On August 1, 2006, a federal district judge sent Josh Wolf, a freelance video journalist and blogger, to prison. Wolf, a recent college graduate who did not work for a mainstream media organization at the time, captured video footage of an anti-capitalist protest in California and posted portions of the video on his blog. As part of an investigation into charges against protestors whose identities were unknown, federal prosecutors subpoenaed Wolf to testify before a grand jury and to hand over the unpublished portions of his video. Wolf refused to comply with the subpoena, arguing that the First Amendment allows journalists to shield their newsgathering materials. The judge disagreed, and, as a result, Wolf spent 226 days in federal prison,...
Part I of this article looks at the history of the federal courts\u27 jurisprudence in deciding pris...
There is an alarming trend in the United States of citizens being arrested for videotaping police of...
Most states have enacted shield laws that allow journalists to protect the identities of confidentia...
On August 1, 2006, a federal district judge sent Josh Wolf, a freelance video journalist and blogger...
Are student journalists protected by the reporter\u27\u27\u27\u27s privilege and state shield law in...
The need for a federal shield law to protect a reporter’s sources from the federal government is gro...
In 2008, the U.S. Department of Justice subpoenaed James Risen, a Pulitzer Prize winning New York Ti...
The failure to agree on a sufficiently narrow definition of journalist has stalled efforts to enac...
Journalists have been subpoenaed and otherwise pressured to give up information and sources more tim...
Rooted in the U.S. Constitution and state statutes known as shield laws, the reporter’s privilege ha...
This Note discusses the current state of the first amendment with regard to access of the press to s...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture recently removed animal inspection reports from its website, stat...
Few occu.pations or professions rank lower than reporters in public esteem. In July 1999, Justice St...
This Note will first explain, in Part I, why journalists need to be protected, and detail the histor...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Part I of this article looks at the history of the federal courts\u27 jurisprudence in deciding pris...
There is an alarming trend in the United States of citizens being arrested for videotaping police of...
Most states have enacted shield laws that allow journalists to protect the identities of confidentia...
On August 1, 2006, a federal district judge sent Josh Wolf, a freelance video journalist and blogger...
Are student journalists protected by the reporter\u27\u27\u27\u27s privilege and state shield law in...
The need for a federal shield law to protect a reporter’s sources from the federal government is gro...
In 2008, the U.S. Department of Justice subpoenaed James Risen, a Pulitzer Prize winning New York Ti...
The failure to agree on a sufficiently narrow definition of journalist has stalled efforts to enac...
Journalists have been subpoenaed and otherwise pressured to give up information and sources more tim...
Rooted in the U.S. Constitution and state statutes known as shield laws, the reporter’s privilege ha...
This Note discusses the current state of the first amendment with regard to access of the press to s...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture recently removed animal inspection reports from its website, stat...
Few occu.pations or professions rank lower than reporters in public esteem. In July 1999, Justice St...
This Note will first explain, in Part I, why journalists need to be protected, and detail the histor...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Part I of this article looks at the history of the federal courts\u27 jurisprudence in deciding pris...
There is an alarming trend in the United States of citizens being arrested for videotaping police of...
Most states have enacted shield laws that allow journalists to protect the identities of confidentia...