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Journalists' Rights Tracker

Home > Journalists' Rights Tracker
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Leann Frola
A digest of coverage of journalists' rights and legal issues.

A state-by-state guide to journalists' legal protections

Scholastic Journalists' Rights

Pending federal shield law legislation:
S. 2831
S. 1419
S. 340
H.R. 3323
H.R. 581


Senate Judiciary Committee hearings:

I."Reporters' Shield Legislation: Issues and Implications" (July 20, 2005)
II. "Reporters' Privilege Legislation: An Additional Investigation of Issues and Implications" (Oct. 19, 2005)
III. "Reporters' Privilege Legislation: Preserving Effective Law Enforcement" (Sept. 20, 2006)

Testimony:
I.
William Safire
Rep. Mike Pence
Matthew Cooper
Norman Pearlstine
Floyd Abrams
Lee Levine
Geoffrey Stone
II.
Chuck Rosenberg
Judith Miller
David Westin
Joseph E. diGenova
Ann Gordon
Dale Davenport
Steven D. Clymer
III.
Victor E. Schwartz
Theodore B. Olson
Steven D. Clymer
Paul J. McNulty

Member statements:
I.
Sen. Patrick Leahy
Sen. Richard Lugar
Sen. Russ Feingold
II.
Sen. John Cornyn
Sen. Patrick Leahy
III.
Sen. Patrick Leahy


For more on journalists' rights internationally:
Committee to Protect Journalists



Student Press Law Center
Press Release
Feb. 21, 2007

Excerpt:

The Student Press Law Center and four other free expression advocacy organizations this week filed a friend-of-the-court brief with the U.S. Supreme Court arguing that a case to be argued next month could determine when public high school officials have the right to punish students for expression they engage in outside of school.

The case, Morse v. Frederick, focuses on Juneau, Alaska, student Joseph Frederick, who was suspended for ten days from Douglas High School after he held up a banner that read "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" as the 2002 Olympic torch relay passed near his school. Frederick, who was standing across the street from the school on a public sidewalk, had not attended school that morning. In addition, the school had released students so they could watch the relay. School Principal Deborah Morse crossed the street and pulled down Frederick's banner. He was ultimately suspended for 10 days. The school argues that the banner promoted illegal drug use contrary to the school's educational mission.

Frederick sued the Juneau School District in 2002. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit unanimously ruled in favor of Frederick in March 2006. That court held that although it considered the speech to have occurred on campus, it was not subject to censorship or punishment under the Supreme Court's 1969 Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District decision because the banner created no substantial disruption of school activities.

In its brief before the Supreme Court, the SPLC argues that the school's "wide-sweeping view of school power over independent, off-campus student speech has the potential to chill all types of student expression."
Posted by Leann Frola 12:00 AM
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