Pentagon Wants It to Be Illegal for Reporters to Ask âUnauthorizedâ Questions
A judge last week struck down the Pentagonâs restrictions on journalists seeking âunauthorizedâ information, siding with the New York Times in its lawsuit against the government. In response, the Pentagon on Monday added some meaningless window dressing and essentially reissued the same restrictions. The administration pledged to âimmediatelyâ appeal the decision on the original policy, and on Tuesday, the Times filed a motion to compel the administration to comply with the judgeâs order.
As alarming as the Pentagonâs antics are, the Timesâ lawsuit is not the only case about whether reporters have the right to ask questions. Itâs not even the only one in the news this week.
In 2017, police in Laredo, Texas, arrested citizen journalist Patricia Villarreal under an obscure and never previously used law making it a felony to ask government employees for nonpublic information for personal benefit. Her supposed crime was asking a police officer about two local tragedies â a suicide and a deadly car wreck.
Her arrest was widely ridiculed, and a judge quickly threw out the charges. When Villarreal sued over her arrest and mistreatment by officers, the legal question wasnât whether the charges against her were permissible but whether they were so obviously bogus that she could overcome qualified immunity, the unjust and expansive legal shield that protects government employees from liability for all but the most blatant violations. That issue went to the Supreme Court twice, but on Monday, the Court declined to review a federal appellate courtâs ruling that the officers were shielded from liability.
No matter what our severely compromised Supreme Court thinks, the local cops who arrested Villarreal were embarrassingly ignorant of the Constitution. But they were also ahead of their time: The Department of Justice is making the same claims that turned the Laredo police into a First Amendment laughingstock â that reporters simply asking questions to the government is criminal â to federal district Judge Paul Friedman.
Most discussion of the Pentagonâs restrictions has focused on their conditions for reporters to receive press credentials, which the Pentagon says can be revoked if reporters publish âunauthorizedâ information. That policy is wildly unconstitutional on its own, and every mainstream outlet gave up their press passes rather than sign on, leaving war coverage inside the Pentagon to the likes of Turning Point USAâs Frontlines and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindellâs LindellTV streaming service.
But the Pentagonâs legal filings imply that reporters who donât follow the rules risk more than their press passes. On March 12, the DOJ filed a brief to clarify its lawyersâ earlier comments in a discussion with Friedman at a hearing of âwhether asking a question was a criminal act.â The government argued that although journalists may lawfully ask questions of âauthorizedâ Pentagon personnel, âa journalist does solicit the commission of a criminal act, and that solicitation is not protected by the First Amendment, when he or she solicits ⌠non-public information from individuals who are legally obligated not to disclose that information.â
There you have it. What was once a fringe, failed legal theory concocted by some local cops in one Texas border city is now the official position of the federal governmentâs lawyers, which it felt compelled to put in writing in case anyone wasnât sure where it stood after the hearing. Both the rogue cops and the DOJâs lawyers contend that journalists merely asking questions to government officials constitutes unlawful solicitation.
As JT Morris, supervising senior attorney at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (which represents Villarreal) told me in an email last week, the First Amendment âunquestionably protects our right to ask questions, whether itâs a citizen asking police about a local crime or the New York Times asking Pentagon officials about matters of national security. Officials can always respond, âno comment.â But they cannot jail Americans for asking.â
The governmentâs argument would have turned countless Pulitzer-winning national security reporters into criminals. As Friedman put it in his ruling, the ârole of a journalist is to solicit information. ⌠[A] journalist asking questions is not a crime!â (You can tell a judge is miffed when scholarly language fails and they resort to exclamation points.)
The DOJâs âconcessionâ in its clarification brief (and later in its revised policy) â that journalists can direct questions to authorized spokespeople â makes no difference. That the administration even felt the need to state something so obvious, presumably because they thought it would make them sound more reasonable, signals the extent to which theyâve threatened the First Amendment.
Government agencies have long routed journalistsâ inquiries to PR flacks and instructed non-public-facing staffers not to answer reportersâ questions. Thatâs unconstitutional in its own right; earlier this month, the Village of Key Biscayne, Florida, became the latest government agency to settle a lawsuit over its employee gag rule. But until this administration, the government at least placed the burden on its own employees to comply with restrictions on talking to reporters.
Now, the government expects journalists to make themselves a party to its censorship directives, and ignore Supreme Court precedent that they can print any government information they lawfully obtain, even if it shouldnât have been released. âA contrary rule ⌠would force upon the media the onerous obligation of sifting through government press releases, reports, and pronouncements to prune out material arguably unlawful for publication,â the Court reasoned.
Journalist Kathryn Foxhall, who has for years sounded the alarm about âcensorship by PIO,â including in collaboration with the Society of Professional Journalists, says the press has failed to meaningfully oppose these policies. âThe media have done little to fight the ever-tightening rules at federal agencies and elsewhere banning reporters from buildings and prohibiting employees from speaking to journalists without the authoritiesâ oversight. With amazing negligence journalists just assume whatever reporters get is the whole story, even in the face of the many thousands of gagged staff people. Now these Pentagon policies remind us that people in power will stop literally at nothing to control the story,â she told me.
The Pentagonâs position that newsgathering is a prosecutable offense is not just theoretical. Although the DOJâs brief didnât explicitly reference it, just like the officers in Laredo, federal prosecutors have their own archaic and constitutionally dubious law on the books to sane-wash their nonsense arguments â the Espionage Act of 1917. Read literally, that law (Rep. Rashida Tlaib recently introduced a much-needed bill to reform it) arguably prohibits reporters and anyone else from obtaining or attempting to obtain national defense information.
But reading it that way to go after journalists would be unconstitutional and politically toxic, which is why past administrations have refrained. Had the Supreme Court denied the Laredo officersâ qualified immunity in Villarrealâs case, it would have signaled that arguments for expansive interpretations of arcane laws to criminalize routine reporting are a nonstarter.
The Court ducked the issue despite being fully aware that the present administration is looking for any excuse to punish reporters that dare to undermine its narratives. Theyâve already claimed Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson â whose home they raided, seizing terabytes of data â violated the Espionage Act by obtaining leaked information. The Trump administration is barging through the door the Biden administration left wide open, when, despite warnings from First Amendment advocates, it extracted a plea deal from WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Espionage Act charges for obtaining and publishing government records, including about Iraq war crimes.
The DOJâs adoption of the Laredo policeâs discredited theory is an extension of the Assange and Natanson cases; the claim that publishing leaked documents is criminal has evolved into a theory that merely asking questions is, too. The administration lost in court this time, but it said it will appeal, and may be emboldened by the Supreme Courtâs cowardice in the Laredo case.
If this administration succeeds in chipping away at constitutional protections for journalistic practices as basic as asking questions, reporters who wish to do anything more than regime stenography may risk imprisonment just by doing their jobs. In her dissent to the Villarreal ruling, Justice Sotomayor put it well: âTolerating retaliation against journalists, or efforts to criminalize routine reporting practices, threatens to silence âone of the very agencies the Framers of our Constitution thoughtfully and deliberately selected to improve our society and keep it free.ââ
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We have a president with utter contempt for truth aggressively using the governmentâs full powers to dismantle the free press. Corporate news outlets have cowered, becoming accessories in Trumpâs project to create a post-truth America. Right-wing billionaires have pounced, buying up media organizations and rebuilding the information environment to their liking.
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