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Executioners find new ways to hide

1 year ago

Indiana is one of two states with laws excluding the media from witnessing executions. The other, Wyoming, hasn’t executed anyone since 1992.

Indiana, however, executed Joseph Corcoran on Wednesday. Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) Director of Advocacy Seth Stern, along with George Hale, who covers the death penalty for Indiana Public Media, wrote for the Indianapolis Star about Indiana’s “dubious honor of being the national standard bearer for taxpayer-funded secret killings.”

It turned out that a journalist was able to attend the execution, but only because Corcoran and his lawyer gave one of the seats reserved for friends and family to a journalist. The state shouldn’t put the onus on the condemned to ensure transparency around their own killing. The law needs to change.

Read the Indianapolis Star op-ed here and more on the topic from The Associated Press here.

Freedom of the Press Foundation

Taylor Swift, help us find missing Swiftie – U.S. journalist Austin Tice

1 year ago

Austin Tice, a U.S. freelance journalist and former U.S. Marine, has been separated from his family and loved ones for a long time; 12 years to be exact. Tice was reporting on the Syrian civil war from outside the capital Damascus when he was abducted in August 2012.

The rebel-led collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime and the release of thousands of prisoners, including political prisoners, in Syria on Dec. 8 has renewed hopes of locating Tice and the tens of thousands of others who are missing.

Surprisingly, there is a connection between Tice — who was among the first U.S. journalists to make it into Syria after the outbreak of the civil war — and Taylor Swift: Tice is apparently a Swiftie. Now, the pop star could help bring one of her fans home.

Spent the day at an FSA pool party with music by @taylorswift13. They even brought me whiskey. Hands down, best birthday ever.

— Austin Tice (@Austin_Tice) August 11, 2012

In Tice’s last tweet before his abduction on Aug. 11, 2012, which was also his 31st birthday, he mentioned Swift. Tice wrote that he’d spent that day listening to her music at a pool party with members of the Free Syrian Army, a coalition of rebel opposition groups, with which Tice was most likely embedded at the time. He even said it was his “best birthday ever.” A few days later, he disappeared.

Weeks later, a disturbing video emerged online showing Tice blindfolded and being led uphill by gun-clad captors wearing white robes. That 47-second clip, in which the journalist can be heard reciting an Arabic prayer and saying “Oh, Jesus,” was the last direct indication Tice was alive. That is until new information obtained by Reuters on Friday revealed that Tice escaped from his captors briefly in 2013 before being recaptured. Assad’s government repeatedly denied holding the journalist.

But since the fall of the Assad regime, the U.S. administration has intensified its search for Tice, the only missing American journalist that we know of. Both the State Department and the FBI are offering awards of $10 million and $1 million respectively for any information that leads to Tice.

The U.S. has been in direct talks about Tice with Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the dominant rebel faction that currently leads the interim Syrian government.

HTS has offered to “cooperate directly” with the U.S. administration to locate Tice. A spokesperson for the new Syrian interim government told NBC News on Dec. 12 that the country’s new leadership blames Assad for the anguish of Tice's family.

In a press briefing soon after Assad fled to Russia, President Joe Biden said that despite his administration not having “direct evidence” that Tice is alive, his administration is “committed to returning him” home. Biden also sent U.S. officials to the region to help with the search effort. Tice’s parents maintain that their son is still alive.

The British newspaper The Times reported Wednesday that Syrian journalist and activist Saher al-Ahmad, who was imprisoned by Assad’s regime, believed he was held in the same Damascus jail as Tice as recently as 2022. He said he saw the American journalist a few times, which aligns with an unconfirmed U.S. intelligence report from 2022 in which a senior Syrian opposition leader stated that Tice had been in a Damascus prison since July 2021, according to The Washington Post.

For the past 12 years, successive U.S. administrations have tried and failed to bring Tice back home. Meanwhile, Tice’s parents and press freedom advocates, including Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), have worked on numerous advocacy campaigns and initiatives to raise awareness about his case.

Swift could help with those efforts at this critical time. If she learns about Tice’s abduction and publicly sympathizes with the American journalist and his family members who desperately want his return, she could give a huge boost to his chances of being found or released.

The superstar could express solidarity either online or offline. Her star power (and legions of fans) could encourage the Biden administration to do even more in its last remaining weeks to end Tice’s ordeal. Tice deserves to be home with his family for the holidays, safe and sound.

Taylor Swift, please help us find your fan, American journalist Austin Tice.

Ahmed Zidan

Third Phase of O’Fallon Main Street Improvement Project Proposed

1 year ago
From Mid Rivers Newsmagazine:  O’Fallon is planning for the third phase of its Main Street Improvement Project. At the Nov. 21 meeting, the City Council introduced a bill that would approve plans for the Main Street Phase 3 improvement project and authorize acquisition of property. The bill will receive a vote for passage at the […]
Dede Hance

Privacy protection shouldn’t come at free speech’s expense

1 year ago

A recent federal court decision upholding the constitutionality of “Daniel’s Law” in New Jersey could embolden governments to restrict free speech by using privacy laws.

Daniel’s Law prohibits anyone from disclosing or publishing the home addresses and unlisted telephone numbers of government officials like judges, prosecutors, and police officers once the official sends a request asking for the information to be removed. After law enforcement and correction officers sued direct mail companies, data brokers, and similar entities under the law, the federal court rejected the defendants’ argument that it violates the First Amendment.

Daniel’s Law may sound like a reasonable way to protect government employees’ privacy. The law was enacted following a tragic attack at the home of a federal judge, in which her son was killed and her husband severely wounded. Public officials who face threats should receive enhanced security and protection, and those who threaten them should be punished.

We’re also certainly not here to defend data brokers, whose unregulated collection and sale of people’s data puts many people — including journalists — at significant risk. There’s no doubt that properly crafted privacy laws can be compatible with the First Amendment.

But we should be wary of laws that prohibit people from publishing or obtaining truthful information about government officials, even in the name of protecting privacy. For example, Daniel’s Law makes it far more difficult for journalists to investigate issues related to officials’ residency — such as whether they’re registered to vote where they live or have close family members living in a house owned by a billionaire — by allowing them to scrub their home addresses from most public records.

Courts must require the government to meet the highest constitutional burden to justify laws that protect the privacy of some of the most powerful government actors when those laws impact truthful speech. If not, we risk giving the government the power to limit or censor speech that’s embarrassing or sheds light on official wrongdoing.

Government shouldn’t get to decide what journalists can and can’t print

Data brokers aren’t the only ones affected by Daniel’s Law. Journalists are too. One New Jersey journalist, Charlie Kratovil, challenged Daniel’s Law on First Amendment grounds after a law enforcement official, Anthony Caputo, sent him a cease and desist letter for raising questions about Caputo’s place of residence. Kratovil, whose reporting revealed that Caputo lived more than two hours away from the community he served, had stated the name of the street (but not the specific address) listed on Caputo’s voter profile during a city council meeting.

So far, New Jersey courts have decided that Daniel’s Law can forbid publishing officials’ exact addresses, after Caputo and the state begrudgingly conceded that Kratovil could publish the name of the town he lived in. But Caputo first invoked Daniel’s Law after Kratovil mentioned just his street name, and other journalists will surely wonder how “exact” is too exact when it comes to discussing officials’ place of residence.

Kratovil has appealed to the New Jersey Supreme Court, arguing that the law violates the First Amendment by giving the government the power to say what the press can and can’t print.

Privacy laws must meet highest standards when government restricts speech

Daniel’s Law restricts speech based on its content (because it regulates disclosure of specific information about government employees). It also gives the government the power to prohibit the publication of true information. It should therefore be subject to the highest level of First Amendment scrutiny.

If we’re going to allow the government to infringe on free speech, it must have an extremely good reason and be required to write a law that affects the least amount of speech necessary to obtain its goals. That’s not just our opinion, it’s long been the Supreme Court’s standard.

But in its recent decision, the federal court held that Daniel’s Law isn’t required to satisfy this extremely high bar, simply because it’s a privacy law. Instead, the court applied a less strict balancing test that it said comes from past Supreme Court decisions involving a conflict between privacy and free speech.

That’s dangerous. Lowering the bar for privacy laws gives the government a freer hand to regulate speech as long as it says it’s doing it to protect privacy. Government officials and other public figures will inevitably abuse that power to stifle speech they dislike.

There’s no shortage of public figures and officials claiming that reporting on their illegal, hypocritical, or unsavory behavior violates their privacy. Some have even tried to use privacy as a justification for suing reporters. For instance, when Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry was attorney general, he sued a reporter for requesting public records about sexual harassment allegations against one of his top deputies, arguing that their release would violate the deputy’s privacy. And just last year, an Arizona state senator claimed a journalist invaded her privacy by knocking on her door to see if she lived in the district she represented, and temporarily obtained a restraining order against the journalist.

The court’s decision is also wrong as a legal matter. The Supreme Court has repeatedly refused to allow litigants to characterize legal claims as about something other than speech — whether it’s emotional distress or even privacy — as workarounds to punish speech. The Supreme Court has also warned against expanding exceptions to the First Amendment and called ad hoc balancing tests weighing First Amendment rights against other competing interests “startling and dangerous.” The First Amendment already strikes the balance in favor of free speech.

The public’s interest in where officials live

Both of the courts that heard Kratovil’s challenge to Daniel’s Law concluded that the exact address and phone numbers of public officials aren’t matters of public concern or significance. That takes too narrow a view of the public interest. Sometimes journalists need to bring the receipts, and publishing details can be the most powerful way to demonstrate a news report is true.

For instance, when CNN exposed North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson’s offensive posts on online sex forums, it published his date of birth — information considered “private” under at least one law similar to Daniel’s Law — to prove the link between Robinson and the online accounts. It also published his unique online user name, information that some future privacy law could designate as private, as some have with email addresses.

That’s not to say that journalists should publish officials’ personal information without careful consideration and without good reason. But the First Amendment generally places the responsibility for making that decision in the hands of journalists, not judges, who may wrongly give greater weight to powerful people’s wish for secrecy than the value of public disclosure. We shouldn’t bend the rules to make it easier for the government to censor the press in the name of privacy.

Caitlin Vogus

Take It Down Act Has Best Of Intentions, Worst Of Mechanisms

1 year ago
You may have heard that the US government has a bit of a mess on its hands after House Speaker Mike Johnson worked out a somewhat carefully crafted compromise continuing resolution funding plan to keep the government open, only to have it collapse after Elon Musk screamed about how bad it was and how anyone […]
Mike Masnick

Daily Deal: The Complete Photoshop Master Class Bundle

1 year ago
The Complete Photoshop Master Class Bundle has 6 courses to help you learn all you need to know about Photoshop. Courses cover basic editing, layers, retouching, light effects, outdoor portraiture, web design, and more. It’s on sale for $30. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales […]
Daily Deal

Equipping Gen Z for Green Jobs in Building Operations

1 year ago
From Triple Pundit:  Building operations contribute roughly 27 percent of all global carbon emissions, and the problem is growing. By 2060, the world is expected to add 241 billion square meters of floor area to the global building stock, the largest wave of building and infrastructure growth in human history. That’s the equivalent of adding an entire New York […]
Dede Hance