A Shield Law For Reporters
by TChris
The law is all about competing policies, and the competition is fierce when the need for a free and unfettered press clashes with the desire to solve (or defend against) a crime. Journalists frequently have information that would benefit either the government or the defense in a criminal case. When they assert a privilege to avoid becoming a witness, they may circumvent a defendant's Sixth Amendment right to compel testimony, just as they may defeat the government's ability to haul witnesses before grand juries. Striking a balance between a journalist's need to protect sources (to assure that other sources will divulge hidden truths without fear of reprisal) and the legal system's need for witnesses is a difficult task.
Yesterday, TalkLeft pondered the unanswered questions in the ruling that denied New York Times reporter Judith Miller and Time Reporter Matthew Cooper the privilege to conceal the identities of the persons who talked to them about Valerie Plame's employment as a CIA operative. Today, some who think the court got it wrong are calling upon Congress to legislate a shield against the compelled testimony of reporters. Many states have laws that recognize at least some protection for a journalist's privilege not to burn a source.
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