press can
record on-duty police officers. That was good news -- except it should
never have been up for debate, because you always have the right to photograph what's plainly visible in public. Including the police.
Addressing events in Ferguson, President Obama had some encouraging words
last week that defended this country's proud tradition of media
freedom. "Here, in the United States of America," he said, "police
should not be bullying or arresting journalists who are just trying to
do their jobs and report to the American people on what they see on the
ground."
But those strong words, a reflection of the foundational
role of the media in our democracy, belie what has become a sustained
attack by the government on press freedoms.
The Obama
administration is the most aggressive in U.S. history when it comes to
prosecuting journalists' sources for disclosing unauthorized leaks. It
has gone after the journalists, too. In just one example, it continues
to pursue a Bush-era subpoena of James Risen, a New York Times
journalist, to testify against a source accused of leaking information
about CIA efforts to derail Iran's nuclear program. In an effort to
sever journalists from their sources, Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper recently went so far as to sign a directive
forbidding intelligence officials from talking to the press -- even
about unclassified matters -- without securing permission in advance.
Widespread
government surveillance, in addition to imperiling the privacy rights
of millions of Americans, has also severely undermined the freedom of
the press. A recent ACLU-Human Rights Watch report
shows that many journalists have found information and sources
increasingly hard to come by. To make matters more burdensome, they've
had to resort to elaborate techniques to keep their communications
secret. The result? We get less information about what our government is
doing in our name.
The right to record the actions of the
government without it interfering is a basic prerequisite to a
functioning democracy. Restrictions on media freedom -- whether via
surveillance, prosecutions, or tear gas -- rob us of the information we
need to engage in informed debates, assess our government's policies and
practices, and hold it to account. Journalists aren't criminals, and
they shouldn't have to act like spies.
But there's still a fight
to be fought. A media shield law taken up last year by the Senate gives
journalists important protection from having to disclose their sources
(though it does have some problems, including a deeply concerning national security exception).
In Ferguson and elsewhere, the ACLU remains vigilant, making sure protesters and journalists know their rights and challenging restrictions on speech. So be sure to brush up -- and if your rights have been violated, we want to know about it.
Home
»
»Unlabelled
» Journalism Is Under Attack, and Not Just in Ferguson
Thursday, 21 August 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment