NABJ and Other Press Organizations Demand Answers from DOJ on Targeting of Journalists
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
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Posted by: Tiane Johnson
The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) and more than 60 civil liberties, digital rights, press freedom and public
interest groups sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder demanding a
full, transparent account of the Justice Department’s targeting of
journalists and whistleblowers.
May 24, 2013
Attorney General Eric Holder
Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Ave Washington, DC 20530
Dear Sirs:
More
than 50 journalism and press organizations recently wrote you to voice
grave concerns about the Justice Department’s subpoena of telephone
records belonging to Associated Press reporters and editors. We write
today as a coalition of civil rights, public interest, transparency and
media reform groups to express similar concerns.
Your
actions have threatened press freedom — and endangered the health of
our democracy. As groups working to strengthen democratic institutions
and foster more open government, we are deeply concerned that your
agency’s actions will hinder efforts to make government more transparent
and accountable to the public.
Following
years of aggressive leak investigations, the Justice Department’s
overreaching subpoena of AP phone records sets a dangerous precedent.
Furthermore, it appears to violate the Department’s own rules and
guidelines. The impact of the Justice Department’s actions is already
being felt. AP CEO Gary Pruitt reports that sources are now less willing
to talk to reporters. And journalists from newsrooms large and small
have noted the chilling effects on their coverage of the government.
The
latest news suggests that the subpoenas were even broader than
initially reported. In addition, details are emerging about a case in
which the Justice Department also seized phone records from reporters at
Fox News and labeled one of its journalists a "co-conspirator” for
simply doing his job.
These
troubling developments raise real questions about the scope of the
Department’s surveillance of journalists. At a recent congressional
hearing, Mr. Holder, you couldn’t recall how many times the Justice
Department has subpoenaed journalists’ records. We need to know the full
extent of your Department’s crackdown against journalists.
In
the digital age, reporting is no longer confined to America’s
traditional newsrooms. As such, threats to press freedom threaten anyone
who seeks to share information about official actions using a
cellphone, social media service or website. The Obama administration
promised a new era of openness and transparency. Your actions, which
expand secrecy and intimidate those trying to shed more light on our
government, run counter to that promise.
We
demand a full accounting of the Justice Department’s targeting of
journalists and whistleblowers. We need this information so that we can
advocate for appropriate action to protect everyone’s constitutional
rights and push for stronger legal standards to protect all types of
information gathering and sharing.
The
Justice Department must explain its overreach in this matter.
Furthermore, we call on the Department to stop violating its existing
rules and cease targeting of individuals and organizations reporting on
government activity.
Sincerely,
ACCESS Alliance for Women in Media American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression American Civil Liberties Union American Library Association The Banyan Project Brave New Films Center for Democracy and Technology ColorOfChange.org Common Cause Communications Workers of America CREDO Action CultureStrike Defending Dissent Foundation Digital Media Law Project Electronic Frontier Foundation Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting Freedom of the Press Foundation Georgia First Amendment Foundation IndyMedia Investigative News Network iSolon.org Katy's Exposure Blog Knowledge Ecology International LAMP: Learning About Multimedia Project Media Alliance The Media Consortium Media Mobilizing Project Mine Safety and Health News MuckRock National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture National Association of Black Journalists National Coalition Against Censorship National Freedom of Information Coalition National Priorities Project Native Public Media The Newspaper Guild-CWA OpenTheGovernment.org Park Center for Independent Media Participatory Politics Foundation PEN American Center Personal Democracy Media Project Censored Project On Government Oversight Prometheus Radio Project Public Record Media RootsAction.org Society of Professional Journalists Sunlight Foundation Tully Center for Free Speech at Syracuse University United Republic Utah Foundation for Open Government Washington Civil Rights Council Women In Media & News Women, Action & the Media Women's Media Center WRFN, Radio Free Nashville Writers Guild of America, East
### An
advocacy group established in 1975 in Washington, D.C., NABJ is the largest
organization for journalists of color in the nation, and provides career
development as well as educational and other support to its members worldwide.
For more information, please visit www.nabj.org.
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