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Despite Snowden Leaks, Obama Administration Still Asserts State Secrets Privilege

The New York Times reports that the White House has asserted the state secrets privilege in two federal cases pending in California. The plaintiffs are challenging the constitutionality of the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance programs. "The government said that despite recent leaks by Edward J. Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor, that made public a fuller scope of the surveillance and data collection programs put in place after the Sept. 11 attacks, sensitive secrets remained at risk in any courtroom discussion of their details — like whether the plaintiffs were targets of intelligence collection or whether particular telecommunications providers like AT&T and Verizon had helped the agency," The Times reports.

Second Circuit Rules Warrantless GPS Tracking Was In Good Faith

Even though the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Jones the law enforcement's installation of GPS devices on suspects' vehicles  are searches under the Fourth Amendment, the Second Circuit has reasoned '"Jones left open the question of whether the warrantless use of GPS devices would be 'reasonable—and thus lawful—under the Fourth Amendment [where] officers ha[ve] reasonable suspicion, and indeed probable cause' to conduct a search,'" according to The New York Law Journal. The GPS tracking of the defendants in the case before the Second Circuit was not done with delibrate, reckless or gross disregard for their Fourth Amendment rights and was done with reasonable reliance on court precedent before the U.S. Supreme Court decided Jones, The Journal also reports. So the panel decided the evidence related to the search was in good faith and didn't need to be excluded.
 

Former Attorney General Warns Against Media Shield Law

Michael Mukasey, who served as attorney general under former President George W. Bush, is arguing against a bill pending in the U.S. Senate that would allow reporters to protect their confidential sources in most instances, The Wall Street Journal reports. Mukasey argues the bill is '"fraught with near-meaningless amibiguity'" on who would be covered journalists and that the bill would give judges too much power to decide "whether the disclosure of the information would be contrary to the public interest and thus not protected," The Journal also reports.

GCs: James Risen Should Seek Certiorari With U.S. Supreme Court

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 10:55

This week is sort of the high holidays for media-law attorneys: Media Law Resource Center’s annual meetings, a communications law program at Practising Law Institute and several other events. There was a fascinating discussion Thursday at PLI on reporters’ privilege with several general counsels of major medial companies.

New York Times reporter James Risen, who the Fourth Circuit has ruled must identify a confidential source in the case of a former CIA agent suspected of being a leaker, should seek certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court--otherwise he may have to go to jail to protect his unnamed source, said Lee Levine, a leading First Amendment lawyer with Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz.

But Levine said he does not think that the U.S. Supreme Court would take the case.

If the U.S. Supreme Court takes the case, there could be five votes in favor of recognizing a qualified common law privilege for reporters’ confidential sources, Levine said. Justice Anthony Kennedy would be the key vote, he said.

Justice Stephen Breyer, who often votes unfavorably on First Amendment issues, might vote in favor of recognizing a qualified common law privilege because he favors balancing tests in his jurisprudence, Levine said.

David McCraw, vice president and assistant general counsel for The New York Times Company, said there will never be an ideal test case on reporters’ privilege and he fears the next test case would be brought by a "blogger in a bathrobe.”

Karen Kaiser, associate general counsel for The Associated Press, said the "time is now to bring these critical principles to the forefront."

Barbara Wall, vice president and senior associate general counsel for Gannett and who was part of the group who attended meetings with Attorney General Eric Holder after it was revealed that both Associated Press and Fox News had phone lines tapped by federal law enforcement without notice, said the federal prosecutors “felt, particularly with the Rosen subpoena, they felt they had to allege that Rosen was involved in criminal behavior.” Rosen was alleged in court papers to have broken the law as an aider, abettor and/or co-conspirator, but he was not charged.

The Department of Justice’s draft revised guidelines, which still have to be finalized, are an improvement, said Bruce Brown of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Most of the panelists favor the reporters shield bill pending in the U.S. Senate.

Kaiser said, that before prosecutors can access information from the media without notifying them ahead of time, the shield bill would require a judge to find that there is clear and convincing evidence that disclosure would be a threat to an ongoing criminal investigation.

The shield law "does eliminate clear prosecutorial overreach," Kaiser said.

Eve Burton, senior vice president and general counsel for The Hearst Corporation, was the sole contrarian on the panel in opposing the shield bill.

The privilege would not apply at all in the national security context, Burton said.

Separately, Burton said there is another issue with media companies moving their computer systems into the cloud.

Microsoft and AOL are willing to contract with media companies that they will always provide notice that the government has sought to access information about the media companies--unless there is a governmental order precluding disclosure, Burton said. But Google and Amazon are not, she said.

Google and Amazon want to retain the discretion not to have to disclose that there has been governmental access to media companies’ information, Burton said.

The result is that Hearst and other companies are not joining the cloud or taking their business elsewhere, Burton said.

Google and Microsoft and other tech companies are better at protecting from hackers than media companies are, but they are not willing to go to jail to protect their sources, Wall said. So the middle ground might be to have some computing functions on the cloud, but to keep e-mail in-house, she said.

 

U.S. Supreme Court Test Case Set Up with Prosecutors Informing Terror Suspect of Warrantless Evidence in His Case?

The Washington Post reports that a defendant in a terrorism case has been informed by the U.S. Department of Justice that federal prosecutors want to use evidence generated from warrantless surveillance against him. The case is expect to generate a constitutional challenge. The case also could generated a U.S. Supreme Court test case. The Supreme Court rejected prior challenges to warrantless surveillance because the "lawyers, journalists and human rights organizations who brought the suit could not prove they had been caught up in the surveillance. As a result, they did not have legal standing to challenge the constitutionality," The Washington Post also reports.

Politico: Supreme Court May Get Reporter's Privilege Plea

New York Times reporter James Risen has asked the Fourth Circuit to put on hold its ruling denying that a reporters privilege applies in a criminal case in which he could be forced to testify, Politico reports. Meanwhile, Risen will seek for the U.S. Supreme Court to take up the issue.

The underlying criminal case involves former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling, who "has been indicted for leaking Risen information about a CIA operation to provide Iran with flawed nuclear designs as part of an effort to set back that country's alleged nuclear weapons program," according to Politico.

Risen has vowed to go to jail before revealing who his source was.
 

New Trial Ordered in Philly Innocence Project Case

The Philadelphia Inquirer has this report on a judge ordering a new trial in a Pennsylvania Innocence Project case: "Calling the original trial evidence 'extremely weak' and newly uncovered evidence compelling, a Philadelphia judge has granted a new trial for two men serving life for the 1995 robbery-murder of a North Philadelphia business owner."

Alleged Wrongful Convictions Get Renewed Look in Alaska, Texas

The family of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was executed by the state of Texas for allegedly killing his three children by setting his family home on fire, is seeking a post-death pardon for Willingham due to "outdated arson forensics and possible prosecutorial misconduct," the Austin Chronicle reports. In 2009, the New Yorker wrote an extensive and amazing piece on the Willingham case and whether an innocent man was executed. It is well worth a read: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/09/07/090907fa_fact_grann

In another Innocence Project development out of Alaska, the Alaska Department of Law has asked law enforcement in that state to ask for an independent review of a Fairbanks murder, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported. The Alaska Innocence Project asked for the exoneration of the four men convicted in that killing. The full report: http://www.newsminer.com/fairbanks_four/state-seeks-independent-review-o...

Spousal Privilege Not Recognized For Same-Sex Couple in Kentucky

Gannett's The Courier-Journal reports that the same-sex partner of a woman facing murder and robbery charges in Jefferson County, Kentucky, can be compelled to testify against her. The two women entered into a civil union in Vermont, but they never converted their civil union into a marrage as was possible after Vermont allowed same-sex marriages. The judge reasoned that couple would have to be married at the very least for Kentucky to recognize their union for purposes of triggering the spousal privilege against testifying against one's spouse. Further, the trial judge ruled "Kentucky’s ban on same sex marriage and on recognizing same sex unions from other states means the privilege does not apply," The Courier-Journal also reports.

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