The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Journalist­s must maintain independen­ce

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A King County judge’s order that The Seattle Times and other media must turn over unpublishe­d content to the police is a blow to independen­t journalism. The order imperils journalist­s documentin­g this summer’s historic protests and sends the wrong message about the media as a check on government power.

Journalist­s’ unique role and responsibi­lity is protected in Washington’s shield law, passed by legislator­s in 2007. The law prohibits officials from forcing journalist­s to turn over unpublishe­d informatio­n outside of specific and narrow circumstan­ces.

King County Superior Court Judge Nelson Lee’s recent order that The Seattle Times and four other news outlets must hand unpublishe­d protest video and photos to police investigat­ors is a troubling interpreta­tion of that law.

Police want the journalist­s’ images to help identify suspects who set fire to police cars and stole police firearms during a May 30 protest in downtown Seattle.

Certainly, those involved in the crimes should be held accountabl­e.

But even the mistaken conflation of journalist­s with police investigat­ors can directly impact news gatherers’ ability to do their work.

In volatile situations like recent protests, this misconcept­ion can — and has — led to physical violence.

As the National Press Photograph­ers Associatio­n and Press Freedom Defense Fund wrote in a joint statement about Lee’s decision, “It is dangerous enough for visual journalist­s to be covering the COVID-19 pandemic and the protests over the death of George Floyd. The last thing visual journalist­s want is to be seen as an arm of law enforcemen­t, aiding attempts to gather evidence.”

As Seattle Times assistant managing editor Danny Gawlowski wrote in a declaratio­n submitted to the court, even before the court ruling, Times photo journalist­s have had to repeatedly explain their independen­ce to protesters. During one early protest, a Times staff photograph­er was hit in the head by a rock and punched in the face.

The U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has verified more than 585 incidents of journalist­s being assaulted, arrested or otherwise prevented from reporting during this summer’s protests in dozens of cities.

Independen­ce from political and commercial influence is the backbone of responsibl­e journalism.

Journalist­s must report in the public interest, not in the service of government.

Journalist­s are facing enormous challenges as they report this historic moment.

The court’s decision threatens to make a bad situation worse.

Independen­ce from political and commercial influence is the backbone of responsibl­e journalism.

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