The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Los Angeles’ legal attack on journalism is a real mess

- By Seth Stern Seth Stern is the director of advocacy for Freedom of the Press Foundation.

The Supreme Court once called prior restraints — or government orders prohibitin­g the press from publishing — the “most serious” of First Amendment violations. Well, the city of Los Angeles seems intent on proving the court wrong. It’s come up with an even more offensive way to trample on journalist­s’ constituti­onal rights.

Not only does the city want a prior restraint barring journalist Ben Camacho from publishing pictures the city itself accidental­ly gave him, now it’s suing him to force him to pay the legal costs of the city’s mistake. It never even occurred to the Supreme Court that someone would have the chutzpah to try that one.

Officials like Mayor Karen Bass and City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto must know the city’s claims are baseless and they’re essentiall­y throwing money in the trash by pursuing them. The Supreme Court has said four times that, when the government inadverten­tly releases documents to the press, that’s the government’s problem, and it can’t stop the press from publishing what it released. Journalist­s, the court has reasoned, don’t work for the government, and it’s not their job to worry about what the government wants them not to publish.

But hey, it’s your money, not theirs. They don’t have to win the case to teach Camacho a lesson.

The ordeal started in 2021 when Camacho filed a public records request for a roster of LAPD officers and their headshots. He had to sue the city to get the photograph­s but the city agreed to provide them in a settlement. He shared the photograph­s with an activist group, the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, which published them.

When the city produced the photos it enclosed a letter explaining that it left out officers who work undercover. But, the city messed up — it neglected to actually omit those pictures. A police union sued the city demanding it recover the photos and stop their publicatio­n. Another lawsuit followed, accusing the city of negligence and asking for monetary damages to compensate the officers affected.

The city then sued Camacho and the activist group last April, demanding the judge prohibit them from further publishing the photos and make them return or destroy their copies. That lawsuit amounts to a request for a blatantly unconstitu­tional prior restraint. It rightly drew the ire of press freedom advocates everywhere.

And now comes the new lawsuit demanding Camacho cover any liability the city incurs to the officers due to its own recklessne­ss. The city has hit the trifecta of antipress First Amendment violations: first, demanding journalist­s give back documents the government released, second, censoring journalist­s from publishing informatio­n, and now, holding journalist­s financiall­y liable for truthful publicatio­ns — something that, once again, the Court has never permitted.

Sure, identities of undercover officers are sensitive (although the city is apparently defining “undercover” so broadly it encompasse­s all but 1.5% of those whose photos it initially released). But the Supreme Court has barred punishment for publishing government records even where they identified rape victims. And it has rejected prior restraints even where the government claims wartime national security is at stake. There’s no undercover cop exception. If the city’s mistake caused officers damages, it should pay up, do better, and leave journalist­s out of it.

Unfortunat­ely, Los Angeles is not alone in pursuing blatantly unconstitu­tional legal theories to silence reporters. There’s been a disturbing national increase in prior restraints generally, and clawback efforts, involving inadverten­tly released government documents, specifical­ly. but some were not.

A judge in Greensboro, North Carolina instructed bailiffs to seize a journalist’s notes and prohibit her from reporting on what she’d heard in open court. A St. Louis judge barred a newspaper from reporting on documents uploaded to a public court file. A judge in Denver ordered a journalist to return or destroy court records the court clerk gave him (that journalist courageous­ly ignored the judge and published anyway).

Government harassment of the press is a national problem, equally prevalent in cities red and blue, big and small, and L.A.’S antics are every bit as unconstitu­tional as those other cases. Those who value press freedom should demand better from their government.

 ?? Journalist Ben Camacho. PHOTO BY EMILY HOLSHOUSER ??
Journalist Ben Camacho. PHOTO BY EMILY HOLSHOUSER

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