1 / 58

Covering Security & Liberty IJJ: Security & Liberty Fellowships Tim Porter, Nov. 7, 2004

Covering Security & Liberty IJJ: Security & Liberty Fellowships Tim Porter, Nov. 7, 2004. 1,000’s of Stories. What Is Journalism For?. “The primary purpose of journalism is to provide citizens with the information they need to be free and self-governing.”

elga
Download Presentation

Covering Security & Liberty IJJ: Security & Liberty Fellowships Tim Porter, Nov. 7, 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Covering Security & LibertyIJJ: Security & Liberty FellowshipsTim Porter, Nov. 7, 2004

  2. 1,000’s of Stories

  3. What Is Journalism For? • “The primary purpose of journalism is to provide citizens with the information they need to be free and self-governing.” • The Elements of Journalism, Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel

  4. Journalism's first obligation is to the truth. Its first loyalty is to its citizens. Its essence is a discipline of verification. Its practitioners must maintain an independence from those they cover. It must serve as an independent monitor of power. It must provide a forum for public criticism and compromise. It must strive to make the significant interesting and relevant. It must keep the news comprehensive and proportional. Its practitioners must be allowed to exercise their personal conscience. The Elements of Journalism

  5. Obligation to the Truth • Outsourcing the Pentagon To find the answers, the Center began in early 2004 to investigate the patterns of Defense Department contracting. Our prime source was the Pentagon's own procurement databases—public information that had been posted for years on an obscure Defense Department Web site. -- Larry Makinson, Center for Public Integrity, http://www.publicintegrity.org/pns/default.aspx

  6. Obligation to the Truth

  7. Obligation to the Truth • “U.S. to Free Hamdi, Send Him Home” • “Yaser Esam Hamdi, who was held in solitary confinement as an ‘enemy combatant’ for nearly three years and never charged with a crime, will be released from custody. … The U.S. military captured Hamdi with pro-Taliban forces in Afghanistan in 2001. He was sent to Guantanamo Bay. ... He has been held in military brigs ever since.” • Washington Post, Sept. 23, 2004

  8. Loyalty to the Citizens

  9. Loyalty to the Citizens

  10. Loyalty to the Citizens • “The Constitution is not a ‘suicide pact’ … but not every sacrifice of freedom buys more security. … Yes, this is a war against terrorism. But more than that, it is a war in defense of liberty and the rule of law. If we surrender our freedom and our values out of fear, we are running up the white flag of defeat.” • Editorial, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Dec. 30, 2003

  11. Pre-9/11 • Government restrictions on information began to increase even before Sept. 11, 2001 • Driver's Privacy Protection Act in 1994 • Information released only for law enforcement and insurance coverage • Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, April 2001 • Journalists who routinely called hospitals to get the status of a patient may be unable to get such information in the future. -- Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

  12. Post-9/11 • Government restrictions after Sept. 11, 2001 • Patriot Act, 2001 • Community Protection from Chemical Terrorism Act, 2002 • Restricts access to chemical plants’ risk management plans • Department of Homeland Security, 2003 • Legislation criminalizes leaks of unclassified “critical infrastructure information” – being used to withhold information on dams, power plants, oil pipelines and structures • Court closures • Federal courts are increasingly closing immigration law and deportation hearings at the request of prosecutors -- Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

  13. Access to Information Tightens • Government shifts the burden of disseminating public information from itself to the press. • Reporters told: You can have it, but we won’t help you get it. • For example …

  14. We Don’t Have No Stinking Lists!

  15. Ask … But We Won’t Tell • “The Department of Homeland Security itself, meanwhile, is the most secretive of agencies in the most secretive of administrations. When a CJR intern asked for the exact number of terrorist warnings to the public since 2002, a p.r. person at the department, who declined to give her full name, said the information was ‘classified.’ ” • “Imagining Evil, Homeland Security: What We Don’t Know Can Hurt Us” • Columbia Journalism Review, Sept.-Oct., 2004

  16. Confidentiality Threatened • Anthrax Figure Wins a Round on News Sources • “In a development that could undercut reporters' ability to obtain confidential information, Justice Department officials agreed Thursday to distribute to dozens of federal investigators in the 2001 anthrax case a document they can sign to release journalists from pledges of confidentiality.” • New York Times, Oct. 21, 2004

  17. Free Press Under Fire • “The fundamental right of Americans, through our free press, to penetrate and criticize the workings of our government is under attack as never before.” • William Safire, New York Times, Sept. 29, 2004

  18. Stories Are Going Untold • “The past two decades of journalism in the United States generated a collection of important stories that made significant changes to benefit the public interest. But reporting many of those stories would be difficult or impossible today because of greater restrictions on access to institutions, events and information.” • Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, “Lost Stories”

  19. Balancing Act • Every story must take into account the “competing interests” of homeland security -- assessing threat vs. protecting liberties. • David Boardman Managing editor, Seattle Times

  20. Security vs. LibertyHow Press Coverage Is Shaped National security coverage is shaped by the “traditional journalistic fault lines.” • Amanda Bennett, Editor, Philadelphia Inquirer

  21. Journalistic Fault LinesWhat Does That Mean? • Fault lines are the hard-wired pieces of the news business – structural, intellectual and emotional – that influence the quality of our work. • For example …

  22. Journalistic Fault Lines • Expediency: Deadlines eventually arrive; we publish what’s done. • Space: There’s only so much of it. We write to fit. • Need for Narrative: A story has to have tension; good guys vs. bad guys make for better stories. • Fairness: On the one hand, on the other, on yet another. Truths are not self-evident. They are “according to” and usually rebutted. • Bad News: Let’s face it, if it’s broke we prefer it. • Status Quo:We are the establishment and, as such, will only go so far in our reporting. • Andrew Cline, Rhetorica.net

  23. Big vs. Small Newspapers

  24. Security & Liberty Coverage • Headlines: • Most stories are wire or syndicated, short, spot, institutional • “Fairness” (he said, she said) dominates • Localization of national issues is almost non-existent • Even larger papers (not Times, Post, Trib) more likely to be reactive and routine rather than enterprising and exceptional

  25. One Newspaper’s Coverage • Dallas Morning News • 145 mentions of Patriot Act in last two years • Two local stories of substance: • Local libraries concerned about section 215; B-1, 890 words, May 11, 2004 • City Council condemns Patriot Act City, one of the largest to pass decree; some say liberties threatened; B-1, 800 words, Feb. 26, 2004 • No indication of local enterprise -- Based on Factiva search

  26. … and Another’s • Seattle Times • 148 mentions of Patriot Act in last two years • Some local enterprise: • Takeout on local town’s opposition to Patriot Act, 2,400 words, A-1, Aug. 10, 2003 • Student investigated for photographing local water facility • Substantial space devoted to L.A. Times, Wash. Post stories on privacy vs. security, terrorism prosecutions -- Based on Factiva search

  27. Types of Coverage • Spot news • Stories that just happened • Beat reporting • Stories that were developed or encountered while working in a subject area • Enterprise • Stories that derived from our own initiative

  28. Type of Coverage:Spot News • Stories that just happened • Most prevalent • Least perspective • Lack of opposing viewpoints • Reliant on press conferences or official announcements • However …

  29. Spot Stories Can … • Police open fire at anti-war protest, longshoremen injured • “Police opened fire with wooden dowels, ‘sting balls’ and other non-lethal weapons at anti-war protesters outside the Port of Oakland, injuring at least a dozen demonstrators and six longshoremen standing nearby.” -- Martha Mendoza Associated Press, April 8, 2003

  30. … Lead to Follow-ups • State monitored war protesters • “Days before firing wooden slugs at anti-war protesters, Oakland police were warned of potential violence at the Port of Oakland by California's anti-terrorism intelligence center, which admits blurring the line between terrorism and political dissent.” - Oakland Tribune, May 18, 2003

  31. Pluses Localization of national issues Numerous takeouts developed off beats Application of broad issues – such as immigration – to specific topics – such as foreign students Minuses Mostly spot stories reacting to official actions Repetitive background used as filler for many stories Epidemic of he-said-she-said-itis Beat Reporting:Pluses and Minuses

  32. Beat Reporting: Topics • Stories developed or encountered while working a beat, such as: • Local, regional or state government • Legal affairs • Education • Law enforcement • Immigration • Business • Science

  33. One Beat Reporter’s Work • Bob Egelko, Federal court reporter, S.F. Chronicle • Bylines 2003-04: 650+ • Nexis returns on: • Patriot Act: 11 • Homeland security: 8 • Immigration: 43 • Criminal justice: 15 • Civil liberty: 103

  34. Enterprise Off the Beat • “Justices to rule on detention of immigrants” • “The case arose before Sept. 11, 2001, and is not directly related to terrorism. But the ruling, due by the end of June, could be crucial for the Bush administration's claim of broad authority to order detention without bail in immigration proceedings -- authority that has been used to hold more than 1,000 people, mostly for minor immigration violations, since the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.” -- San Francisco Chronicle, Jan. 15, 2003, A-3

  35. Enterprise Off the Beat • “Congress uses scalpel to cut up Patriot Act” • “In response to the worst terrorist attack ever on U.S. soil, Congress passed the greatest expansion of search and surveillance authority in the nation's history, with barely a murmur of dissent. But less than two years later, the USA Patriot Act is under siege. More than a half-dozen bills to roll back portions of the law are pending in Congress.” -- San Francisco Chronicle, Sept. 10, 2003, A-1

  36. One Beat Reporter’s Work • Dan Eggen, Justice Department reporter, Washington Post • Bylines 2003-04: 400+ • Factiva returns on: • Patriot Act: 28 • Homeland security: 25 • Immigration: 23 • Criminal Justice: 1 • Civil liberty: 22

  37. Enterprise Off the Beat • “FBI Applies New Rules to Surveillance” • “Under the new guidelines, all counterterrorism cases are opened under the same classification number, 315, and are handled from the outset like an intelligence or espionage investigation, officials said. The structure allows investigators to more easily use secret warrants and other methods that are overseen by the surveillance court and not available in traditional criminal probes, sources said.” -- Washington Post, Dec. 13, 2003, A-1

  38. Enterprise Reporting • Stories derived from our own initiative • True enterprise was rare • Mostly limited to the largest newspapers • More enterprise coverage in newspapers on both coasts than those in the heartland

  39. EnterpriseNew York Times: Terrorbusters Inc.Oct. 16, 2004

  40. EnterpriseWall Street Journal: Holding PatternJune 3, 2003 • “Hunt for Terrorists Lands One Pilot In State of Limbo” • “… as the government assembles a bureaucracy for handling alleged terrorist threats it is drawing fire for inadequate due-process protections. Big airline-pilots' and mechanics' unions have filed suit in federal court to strike down the TSA's threat-assessment system, arguing the agency's standards … encourage ‘arbitrary, inconsistent and discriminatory enforcement.’”

  41. EnterpriseChicago Tribune: Tossed Out of AmericaNov. 16, 2003

  42. Enterprise:Sacramento Bee: Liberty in the BalanceSept. 21, 2003

  43. Topics:Homeland Security • Issues • Anti-terrorism • Preparedness, airports, public buildings, structures and spaces, ports • Intelligence gathering • Law enforcement • Technology • Funding • Money sent to first responders • Bureaucracy

  44. Topics:Politics & Government • Issues • Legislation • Funding • Partisan debate • Department of Homeland Security • Politics and culture of bureaucracies

  45. Topics:Immigration • Issues • Deportation • Asylum • Education enrollment • Scientific research

  46. Topics:Criminal Justice • Issues • Detainment • Ethnic profiling • Prosecution, secret warrants (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court) • Legal affairs • Court system

  47. Topics:Civil Liberties • Issues • Privacy • Libraries, Internet use • Ethnic profiling • Religion • Open government • Freedom of information • Critical infrastructure • Access to information • Environmental

  48. One Newspaper’s Coverage:Newark Star-Ledger • Archive search: 01/01/03 – 07/31/04 • 58 stories; 12 on Page 1 • Topics: • Security – 17: National, regional and local issues • Immigration – 3: Deportations • Newark airport – 13: Security issues, TSA hiring, luggage searches • Newark port – 3: Cost issues, security of containers • Civil liberty – 10: Concerns about Patriot Act, librarians • Funding issues – 4: Cost to local entities of security upgrades • Cops & Courts – 8: Missile buyer arrested; court rulings on detainees

  49. Are We Succeeding at This? • “The primary purpose of journalism is to provide citizens with the information they need to be free and self-governing.” • The Elements of Journalism, Bill Kovach, Tom Rosenstiel

  50. What’s at Stake: Our Values “… in the face of devastating terrorist attacks, ‘the government may be justified in taking measures which in less troubled conditions could be seen as infringements of individual liberties.’ ” – John Yoo, former Justice Department lawyer and architect of the legal argument establishing military tribunals -- Tim Golden, New York Times, “Tough Justice,” Oct. 24, 2004

More Related