Pressure Builds in Response to Journalist Arrests

Mayor Bloomberg

Mayor Bloomberg has supported the NYPD's treatment of reporters covering Occupy Wall Street.

On Monday afternoon Joe Pompeo of Capital New York broke the news that 13 New York City news organizations and 10 press-freedom groups from across the country had sent a letter to city officials in response to recent journalist arrests. The same day, the New York Press Club announced a new coalition was forming to monitor the NYPD’s treatment of the press.

We have been tracking and documenting these journalist arrests since September and a week ago launched a citizen petition calling for all charges to be dropped and demanding that Mayor Michael Bloomberg commit to protecting the First Amendment.

Pompeo quotes part of yesterday’s letter, which points out that these arrests represent ongoing challenges with police-press relations:

"The signatories below wish to express their profound displeasure, disappointment and concern over the recent actions taken against the media. ... Over the past few months we have tried to work with [the Office of the Deputy Commissioner for Public Information] to improve police-press relations. However, if anything, the police actions of the last week have been more hostile to the press than any other event in recent memory."

Indeed, as we reported last Friday, there is a troubling trend in the erosion of press freedoms. These arrests are only the most recent and perhaps most shocking incidents in a long series of incursions on the First Amendment.

Brian Stelter of the New York Times reported that the letter highlights “numerous inappropriate, if not unconstitutional, actions and abuses” by the police against both “credentialed and noncredentialed journalists.”

The letter also reveals that press met with NY officials in August. At that time Bloomberg administration officials had committed to “train new officers in observing guidelines for the treatment of the media.” However, the letter notes this training never occurred. A similar training effort was part of the settlement between St. Paul, Minn. police and journalists arrested in 2008 at the Republican National Convention.

It’s vital that news organizations, unions, professional associations and press-freedom organizations speak out when these freedoms are attacked and work together to hold our leaders accountable.  But the public has a responsibility here too. For too long, many have taken the First Amendment for granted, as something so fundamental to our American identity that it hardly warranted attention. The recent arrests and press suppression have been a catalyst, sparking renewed interest about the state of the First Amendment.

We should welcome this debate. In an article about the arrests, the New York Observer notes that “history shows the government cannot delegate fundamental rights like the First Amendment to law enforcement.” The public must ensure our government truly and consistently defends freedom of the press.

It has now been one week since last Tuesday’s arrests of 10 journalists in New York. Since then, tens of thousands of people have signed our citizen petition to Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the U.S. Conference of Mayors. We’ll be delivering those petition signatures on behalf of people across the country, amplifying the demands from newsrooms and other press-advocacy groups that are now weighing in.

Photo via (cc) by Flickr user Rubenstein

Free Press is a national, nonpartisan organization working to reform the media. Free Press does not support or oppose any candidate for public office. Through education, organizing and advocacy, we promote diverse and independent media ownership, strong public media and universal access to communications.

Comments:

End Sponored Media

End Sponsored Media

Sponsored media is coercive speech in the same way that shouting fire in a crowded movie theater is or telling someone their child has died when it isn't true.

You end sponsored media and you end money as speech, you end lobbying and end the elevation of capital.

And with this we get our political voice back we get our power back, we count again.

"The medium is the message." Ask yourself what sponsorship is? Sponsorship is censorship and it
means we don't have a voice.

This is one demand that will fulfill the others.

The meme is ready. End sponsored media.

Imagine there's no Fox
It's easy if you try
No CNN below us
Above us only sky

Imagine all the people
Living for today

Imagine there's no Wall Street Journal
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no Comcast too

Imagine all the people
Living life in peace

You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one

Imagine no Washington Post
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man

Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world

You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one

End false democracy, end sponsored media.
We need horizantal speech not hierarchical.
Also children need a chance to develop without the pusher

Where was outrage when POTUS tried to stop Fox

Where was the outrage when POTUS and its proxies tried to stop / censor Fox when it was going for Helen Thomas' press corps seat last year.

Absent.

Y'all are either in all the way on this 1st Amendment thing, or you're not at all.

Is that the best you can say?

Not even close to being comparable. You're statement is an opinion, not a matter of recorded fact like the journalists' arrests that the article references.

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