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03/08/06
Business
writers' group backs SEC stance on subpoenas
NEW YORK (AP) -- A national group of financial reporters is
backing a decision by Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman
Christopher Cox to adopt a new policy on issuing subpoenas
to journalists.
The Society of American Business Editors and Writers, a not-for-profit
organization based at the School of Journalism at the University
of Missouri in Columbia, Mo., said in a statement Wednesday
that it supported Cox's decision to clarify the terms under
which the agency would serve subpoenas to journalists.
Last week, Cox and the other four commissioners of the SEC
decided to issue new guidelines to agency attorneys on the
matter. That came after Cox took the unusual step of stopping
the agency's pursuit of subpoenas previously served on writers
at MarketWatch, Dow Jones Newswires and TheStreet.com related
to an investigation into allegations of stock manipulation.
Noting that Cox said that financial reporting often supported
the agency's mission by alerting investors to dangers in the
marketplace, SABEW said that "for the SEC to undermine
what its chairman views as a key ally simply as a shortcut
to gathering information it can get in far less damaging ways
is misguided and self-defeating."
"We await completion of this important work," the
group said.
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