Most Editors Say They'd Publish Articles Based on Leaks
By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON
Published: July 11, 2005
In the wake of a decision by the editor of The Cleveland Plain Dealer to withhold two articles based on leaked government documents for fear of criminal prosecution, editors of major newspapers said last week they saw no reason to back off such stories.
A number of these editors said they were baffled by the paper's move.
Paul Steiger, managing editor of The Wall Street Journal, said that "if documents come to a reporter or news organization and the reporter has not done anything illegal to get the documents, I cannot understand what the basis for a criminal prosecution would be."...
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The publication of accurate information, even information that the source was not authorized to provide, is not a crime in most jurisdictions. But as the Time case shows, a news organization can be subpoenaed, and fined or even held in criminal contempt, for refusing to turn over documents that could identify a source who may have broken the law....
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One example of the level of concern about government and private efforts to unmask sources is a new ethics policy at The Los Angeles Times, to be issued this week, which instructs journalists to "never enter into any company computer unnamed sources."...
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/11/business/media/11paper.html