From Freedom of the Press Foundation <[email protected]>
Subject New York Times pushes for PRESS Act
Date October 18, 2024 5:35 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Transparency needed on FISA surveillance

View this email in your browser ([link removed])

Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

Here are some of the most important stories we’re following from the U.S. and around the world. If you enjoy reading this newsletter, please forward it to friends and family. If someone has forwarded you this newsletter, please subscribe here. ([link removed])

Now that Sen. Chuck Schumer’s hometown paper has endorsed the PRESS Act, he should make it a priority to get it through the Senate. AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib


** New York Times pushes for PRESS Act
------------------------------------------------------------

This week, The New York Times published an important editorial ([link removed]) calling on the Senate to pass the PRESS Act, the strongest press freedom bill in modern history.

The PRESS Act has already passed the House unanimously, but it’s been stalled in the Senate, where opponents like Sen. Tom Cotton have held it up based on absurd claims ([link removed]) .

We need the PRESS Act now more than ever. As the Times explained in its editorial, this is not simply a matter of “press versus government”:

“This law would effectively protect those who serve the public interest by blowing the whistle on government wrongdoing. And it would help protect all Americans, who deserve nothing less than the full truth about the officials they elect and the government they fund.”

Read the editorial here ([link removed]) , and consider sending it to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer ([link removed]) of New York (who has said he supports the PRESS Act ([link removed]) ) or your senator. You can also use this easy contact form from the ACLU to tell the Senate to pass the PRESS Act ([link removed]) .

Intelligence community must give estimate of ‘incidental’ collections

Declassified reports and other hints have long shown that Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act has been used and abused to spy on Americans ([link removed]) .

But despite its promises to Congress, the intelligence community has never given a public estimate of the number of U.S. persons’ communications that are “incidentally” collected as part of the National Security Agency’s Section 702 surveillance.

This week, Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) and more than 20 other organizations joined a letter led by Restore the Fourth calling on the intelligence community to determine and release this estimate. Read it here ([link removed]) .

U.S. must intervene on behalf of journalist charged by Israel

FPF also joined a letter ([link removed]) led by Defending Rights & Dissent urging the U.S. embassy in Israel to advocate for American journalist Jeremy Loffredo, who was arrested on Oct. 9 and charged with “aiding the enemy during wartime and providing information to the enemy.” We wrote an op-ed ([link removed]) about the case for The Guardian last week.

The charges against Loffredo are apparently based on his journalism regarding the impact of Iranian missile strikes in Israel. There must always be consequences when American journalists are punished for reporting news, even if the government responsible is an American ally or the journalist reports for a controversial outlet.


** What we’re reading
------------------------------------------------------------

As US presidential vote looms, newsrooms focus on how to stay safe ([link removed]) (Voice of America). As FPF Executive Director Trevor Timm explains, “Police departments feel that they have the power to violate the rights of journalists. Then what ends up happening is it turns into a snowball effect. More police agencies crack down even harder.”

Courage is contagious: Daniel Hale to receive the inaugural Ellsberg Whistleblower Award ([link removed]) (Ellsberg Whistleblower Award). Congratulations to Hale! Whistleblowers like Hale — who informed the public about high civilian casualties and governmental misconduct regarding U.S. drone warfare — deserve to be celebrated for their courage.

This reporter was arrested for asking questions. The Supreme Court just revived her lawsuit ([link removed]) (Reason). Police and prosecutors who retaliate against journalists for their reporting should take note: The Supreme Court wants people whose First Amendment rights are violated by government retaliation to have their day in court.

The FBI knocked on my door ([link removed]) (Ken Klippenstein). What’s the point of the FBI paying a journalist a home visit to tell him something he already knows, other than to say “you’re on our radar”? Ken Klippenstein may not be intimidated, but what if it had been a less experienced journalist?

Beef up the freedom of the press ([link removed]) (The Wall Street Journal). “Journalists need to be able to maintain the confidentiality of sources who provide information about government misconduct or other sensitive information.” We need both the PRESS Act and stronger First Amendment protections for the press.


** Come see us in Chicago, Washington, or London
------------------------------------------------------------

On Monday, FPF Advocacy Director Seth Stern and other experts will discuss the threats to press freedom, including Israel's murder of journalists in Gaza, Project 2025, and the prosecution of Julian Assange. Join us at this event ([link removed]) , organized by Defending Rights & Dissent, on Oct. 21 at 7:30 p.m. CT at Nabala Cafe, 4660 N. Broadway in Chicago.

The Double Exposure Festival & Symposium ([link removed]) , Nov. 7-10 in Washington, D.C., will have panels, workshops, and master classes focused on investigative storytelling. Don’t miss our Director of Advocacy Seth Stern, who will discuss dangerous government efforts to limit who is a journalist — such as by excluding ([link removed]) documentary filmmakers. Purchase your tickets or passes here ([link removed]) .

Or come see us in London, where we’re co-hosting Source! the London Logan Symposium ([link removed]) with The Centre for Investigative Journalism ([link removed]) Nov. 14-15. Hear from journalists from all over the world about press freedom issues and the challenges they face in protecting themselves and their sources. Register to attend here ([link removed]) .


** Follow us on TikTok and Instagram
------------------------------------------------------------

FPF is now live on Instagram ([link removed]) and TikTok ([link removed]) . Click the links to follow us and see our latest posts about press freedom.
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]

============================================================
Copyright © 2024 Freedom of the Press Foundation, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.

Our mailing address is:
Freedom of the Press Foundation
49 Flatbush Ave, #1017
Brooklyn, NY 11217
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis