Special prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald (AP)

Jamin Raskin feels the press is giving Novak a free ride
ASK THIS | February 14, 2005

It has been more than a year and a half since Robert Novak revealed in his newspaper column that Valerie Plame was a CIA agent, and more than a year since special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald began investigating. How long does it take to get to the bottom of something that looks so simple? Law professor Jamin Raskin thinks the press is giving Novak a free ride.


By Jamin Raskin

raskin@wcl.american.edu

 

Q. Judith Miller of the New York Times and Matthew Cooper of Time Magazine have been held in contempt of court and could be sentenced to up to 18 months in prison for not revealing the sources who leaked to them the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame.  Why isn’t Robert Novak, who originally outed Plame by publishing her CIA affiliation, in the same situation as Miller and Cooper?

 

Q. Assuming that he has been subpoenaed, did Novak plead the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination?  In that case, wouldn’t he have been offered immunity from prosecution by special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald? If so, did Novak accept it?  Does that mean he went ahead and testified, turning in his sources?

 

Q. Should Novak have been offered immunity?  Did he not aid and abet a criminal offense by publishing the identity of a covert agent?

 

Q. Why isn’t Novak openly stating his position and explaining his legal posture like Miller and Cooper have? What principles is he defending? 

 

Q. Why are the media giving Novak a free ride?

  

Q. If Former Ambassador Joseph Wilson and his wife Valerie Plame were targeted by anonymous high-level government sources because Wilson expressed skepticism about the Bush administration’s story about “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq, was this an effort to retaliate against Wilson for his exercise of his First Amendment rights?

 

Q. Who should be covered by the “news reporter shield laws” in 31 states that protect journalists from having to reveal government and other sources? Are bloggers and other Internet writers journalists within the meaning of these laws?  Should the proposed federal shield law championed by leading First Amendment and media groups try to draw a line between conventional media and on-line media?

 

Q. Do media entities believe that their reporters should have more rights against judicial subpoena and process under freedom of the press than other citizens have under freedom of speech? Are all citizens part of the press for constitutional purposes?

 

Q. Why does the public seem so unmoved by the plight of journalists being subpoenaed, held in contempt and possibly sent to jail?

-

And how to write to Patrick Fitzgerald...
Posted by Lynne Foster Shifriss -
02/21/2005, 02:59 PM

How can whatever has happened with Robert Novak be kept so quiet? It makes me wonder just how high up his source was...and that's just why we should know. At least I'll feel better if I can write to Patrick Fitzgerald and complain about this dirty business.


-

Feel like complaining?
Here's a list of ombudsmen at U.S. newspapers, compiled by the Organization of News Ombudsmen.

Martin Lobel
It’s time to do more than just say the economy is the No. 1 issue
If voters are to go into the midterm elections with any understanding at all, the press needs to get away from he-said, she-said reporting and look into the positions that candidates and the two parties are taking. Martin Lobel offers some vital questions.

William Claiborne
What a broken Senate looks like from far away...and why it matters
Our correspondent in Australia has ideas on how to improve things a little. But he’s not optimistic that anyone on Capitol Hill will be interested.

Steven Greenhut
How severe is the public employee pension problem across the U.S.? (Hint: Is a $3 trillion debt severe?)
Columnist and author Steven Greenhut looks at the ongoing pension issue, including abuses of it, and deals with some of the key questions.

Watchdog Blog
Herb Strentz
Des Moines Fair Coverage, Part 2
Cleaning up in the wake of the 2010 Iowa State Fair will be daunting this year. In addition to the mess left by nearly 1 million visitors and thousands of farm animals, we have a continuing saga of news coverage that told of possible racial assaults and then, in Saturday Night Live fashion, appears [...]

Herb Strentz
On ‘Beat Whitey Night’ in Des Moines
(Editor’s note: The incidents described here have become part of a developing story, as this Google link shows.) The Des Moines Register’s reluctance to identify criminal suspects or victims by race has turned into an outright refusal to do so. The closing night of the Iowa State Fair was marked by an observance not exactly on the [...]

Barry Sussman
Justice Department Shows Its Mettle, Indicts Clemens
I got this note from a friend and colleague a little while after Roger Clemens was indicted by a federal grand jury on Aug. 19th: “And meanwhile, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, CIA officials and others who lied to Congress in sworn testimony about Iraq go free. If we can ‘look forward, not backward’ on torture, perjury, [...]

Blog main page >>
Web Essentials
Leading journalism sites, blogs...
Enter your e-mail address
Spotlight On

TWITTER
Follow Nieman Watchdog on Twitter.
(Nieman Watchdog)

Telecoms charging more to do nothing
It's getting more expensive to have an unlisted phone number. What's the logic behind that?
(Center for Media and Democracy)

Prosecute those leaks
The Obama administration has indicted another alleged leaker, this time for reportedly passing along to Fox News an intelligence assessment that North Korea was likely to respond to U.N. sanctions by conducting another nuclear test.
(Secrecy News/Federation of American Scientists)

A broad array of massive financial crimes
As PRWatch.org shows, court-imposed settlements have only skimmed the surface of big banks' wrongdoing in the financial crisis.
(Center for Media and Democracy)

More Spotlights >>