The growth of the surveillance state in Washington, D.C., is coinciding with a renewed determination by federal agencies to expose journalists’ notes and sources. Recent events show how our Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures and our First Amendment right of a free press are inextricable and mutually reinforcing – that if you degrade one of these rights, you threaten both of them.
In May, we reported that the FBI raided the home of journalist Tim Burke, seizing his computer, hard drives, and cellphone, after he reported on embarrassing outtakes of a Fox News interview. It turns out these outtakes had already been posted online. Warrants were obtained, but on what credible allegation of probable cause? Or consider CBS News senior correspondent Catherine Herridge who was laid off, then days later ordered by a federal judge to reveal the identity of a confidential source she used for a series of 2017 stories published while she worked at Fox News. Shortly afterwards, Herridge was held in contempt for refusing to divulge that source. This raises the question that when CBS had earlier terminated Herridge and seized her files, would network executives have been willing to put their freedom on the line as Herridge has done? In response to public outcry, CBS relented and handed Herridge’s notes back to her. But local journalists cannot count on generating the national attention and sympathy that a celebrity journalist can. Now add to this vulnerability the reality that every American who is online – whether a national correspondent or a college student – has his or her sensitive and personal information sold to more than a dozen federal agencies by data brokers, a $250 billion industry that markets our data in the shadows. The sellers of our privacy compile nearly limitless data dossiers that “reveal the most intimate details of our lives, our movements, habits, associations, health conditions, and ideologies.” Data brokers have established a sophisticated system to aggregate data from nearly every platform and device that records personal information to develop detailed profiles on individuals. To fill in the blanks, they also sweep up information from public records. So if you have a smartphone, apps, or search online, your life is already an open book to the government. In this way, state and federal intelligence and law enforcement agencies can use the data broker loophole to obtain information about Americans that they would otherwise need a warrant, court order, or subpoena to obtain. Now imagine what might happen as these two trends converge – a government hungry to expose journalists’ sources, but one that also has access to a journalist’s location history, as well as everyone they have called, texted, and emailed. It is hardly paranoid, then, to worry that when a prosecutor tries to compel a journalist to give up a source through legal means, purchased data may have already given the government a road map on what to seek. The combined threat to privacy from pervasive surveillance and prosecutors seeking journalists’ notes is serious and growing. This is why Protect The 1st supports legislation to protect journalistic privacy and close the data broker loophole. The Protect Reporters from Exploitive State Spying, or PRESS Act would grant a privilege to protect confidential news sources in federal legal proceedings, while offering reasonable exceptions for extreme situations. Such “shield laws” have been put into place in 49 states. The PRESS Act, which passed the House in January with unanimous, bipartisan support, would bring the federal government in line with the states. Likewise, the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act would close the data broker loophole and require the government to obtain a warrant before it can seize our personal information, as required by the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The House Judiciary Committee voted to advance the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act out of committee with strong bipartisan support in July. The Judiciary Committee also reported out a strong data broker loophole closure as part of the Protect Liberty Act in December. Now, it’s up to Congress to include these protection and reform measures in the reauthorization of Section 702. Protect The 1st urges lawmakers to pass measures to protect privacy and a free press. They will rise or fall together. Comments are closed.
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