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JAIL OVER CONFIDENTIAL SOURCES
Press Release- PREN/114/04
The Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression
concerned about possible prison sentence for American journalist
for refusing to reveal source
Washington, D.C., December 8, 2004. The Office of the Special Rapporteur
for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights (IACHR) is concerned about the possibility that journalist
Jim Taricani will be sentenced to up to six months in prison at
a hearing scheduled for tomorrow, December 9. Mr. Taricani, a journalist
with WJAR, an NBC-affiliated television station in Providence, Rhode
Island, had been convicted of criminal contempt on November 18 for
refusing to identify his confidential information source.
In March 2004, U.S. District Court Judge Ernest C. Torres held
Mr. Taricani in civil contempt after he
refused to reveal the identity of the person who gave him an FBI
videotape, which was under a protective order prohibiting its disclosure
as part of a federal investigation into government corruption. Considering
Mr. Taricani's continued refusal to reveal the source, Judge Torres
decided to initiate the criminal contempt proceedings on November
4, which led to Taricani's conviction. After Mr. Taricani's conviction,
Joseph Bevilacqua Jr, a lawyer in Providence, R.I., came forward
to say he was the source of the F.B.I. videotape; however, it is
unclear if this revelation will have any effect on Mr. Taricani's
sentence.
The Office of the Special Rapporteur recalls that freedom of expression
is understood to encompass
journalists' right to keep their sources confidential. This is reflected
in Principle 8 of the Declaration of
Principles on Freedom of Expression of the IACHR, which states,
"Every social communicator has the right to keep his/her source
of information, notes, personal and professional archives confidential."
The main foundation of the right to confidentiality is that within
the scope of their work, and in order to
provide the public with the information needed to satisfy the right
to information, journalists are
performing an important public service when collecting and disseminating
information that would not be
divulged were the confidentiality of sources not protected. This
right to confidentiality involves
providing legal guarantees to sources to ensure their anonymity
and to avoid possible reprisals against them for divulging certain
information to the press. Confidentiality, therefore, is essential
to
journalists' work, and to the role that society has conferred upon
them to report on matters of public
interest.
Given the importance of the right to confidentiality, the Office
of the Special Rapporteur is concerned that the criminal conviction
and sentencing of Jim Taricani could set a troubling precedent for
other cases. If the practice of trying journalists for criminal
contempt for refusing to identify sources is
consolidated, it would constitute a threat to freedom of the press
in the U.S.
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