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Press
Releases
Tom Curley
President and CEO
The Associated Press
The Hays Press-Enterprise Lecture
Riverside, California
May 7, 2004
Just a month ago AP sent reporter Denise Grones to Hattiesburg,
Mississippi, to cover a speech by U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia. She ended up being the unwilling subject of
her own story.
As Scalia spoke, a United States Marshal stepped in front
of Denise and demanded that she turn over the digital recording
she was making to back up her notes. She tried to say no,
but the marshal ignored her and erased Justice Scalia’s
words from memory on the spot.
In February, AP photographer Michael Derer was covering a
train derailment near Woodbridge, New Jersey. When he stepped
onto railroad property to try to get a picture of the wreckage,
the local police who were controlling access to the scene
packed him into a squad car and drove him away.
And in March not too far from where we are now, AP freelance
photographer Michael Mariant was taking pictures of people
entering the Santa Barbara County Courthouse on the morning
when a grand jury would consider molestation charges against
Michael Jackson.
One day earlier a judge had ordered the media not to identify
or publish pictures of the grand jurors. Our photographer
was across the street from the courthouse shooting images
of peoples’ feet and backs as they lined up to go into
the courthouse.
A sheriff’s deputy demanded his camera, flipped through
his images, and deleted the ones that the deputy decided would
violate the judge’s order. I should add that –
leaving aside the question of whether the judge’s order
was constitutional -- neither Michael nor the deputy really
knew which of the people in the photos – if any –
were actually grand jurors.
Of course, AP and these individual journalists had legal rights,
and we called in the lawyers in each case.
But that doesn’t get us back the words and pictures
we really wanted. They’re gone for good.
The point I want to make with these brief examples is an elemental
one: the government’s power is overwhelming. It’s
agents are armed and authorized to use force if they have
to.
Your lawyer may eventually have the last word, but in the
moment when the power of the state first confronts you, your
choices are between doing what you’re told the easy
way or doing it the hard way.
Power, of course, is what gets things done. It provides essential
services, maintains order, and keeps us safe.
But power will not restrain itself. Those entrusted with it
have to be watched. That is not meant as a political statement
or a character assessment. It’s just a basic law of
nature.
The powerful have to be watched, and we are the watchers.
And you don’t need to have your notebook snatched by
a policeman to know that keeping an eye on government activities
has lately gotten a lot harder.
In fact, the government itself has actually told us so.
After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the attorney general of
the United States informed federal departments he was reversing
the spirit of the Freedom of Information Act.
The essence of the FOI Act is that government information
is open and accessible to the public unless there is a very
good reason to keep it secret. But under the attorney general’s
directive, department heads were told they should treat government
information as secret unless presented with a very good reason
to make it accessible.
The agencies eagerly complied. Up went the barriers. Down
came the official Internet sites and document databases. Gone
were expedited FOI procedures for reporter requests to many
agencies.
By last summer, a government study determined that nearly
a third of the federal officials whose duty is to comply with
FOI requests reported they had succeeded in reducing the flow
of information to the public.
The states appear to have fallen in step with the new spirit
of secrecy. In a survey taken last month of AP chiefs of bureau
around the country, more than half told us that state and
local governments are making it much harder for us to do our
jobs.
Here’s a quote from one: “I think the biggest
frustrations are the increasingly aggressive attitude of government
officials toward keeping secrets, and the necessity to retain
legal counsel to challenge some of their actions.”
And another one said this: “The biggest problem areas
remain at the lowest levels in government and law enforcement.
The smaller the community, the more the top officials think
they own the records.”
Government actions taken in the name of heightened national
security and the war on terrorism are responsible for some
of this, but by no means all of it.
State and federal judges seem more inclined than ever to issue
gag orders, seal documents or even close proceedings in cases
of all kinds, not just terrorism cases. All too often, they
do this without bothering to hear arguments or make findings
that the restrictions are necessary to assure a fair trial
or to serve any other important public interest.
And no discussion of restricted information access would be
complete without mention of the Health Information Portability
and Privacy Act, the notorious HIPAA.
While it was passed with the praiseworthy goal of protecting
the privacy of sensitive personal medical information, the
law has turned out to be an object lesson in unintended consequences
and a nightmare for journalists.
It is one of the most widely misunderstood laws on the books.
Police officers sometimes tell journalists they believe they
themselves could be charged with a crime if they disclose
health-related facts about a suspect or a victim. Not true.
Hospital officials sometimes warn journalists that just reporting
such facts could subject the journalists to criminal penalties
under the law. Also not true.
By now, every news organization in the country has a file
drawer full of HIPAA stories, and we certainly have ours.
Last May, for example, some of you may recall that former
President Gerald Ford suffered a dizzy spell on a California
golf course. We heard he was rushed to a hospital in Rancho
Mirage.
But when we called to find out for sure, the hospital consulted
its lawyers and dummied up. They wouldn’t even tell
us whether Ford was there.
Since it was a Saturday, we couldn’t reach anybody on
Ford’s staff. It took us several hours to confirm even
the sketchy details that were circulating.
Those were very long hours on our national desk. Here’s
how one senior editor put it in an after-action report: “All
I could think of was this: one of the five living former presidents
might no longer be living, and we have no idea.”
We had similar trouble in March when police in Columbus, Ohio,
arrested a man believed to be responsible for a series of
sniper shootings along the interstate highways. Thanks to
misplaced HIPAA paranoia, we were unable to get a copy of
a missing persons report filed earlier by the man’s
mother because it referred to the suspect’s mental health.
HIPAA doesn’t just pose unreasonable obstacles to journalism.
Our Chicago chief of bureau recently called his mother’s
nursing home for a progress report on her treatment and was
told that HIPAA forbade any such conversation over the phone.
Yet some critics of the law say it contains loopholes that
make it a poor guardian of privacy in ways that really matter.
Clearly, we’re in a time when the challenges to the
public’s right to know are large and growing.
You would expect in such a time that news organizations would
be mounting more determined efforts to meet and overcome those
challenges. But that doesn’t appear to be the case.
Objections among the media to the attorney general’s
post-9/11 directive to clamp down on agency FOI disclosures
were muted at best.
In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks when federal grand
juries began issuing secret indictments and agents rounded
up alleged conspirators or material witnesses, most of us
remained silent.
Nor did the collective news media rally immediately to the
support of legal efforts to open up deportation proceedings
against the hundreds of detainees of Middle Eastern descent
who were taken into secret custody in the wake of the attacks.
That was an extraordinary time for the country. It’s
entirely understandable – and reasonable – that
the press and public were willing to step back for a time
and give the government room to address an unknown and frightening
threat.
The risk has always been, and remains, that this temporary
relaxation of vigilance could gradually become business as
usual.
Fighting the government for information access has never been
easy. It costs a lot of money. It’s hard to win. And
when you do win, the victory often as not comes long after
the underlying news story has lost its immediacy.
Under the best of circumstances, FOI work tends to be all
guts and not much glory.
So, how much more tempting it is to back off on an FOI challenge
when money is even tighter than usual . . . and you can tell
yourself that there are good national security and public
safety grounds for sitting this one out, and maybe the next
one, and the next one.
This could become a dangerous habit if we allow it to take
hold, dangerous for us and for the society in which we play
such a critical role.
Ours is a society of checks and balances. The designers of
our system were under no illusion that freedom could ever
survive and flourish just because it was a good idea.
They wrote a constitution which recognizes that all power
will expand to its limit because that’s what power does.
But our constitution prevents tyranny by dividing up the power
and using it to limit itself.
The story of public life in this country – the story
we in the news business show and tell every day – is
always, one way or another, about power and the important
values and interests that drive its use.
National security is one such value. Public safety is another.
Fair trials are another. Personal privacy is yet another.
And freedom to find out and report what’s happening
is certainly another.
These important interests, and many more, compete and collide
every day. None has an absolute right to prevail over all
the others. The system depends on vigorous advocacy by all
the competitors to achieve a workable balance. Our freedom
hangs in that balance.
Vigorous advocacy for open government is what I believe we
need much more of today.
I do not mean to imply any criticism of the abundant advocacy
we already have. On the contrary, organizations like the Reporters
Committee for Freedom of the Press, the Society of Professional
Journalists, ASNE and dozens of other groups and individuals
are thoroughly committed to this cause.
They accomplish a great deal, and we owe them a lot. They
have raised all the alarms I’ve mentioned, and many
more. Some of them provided early warning about HIPAA.
We need to hear them and we need to help them.
News is our business. We are the watchers. Open government
is the personal interest and constitutional right of every
citizen. But we of the fourth estate have by far the greatest
means and incentive to speak and fight for it.
The advocates of secrecy believe security, privacy and public
safety are a lot more important than open government. It’s
clear they’re fighting harder than ever to portray the
First Amendment as a luxury the country can’t afford
right now. They’re using every available tool at their
command to do so.
To preserve the balance of forces that guarantees liberty,
I believe we have to do the same.
I am not talking about reflexively opposing reasonable measures
that serve our security, our privacy or other values in a
changing world. I am talking about making sure such measures
take proper account of the values that it is our special responsibility
to protect and defend.
The government is pushing hard for secrecy. We must push back
equally hard for openness. I think it’s time to consider
establishment of a focused lobbying effort in Washington.
An advocacy center for open government would identify and
oppose legislation that puts unreasonable restrictions on
public information. It would also propose and seek legislative
support for measures that would strengthen First Amendment
values.
For example, with courts in some circuits showing signs of
withdrawing their recognition of the reporter’s privilege
and threats of newsroom subpoenas and searches increasing
since enactment of the Patriot Act, it may be time to consider
a push for a federal shield law.
Within the next few months, AP will invite representatives
of the organizations I’ve mentioned and some others
experienced in this kind of work to help us develop a plan
for a Washington office that would seek better statutory guarantees
for more accessible government information.
If we’re successful, we would convene a broader group
to help flesh out an agenda for this effort.
The Reporters Committee, SPJ, ASNE and others do some lobbying
already. But by their own accounts their legislative activities
are sporadic and uncoordinated, and the scope is limited by
their tax-exempt status.
Their candid assessment of their own efforts is that only
a full-time dedicated presence will be as effective as it
should be.
I know that some in the journalism community would strongly
disapprove of a project of this kind. They believe the role
of journalists is to remain strictly impartial, and that express
backing for even the best intended legislation would compromise
that role.
I respectfully disagree.
The objection reminds me a little bit of the saying about
the man who was “so broad minded that he wouldn’t
take his own side in a fight.” A fight is what this
is. A fight is what our system of government intends and expects
it to be.
We do not sit in some impartial referee’s box where
open government is concerned. Like it or not, we’re
in the game for keeps, and we can either play badly or play
well.
I believe we have a duty to play well, and that it’s
time to learn whether some new moves will help.
And in the meantime we intend to do more of what we’re
already doing.
* State FOI audits, for example, have been very effective
tools for testing official compliance with state FOI laws
and raising public awareness of their rights. Usually these
audits are conducted as a collaboration among all state media
including AP.
Starting now, AP bureaus in any state where such audits have
not been conducted will be instructed to make some phone calls
and start a project immediately. And AP will press in every
state for regular audits at least once every five years.
* Bureau chiefs will also be directed to provide a status
report on access for still and video cameras to state and
federal courtrooms in their territories. Where there is no
active effort under way to expand access, or the effort has
faltered, chiefs will be asked to develop a plan to move things
forward.
* AP bureau chiefs will be directed to review their procedures
for responding when access to information or proceedings is
blocked. We will help them speed the process of deciding when
to hire counsel, seek allies among other media, and fight
back.
* We will issue fresh instructions to AP editors at every
level to be sure that any news story that benefits from an
FOI request or suffers from lack of public information that
was refused by a government source says so clearly.
There is a lot more we can do, especially if we work together.
Our industry can be proud of the principled stand it has always
taken for freedom of information. Every one of us has used
the FOI laws for the public good, fought to get into public
meetings, sued to overturn gag orders or unseal documents.
The advocacy of ASNE, SPJ, the Reporters Committee, and the
scores of FOI and Open Government councils all over the country
have helped keep the First Amendment vibrant.
Yet today, the forces of secrecy have drawn fresh strength
from the war on terror and the heightened privacy concerns
that new technologies have spawned.
We, the forces of open government, must find fresh strength
of our own, and I am confident we will.
Thank you for inviting me to join you.
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