The House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday approved a federal shield bill that aims to protect journalists from compelled disclosure of their confidential sources, in language identical to that of a 2007 bill that overwhelmingly passed the U.S. House of Representatives. The new bill heads next to the floor for a new, full House vote.
The Free Flow of Information Act of 2009, or H.R. 985, would offer a qualified privilege for journalists, meaning they could not be compelled to identify sources or hand over confidential material except under several scenarios: If doing so would prevent harm to national security, or death or bodily harm; if it were essential to the investigation, prosecution or defense of a crime; if it were deemed “critical to the successful completion” of a legal, non-criminal issue. Also, a reporter could be pressed for confidential information if it were necessary for pinpointing who leaked trade secrets, certain health data or classified national security information.
In other words, “journalists [...] could not be compelled to identify sources or hand over confidential material” ... unless the government felt like compelling them. Those exceptions, in the hands of government, are so broad you could sail a supertanker through the holes they leave.
This bill is reminiscent if the Clash song “These are your rights”:
You have the right to free speech,
As long as you’re not dumb enough to actually try it.
no subject
So in short, Not You. You have to testify...
This might have been a pretty good definition of a journalist 15 years ago. Today, it's bullshit and worse than nothing.
What do you wanna bet that a cub reporter on their first assignment who hasn't even gotten a paycheck yet manages to qualify if they works for a 'major publication'.