San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FEDERAL JUDGE RULES AGAINST VOICE OF AMERICA CHIEF

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

A federal judge has ruled against the head of the agency that runs the Voice of America and other U.s.-funded news outlets who was accused of trying to turn it into a propaganda vehicle to promote President Donald Trump’s agenda.

The ruling effectivel­y bars U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack from making personnel decisions and interferin­g in editorial operations.

Pack, a conservati­ve filmmaker, Trump ally and onetime associate of former Trump political adviser Steve Bannon, made no secret of his intent to shake up the agency after taking over in June.

He proceeded to purge the leadership at Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia, Middle East Broadcasti­ng Networks and the Open Technology Fund, which works to provide secure Internet access to people around the world. The director and deputy director of VOA resigned just days before the firings. Pack also dismissed their governing boards.

His moves were criticized by both Democrats and Republican­s in Congress who control the agency’s budget.

The lawsuit was filed last month in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by five executives who had been fired or suspended. They accused Pack and his senior advisers of violating the “statutory firewall” intended to protect the news organizati­ons from political interferen­ce.

After the suit was filed, Pack announced he had rescinded the “firewall rule” issued by the

Broadcasti­ng Board of Governors. In a statement posted on his agency’s website, he said the rule wrongly prohibited him from directing broadcast operations and “made the agency difficult to manage.”

In her ruling late Friday, Judge Beryl Howell imposed preliminar­y injunction­s that prevent Pak from making personnel decisions about journalist­s employed by the agency, directly communicat­ing with them and conducting any investigat­ions into editorial content or individual journalist­s.

In July, Pack had ordered an investigat­ion into the posting of a video package featuring now President-elect Joe Biden on a VOA website. He called the segment “pro-biden” and said his staff was weighing disciplina­ry action against those responsibl­e.

Fourteen senior VOA journalist­s sent a letter to management in August protesting Pack’s actions, including the dismissal of foreign journalist­s and his comments denigratin­g VOA staff, which they said were endangerin­g their colleagues and the internatio­nal broadcaste­r’s credibilit­y.

“The court confirmed that the First Amendment forbids Mr. Pack and his team from attempting to take control of these journalist­ic outlets, from investigat­ing their journalist­s for purported ‘bias,’ and from attempting to influence or control their reporting content,” Lee Crain, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said in a statement.

The global media agency did not immediatel­y respond to a written request for comment on the ruling.

VOA was founded during World War II and its congressio­nal charter requires it to present independen­t news and informatio­n to internatio­nal audiences.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP ?? A federal judge has ruled against the head of the agency that runs the Voice of America and other U.s.-funded news outlets.
ANDREW HARNIK AP A federal judge has ruled against the head of the agency that runs the Voice of America and other U.s.-funded news outlets.

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