|
ABFFE Seeks Bookstores to Host Reporters' Talks on Confidential Sources
January 03, 2008
The
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
(ABFFE) is seeking bookstores to host reporters who want to speak to the public
about growing efforts to force journalists to reveal their confidential sources.
ABFFE first organized a series of programs about
the importance of confidential sources for a free press in 2006, and "17
bookstores hosted some of this country's leading journalists and were very pleased
with the results," said ABFFE President Chris Finan. "This year's
programs will occur against the background of the dramatic fight to pass a reporters'
shield law in Congress."
Bookstores interested in hosting a reporter should contact ABFFE,
which will work with the MLRC Institute, a not-for-profit educational organization
focused on the media and the First Amendment, to find a reporter who has worked
on major stories that could not have been reported without the use of confidential
sources. MLRC's efforts are being supported by a grant from the McCormick Tribune
Foundation.
In addition to discussing the cases for which
they have firsthand knowledge, the reporters are expected to distribute and
discuss material about the history of the fight over confidential sources, which
dates back to efforts to imprison colonial journalists John Peter Zenger and
Benjamin Franklin's brother, James.
There has been a big increase in the number
of subpoenas issued to reporters in recent years, according to ABFFE, which
cited a few of the more well-known cases: New York Times reporter Judith
Miller, who went to jail for 85 days before her source, I. Lewis Libby, released
her from a confidentiality agreement regarding conversations about CIA agent
Valerie Plame; a 2006 case against video blogger Josh Wolf, who was jailed for
civil contempt for 226 days for refusing to hand over to a federal grand jury
out-takes of his video of a protest in San Francisco in July 2005; and an August
2007 court ruling that ordered five journalists to disclose their sources for
news stories about Steven Hatfill, who had been considered a possible suspect
in the 2001 anthrax attacks, or risk being held in contempt of court.
In October 2007, the U.S. House of Representatives
overwhelmingly approved the Free Flow of Information Act (H.R. 2102), which
protects the confidentiality of reporters' sources in most federal cases. However,
ABFFE noted the fight is expected to get tougher when the Senate takes up the
bill this year. The Justice Department opposes it, and President Bush is likely
to veto it if it reaches him, according to ABFFE.
Booksellers who are interested in hosting a reporter's talk should contact
Finan at chris@abffe.com or (212) 587-4025,
ext. 15.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|