ATL: The Difference Between Bryan Carmody And Julian Assange

ATL: The Difference Between Bryan Carmody And Julian Assange by Tyler Broker:

Since early May, a terrifying ordeal has been playing out in San Francisco. A journalist, Bryan Carmody, had his home raided by the San Francisco police department after he refused to divulge a confidential source. This was an objectively deplorable raid for a couple of reasons.

First, in the infamous Pentagon Papers case, members of the United States Supreme Court noted that “[b]oth the history and language of the First Amendment” supported the view that the press must “be left free to publish news, whatever the source, without censorship, injunctions, or prior restraints.” In the press world, Bryan Carmody “is what’s known as a stringer,” a person who collects material and provides it to news organizations. In other words, Carmody is not a source; he is, by his very nature, a reporter of information and deserving of First Amendment protection. Secondly, California has a shield law that protects the confidentiality of Carmody’s sources.

Given the First Amendment implications and the state specific protection, the fact that not one but two judges signed-off on the raid of Carmody’s home amounts to nothing less than a judicial disgrace. A disturbing failure by the California magistrates to adequately protect a journalist from unjust detainment and gross abuse of state power. The judicial sign-off to the raid is also the product of a grossly abused Fourth Amendment standard that lacks meaningful judicial oversight and is regularly satisfied by incredibly flawed evidence with absurdly high error rates.

This entry was posted in Privileges. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.