Los Angeles Times:
Tim Rutten: Regarding Media
Spin cycle springs a leak
April 8, 2006
....Judy Miller was nothing if not an aggressive reporter and yet, in this instance (the Plame leak), she never wrote. Was it because she was reluctant or were her editors skeptical — or did something else intervene? When she didn't report the leak, the administration simply went along Washington's journalistic food chain until it found someone — the columnist Robert Novak — willing to reveal Plame's identity.
But the chain began with Miller....The circumstances surrounding her dealings with Libby, though, could provide the press — and, more important, those who rely on it — with valuable insight into the ways in which the mutual use and misuse of anonymity both informs and misleads the American electorate....
***
Clearly, anonymity cannot be a mere convenience for either reporter or source. Sometimes, though, it is a necessity, and those who insist otherwise simply aren't being serious. However, it's also frivolous — perhaps even reckless — to ignore the paradoxical realization that the news media's ability to hold the identities of certain sources secret now turns on being open about how and why such decisions are made.
Experience is teaching us that there comes a moment in the life of every story when discretion must give way to candor — or, in the current techno-patois, transparency. If that doesn't happen, there's a growing risk that public trust will be forfeit. Without that, there won't be any point to keeping secrets — or any place to print them. Prudent reporters and editors will have to determine for themselves when that moment has arrived, but it's worse than imprudent to pretend it never does.
It's worth asking whether that moment has arrived for Judy Miller and her former employer.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-rutten8apr08,0,4182974.column?coll=la-home-headlines