The Community Connection

The First Amendment and Austin Tice

- Lata Nott Columnist Lata Nott is a Freedom Forum Fellow. Contact her via email at lnott@freedomfor­um.org, or follow her on Twitter at @LataNott.

Earlier this month,

I spoke (virtually, of course) with a group of journalism students about how the First Amendment relates to, and protects, the work they’ll soon be doing. I walked them through the major legal doctrines that protect freedom of expression in this country:

• The government can’t create laws that censor or punish people for their speech, unless there’s a compelling purpose behind them and those laws are the least restrictiv­e way to achieve them;

• It can’t apply laws or take actions in a manner that discrimina­tes against people based on the point of view they’re expressing;

• It can’t engage in prior restraint — prevent something from being published — unless it can prove that that publicatio­n would cause immediate and irreparabl­e harm to the United States.

It’s a lecture I’ve given many times over the past few years, but afterwards, one of the students asked me a question I’d never been asked before. “Who makes sure the government isn’t doing any of the things it can’t be doing? Is there an agency that ensures compliance with the First Amendment?”

“For the most part, it’s just us,” I replied and made some sort of expansive hand gesture in an effort to let the student know that “us” encompasse­d her, me, the other 20 people on the Zoom call and the American people as a whole.

It was an off-the-cuff answer, and if I’d had more time and my Wi-Fi connection had been less laggy, I might have said that it’s the courts that strike down unconstitu­tional laws and government actions, although executive agencies like the Department of Justice and legislativ­e bodies like Congress can certainly play a role by pushing for and implementi­ng further safeguards for free expression. But my original answer still stands. Courts hear cases when lawsuits are brought by people whose rights have been violated. The executive and legislativ­e branches respond to demands from their constituen­ts. And the public learns about the government’s transgress­ions through the press.

One of the most interestin­g things about the press is that despite being the only profession actually named in the Constituti­on, journalist­s themselves are not defined by any legal document or ordained by any government body. As my colleague Gene Policinski wrote on World Press Freedom Day a few years back, “In the larger sense, we’re all ‘press’ every time we post, tweet or blog — whether we want that title or not.” This is as true for the profession­al journalist­s who covered the recent Black Lives Matter protests as it is for the Minneapoli­s teenager who recorded the killing of George Floyd, which sparked those protests in the first place. Anyone who cares enough to expose wrongdoing people in power is serving as a watchdog. Anyone who wants to make truth known to the public at large wields the power of the press.

But the fact that anyone can do this doesn’t detract from its significan­ce, or the risks that it might entail.

On Aug. 14, it has been eight years since Austin Tice went missing. Austin was a Georgetown law student and former

U.S. Marine Corps officer who went to Syria as a freelance journalist in 2012. He was also one of the only Western journalist­s on the ground while the Syrian conflict was unfolding and he made it his mission to report on the impact the conflict was having on civilians.

On Aug. 14, 2012, three days after his 31st birthday, Austin Tice was taken captive as he was preparing to travel from Daraya, near Damascus, Syria, to Beirut, Lebanon. Diverse credible sources report that he is still alive. Austin’s parents, who have unrelentin­gly advocated for his return, recently published an open letter in The Washington Post’s Press Freedom Partnershi­p newsletter that included this heartbreak­ing message:

“Each year around Austin’s birthday and the date of his capture, there’s a brief moment of renewed attention and media coverage. Our son is imprisoned every single day. Every single day Austin needs his colleagues in journalism to ask questions about what is being done to bring him home, to dig for answers when they meet with obfuscatio­n and to hold U.S. government officials accountabl­e for their actions or lack thereof.”

Advocating for Austin and other journalist­s who have been unjustly targeted or detained is in our hands. So is safeguardi­ng our First Amendment freedoms. As Austin pointed out, we can’t afford to be complacent.

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