SPLC Legal Brief Journalists argue that the law recognizes a First Amendment-based
privilege that protects them from legal actions that threaten
the integrity of their effort to gather and disseminate news.
The subpoena is one legal action that poses such a threat. Common
sense and experience suggests that some sources will refuse to
share sensitive information with journalist if they are viewed
as an extension of a law enforcement or prosecutory agency. Journalists
argue, and many state legislatures have agreed, that reporter's
privileges encourage the active and vital exchange of information
necessary to keep the public fully informed about the world in
which they live. First Amendment Privilege Balancing Test to Determine if a Privilege Exists Even though the Privacy Protection Act applies to both federal
and state law enforcement officers, eight states -- California,
Connecticut, Illinois, Nebraska, New Jersey, Oregon, Texas and
Washington -- have their own statutes providing similar or even
greater protection. States with shield laws: States with court-recognized privileges (some states
have both a shield law and a court-recognized privilege): States with neither:
Legal Protections for Journalists’ Sources and Information
© 2000 Student Press Law Center
View Foot Notes
REPORTER'S PRIVILEGE
The Supreme Court's decision in Branzburg v. Hays,
408 U.S. 665 (1972), has been widely interpreted as recognizing
that a reporter's privilege under the First Amendment does exist
in some circumstances.
A First Amendment Privilege can be overcome when a court
is persuaded that the information being sought from the journalist
is:
(1) highly material and relevant
(2) necessary or critical to the maintenance of the legal claim,
and
(3) not obtainable from the other available resources.
Privilege Based on State Common Law or Constitution
Independent of any First Amendment privilege or shield
law, several states have found that a reporter has a qualified
privilege to refuse to reveal sources or information under state
law. The courts have found that such a privilege exists either
at common law or in the state constitution, or both. In these
states, the privilege is in addition to the First Amendment.
State Shield Laws
Besides the court-recognized privileges, lawmakers
in over 30 states and the District of Colombia have passed "shield
laws" that codify some variation of the reporter's
privilege (see list below). In most of these states, the privilege
is qualified, often adhering to a Branzburg-like balancing
test, discussed above. However, in a few states, like Montana
and New York, the protection is absolute. The protections offered
by these statutes may differ depending on whether the subpoena
seeks the identity of a source or unpublished information. Some
shield laws offer protection for sources or information only if
the reporter expressly promised confidentiality.
Student Journalists and the Reporter's Privilege
Most courts seem to treat student journalists like
their non-student counterparts in reporters' privilege cases unless
the specific wording of a state shield law indicates the student
is not entitled to protection.
Can School Officials Force a Student To Reveal Information?
Unless school officials seek the information through
formal legal channels, it can be strongly argued that they simply
lack the authority to force student journalists to reveal confidential
information. Without a court-issued subpoena ordering disclosure,
student reporters can claim that they are both protected by the
First Amendment or state law from having to disclose such information
and that they are under no obligation to respond to the demands
of school officials. This argument would not apply to private
school officials because they are not limited by the First Amendment.
Students at private schools would have to rely on other legal
protections and against censorship and public pressure. Also note
that faculty advisers may have a more difficult time refusing
the demands of their employers and may, for example, even have
a legal obligation to reveal information about criminal activity
or other wrongdoing on school grounds of which they are aware.
Newsroom Searches
Federal law prohibits both federal and state officers
and employees -- including public school officials -- from searching
or seizing journalists' "work product" or "documentary
materials" in their possession even when the present a search
warrant. The Privacy
Protection Act of 1980 has some limited exceptions. A newsroom
search may be allowed when the government is searching for: (1)
certain types of national security information, (2) child pornography,
(3) evidence that the journalists themselves have committed a
crime, or (4) materials that must be immediately seized to prevent
death or serious bodily injury. In addition, "documentary
materials" may also be seized if there is reason to believe
that they would be destroyed in the time it took to obtain them
using a subpoena, or if a court has ordered disclosure, the news
organization has refused and all other remedies have been exhausted.
For more information and specific cases dealing with court-recognized
privileges see:
Student Media Guide to Protecting Sources and Information (includes a state-by-state guide)
Reporter's Privilege: A complete compendium of information on the reporter's privilege -- the right not to be compelled to testify or disclose sources and information in court -- in each state and federal circuit. (A publication of the Reporters'
Committee For Freedom Of The Press)
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, Tennessee.
Alabama, Alaska, California, Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi,
Missouri, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington,
West Virginia, Wisconsin.
Hawaii, Wyoming.
Back to top
< Return to Previous Page