Read: Texas Senate extends barring reporters from floor
On Jan. 9, a judge in Waco, Texas, issued a sweeping gag order that restricted media coverage ahead of a murder case retrial. The order prohibited the press from reporting on basic facts about the case, including any pretrial rulings. Two days later the judge vacated, or removed, his order after attorneys for local broadcaster KWTX successfully argued that it amounted to an unconstitutional prior restraint.
Read: Texas judge vacates order limiting murder trial coverage
Awaiting justice in North Carolina
For two reporters in Asheville, North Carolina, a long-awaited hearing date following their 2021 arrests was once again delayed this month.
Asheville Blade journalists Matilda Bliss and Veronica Coit were documenting on Christmas Night in 2021 as local police swept a homeless encampment. Both were arrested and charged with misdemeanor trespassing. They spent the day in the courthouse for their bench trial on Jan. 25, only to have it continued until mid-April.
Freedom of the Press Foundation, together with the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina and the Committee to Protect Journalists, has filed a petition for the body camera footage of the journalists’ arrests. North Carolina is one of the only states that does not consider body camera footage a public record.
Awaiting justice in Nevada
On Jan. 25, the Tracker team was also closely following a hearing in a Nevada district court. The Las Vegas Review-Journal, which suffered the loss of its investigative reporter Jeff German last September in a shocking murder, was petitioning the court to sanction local police for their handling of the reporter’s seized devices. Despite comments to the contrary, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officers had searched German’s cellphone when they took it from his home. The judge declined to sanction the department and also declined the outlet’s request to appoint a “special master” to review the data on the seized devices.
Freedom of the Press Foundation Advocacy Director Seth Stern wrote how that ruling misses what reporter’s privilege is fundamentally about: “The primary purpose is to empower sources to communicate with journalists without fear that the government or the public will learn who they are or what they said in court proceedings” Stern wrote.
2022 roundups
I’d be remiss to not highlight the work Tracker reporters do to pull together high-level end-of-year overviews of database categories.
Senior Reporter Stephanie Sugars wrote how the 15 journalists arrested or detained in 2022 is far fewer than the number arrested in 2021 — and far, far fewer than in 2020 — due in large part to fewer national protests.
“Yet every arrest of a journalist has consequences for the free press,” Sugars wrote. “While detained, journalists lose their ability to freely cover the story; criminal charges mean journalists face the threat of fines, prison time — or both.”
At least 19 journalists in the Tracker database — including Asheville Blade reporters Bliss and Coit — still face charges for arrests dating back to 2017.
Read: In 2022, 15 journalists arrested; more face charges
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