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Interview With Jailed Video Blogger Josh Wolf

Video blogger and independent journalist Josh Wolf has been in a federal jail for 170 days for refusing to turn over to a federal grand jury a video of a San Francisco demonstration. On Feb. 6 Wolf's length of incarceration set a new record for US journalism. "Democracy Now!" has an interview with Josh Wolf from his jail cell. If federal authorities can jail bloggers with impunity, it does not bode well for the future of citizen journalism.

43 of 457 comments (clear)

  1. Maybe... maybe not by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't think the fellow was jailed with "impunity". He disregarded a subpoena from a court. Be a good citizen. Show up to court when called. It's no different than standard etiquette and social grace. If you're invited to a large party of important people, even if you disagree with them, at least show up and have a few hors d'oevres.

    With respect to the tape I think that Josh has a positive mindset: let the judge review the tape. I'll grant that it is probably the US attorney who's being the idiot in this regard.

    With respect to the testimoney I think that Josh has a negative mindset: as with the subpoena, show up to court. There are a million different ways of saying "I cannot be positive beyond a reasonable doubt. My religion prevents me from bearing false witness." Something along those lines. Again, if the US attorney weren't being the idiot with respect to allowing the judge to do his job and make the call on whether or not to include the tape, then this probably wouldn't be an issue.

    I think that, as usual, the US attorney is being a knob because he can--because his social connections and political backing give him power over a standard citizen. At the same time: Hey, Josh! When a federal court sends you a subpoena that means "Show up or else!"

    Disregarding a subpoena is a gesture of disrespect and impunity. Jailing a citizen for disregarding a subpoena is just standard procedure (afaik).

    --
    the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
    1. Re:Maybe... maybe not by alshithead · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In agreement, I have to say blogger=reporter!

      If you put yourself out there as a reporter of news, even with providing your own opinion/slant, you take the same risks as a reporter.

      If you write an opinion or editorial piece and REPORT news in some way that is of interest to the justice system, the justice system has the right to ask more details of you in the course of the investigation of a crime. You as a (US) citizen can tell them what they want to know as a tool for their investigation or tell them to fuck off. Reporters have faced this issue for a long time. Just because you label yourself as a "blogger" instead of a reporter does not exclude you from a court order demanding your source. The choice is upon the individual. If I video a crime in front of my house and report it in any kind of mass media, I fully expect the cops to want all information I can provide in the pursuit of their investigation and for them to get a court order requiring me to provide that information. I can give them what they want or face a contempt of court charge for not supplying what the court ordered.

      --
      I reserve the right to think for myself. Others' opinions are optional. Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
    2. Re:Maybe... maybe not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's called "Freedom of Speech", and "Freedom of Association" dude... In case you've forgotten (and you obviously have), those are supposed to be cornerstones of what your country stands for. You're also (of course), free to disagree with them, but at least recognize that they're as entitled to THEIR opinions as anyone else is, including you.

      (Despite what you may think, your statement above isn't one of disagreeance, it's of invalidation; which is to say you're not indicating that you recognize their position, but disagree with them; you're saying that their opinion is invalid because it is different than yours. You're also using ad hominem attacks as support for your self-righteousness, which is strongly indicative of having a weak position/argument in the first place...)

      -AC

  2. Maybe I'm missing something... by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He has video of what are presumably illegal acts by anti-G8 demonstrators, which he refuses to turn over. Anybody - member of the old media or not - would be compelled to turn this over. And if they, the old media, don't have a right to withold evidence from a grand jury empaneled to investigate these crimes - why should he?

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Maybe I'm missing something... by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In all fairness he's asserted that he would be willing to turn the tape over to the presiding judge. It is the US attorney involved who has demanded that the tape be turned over to his office. I don't know the particulars of the subpoena but, afaik, a subpoena is issued from the court and not directly from the US attorney's office. The US attorney issues the subpoena through the court at which time the named party must show up at court to address the contents of the subpoena.

      There's probably a whole slew of legal mumbo-jumbo going on in the background. If Josh didn't retain the services of an attorney prior to the date named on the subpoena, or if he flat out didn't appear on the date of the subpoena, then he's probably screwed.

      I could be totally wrong. Maybe a subpoena is a direct request from the US attorney which bypasses the judge and the court altogether. I doubt it though.

      --
      the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
    2. Re:Maybe I'm missing something... by nomadic · · Score: 3, Informative

      I could be totally wrong. Maybe a subpoena is a direct request from the US attorney which bypasses the judge and the court altogether. I doubt it though.

      I don't practice in that jurisdiction, and I don't practice criminal law, but I know around here attorneys can issue subpoenas on their own. The judge has ultimate authority though, so you can move for a protective order if you object to the subpoena.

  3. Question. by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why do "Journalists" have the special right to not give up information to a corut demanding it?

    I would understand if it was about him, you know, fifth amendment and all.

    But does he have some special credential that signifies him a journalist and immune from the eyes of the court? For that matter, is there any laws that discern high-profile journalists? If there are state laws, why are there?

    I'm just questioning the reasoning behind different "class" of citizens.

    --
    1. Re:Question. by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 3, Informative

      He was subpoenaed.

      He did not grant the request of the subpoena.

      According to Amendment 5, Bill of Rights, it says "nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"

      Due process was made, and he has temporally lost his liberty by being put in jail until he grants the subpoena.

      This is how courts should be ran. There's nothing unfair, or evil about this situation.

      --
  4. Whre is the issue here? by jmorris42 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A grand jury or a court can order you to produce damned near anything it wants. Being a jouralist (or a blogger) is no shield, or haven't you kids been watching the Plamegate/Libby trial?

    And this is a good thing. You can't have justice without first establishing the truth and for that you have to be able to present ALL of the evidence. I really can't see why journalists think they are some sort of fscking priesthood set above all other instituitions. Get over yourselves, you are mostly talentless hacks anyway.

    This idiot was issued an order to produce evidence, he refused and his butt is in jail. And that is exactly where he belongs, for his refusal to comply with one of the most basic responsibilities attached to citizenship.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  5. Honestly by Bifurcati · · Score: 5, Informative
    Despite the scare mongering in TFA, the bottom line is he was subpoenaed for a video that might have been possible evidence in a (possible) serious crime. They're investigating a violent protest - a policeman (apparently) had his skull cracked, for goodness sake. I don't care how pure your protest motives are, that sort of thing is never appropriate. (Well, okay, maybe as an absolute last resort for overthrowing a government, but I don't think we're there yet.)

    If you refuse a legal subpoena then you go to jail. It's got nothing to independent journalism or even protecting his sources - at this level of the game, they want to see the tape. Maybe he'll be interviewed for information about the people on the tape at a later date, but that's not the issue here. Go to jail for (in some weird sense) "protecting your sources", not for witholding evidence, if you want to make a statement.

    This feels like seriously biased reporting.

    1. Re:Honestly by JoshJ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The only reason for his refusal (that I can see) is that it may show some illegal or unethical behavour on his part - In which case, he deserves all he gets.


      Ah, the old "guilty until proven innocent" mentality.
    2. Re:Honestly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The "crime" that is under investigation by the grand jury is a broken taillight on a police car. They blew it up into a "Federal Charge" because some of the money for that vehicle came from Federal Funds. I've never heard about any police getting a broken skull, but certainly police have been known to do such things to citizens without any legal recourse.

      So, we're talking a journalist (blogger or not - "mainstream" media paid him for this reporting) jailed for about half a year so far because he still is foolish enough to believe we still have a Constitution in this country.

      And, inbetween various rants about raping the guy in jail for his patriotic act - you gotta ask yourself if spending months and months of tax money and citizen time (Mr. Wolf's and the Grand Jury) investigating a broken police car taillight is what you think of every time you see that federal tax deduction on your paycheck. Seems to me that while the Feds are screwing around justifying their salaries terrorizing Journalists, there are that many less resources going into preventing actual terrorism.

      Right wing, Left wing, or wingless: do you believe it's an effective use of Federal money to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars investigating a broken taillight? Head over to Ford and pay fifty bucks and move on...

    3. Re:Honestly by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The point being that, if the situation has come this far, the US attorney will have filed a motion making it illegal for any of the tape to be published for many years. Nobody will ever see the truth until after this story is long forgotten (as is usual in today's police state).

      The more I think about it the more this sounds like attorneys playing chess with Josh as the pawn. The more I see it in that light the more I agree: The prosecuting attorney, in no way, should be granted exclusive access to the tape nor should he be allowed to show it in anything but its entirety.

      --
      the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
  6. The fact that he's a blogger is beside the point by winkydink · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Two words: Judith Miller

    If you and the judge disagree and you don't come around to the judge's point of view, you're going to jail.

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

  7. Try 18 months by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Insightful

    170 days may be a record for jounalist but others have been simularly held for longer and under worse conditions. Susan McDougal apwnt 18 months jailed with 7 weeks of that time in solitare confinment for not turning evidence over to the white water investigators. She claimed something even more compelling then a brief association with the press under an emerging form or journalism. She claimed it would incriminate her and refused based on directly worded constitutional rights- not an interpretation someone could change if neccesary.

    It should have been stopped then but it wasn't. Now we have this and we are still seeing it happen. I'm not sure how long before we see shooting someone on a mountain top because of rules of engagment or maybe gass and burn down a building full of women and children again. 170 days seems like it is small compared to others. He could be there a while longer just to match recent simular cases of this happening. I wonder how long he will hold out?

  8. *choke* by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Honestly? Nothing. Your question is quite correct. Given the state of today's government, the politicians, the graft, the greed, the plutocracy, the abuse of power, by all rights the US government (and all three branches) should have been overthrown long ago as charged by the Declaration of Independence.

    In reality? It's just like the court told Saddam when he asserted (correctly) that they had no true authority over him as the UN didn't sanction the US to remove a government. We were allowed in Iraq under the auspices of finding WMDs. The UN just happened to turn a blind eye when we took it to the conclusion. Anyway, when Saddam tried the,"You have no real authority over me" defense the court responded "We have you in shackles. That's all the authority we need."

    --
    the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
    1. Re:*choke* by baldass_newbie · · Score: 3, Informative

      when he asserted (correctly) that they had no true authority over him as the UN didn't sanction the US to remove a government. We were allowed in Iraq under the auspices of finding WMDs. The UN just happened to turn a blind eye when we took it to the conclusion.

      You don't need UN sanction to remove a government. Look at Bosnia circa 1998.

      --
      The opposite of progress is congress
    2. Re:*choke* by redcane · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry, but there was a recent article referencing a study posted on slashdot that demonstrated class mobility was higher in India than in the US.

    3. Re:*choke* by aztektum · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But speak out or have a difference of opinion and goto jail. Or be ostracized all the way through you're public school career for being different.

      It's hard to argue that the US is economically broken, but socially we're just as fucked as every other society.

      Stories like this are less about being allowed to live what has become the American dream (having a lot of stuff defining your success) and more about reclaiming what use to be the American dream (total freedom from over zealous rulers, economically and socially.)

      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
    4. Re:*choke* by Alien+Being · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Last I checked, unemployment was at record lows."

      1. Bush changed the rules for counting the unemployed. 2. Many people are either limited to part-time, or have had to settle for a "job" at Walmart, or both.

      "Gasoline is nearly back to $2 a gallon."

      Still a bunch higher than when Bush took office. Big surprise that an oilman in the oval office led to higher prices.

      "Home ownership is among the highest (possibly THE highest) in the entire world."

      Yeah, and too many people are upside-down on their mortgages. Get ready for the next S&L bailout.

      "Americans can go to school, work hard, become successful, more readily than anywhere else in the world."

      That was true once. I don't believe it any more.

      "My god people...what the fuck do you want?"

      Government accountability, to the people, not to the corporation. The bastards in Washington are destroying this country.

      "These people don't want everyone to be happy...they want everyone to be equally miserable. Worthless turds."

      Either you've been duped and you don't even know it or, more likely, you're just an anonymous troll.

    5. Re:*choke* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And the trains run on time!

      Not really, but you probably know what I mean,
      and if you don't, google the above phrase.

    6. Re:*choke* by Valar · · Score: 3, Informative

      What? Unemployment at record lows? The record post-world war II is 2.4%. The current unemployment rate is 5% (both according to the BLS). Even in the last decade the record is 3.6%.

      Of course, one has to wonder about the sustainability of american consumer spending (considering the average american spends 101% of what they earn) and incredible trade deficits. Interest rates have got to adjust at some point... and as goes capital so goes labor.

    7. Re:*choke* by drsquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course, we can only hope to have the social mobility of a caste system.

    8. Re:*choke* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Last I checked, unemployment was at record lows.

      That is what the numbers say. But it's not reflective of the actual situation. Most measures of unemployment only consider people who are considered "part of the workforce", and actively trying to find a job. Those same measures tend to define somebody who has "left the workforce" as a person who has not worked in three to six months, even if they are actively searching for a job.

      Thus in many regions, especially in the Rust Belt (which has been hit hardest by the moving of manufacturing overseas), the official unemployment rate is quite misleading. In such regions it's quite common for people to not find work for a year or more. And so they're officially considered to have left the workforce, and thus are not counted in the unemployment statistics. While you may have 50% of the workforce without jobs in such areas, an unemployment rate of only 4% to 6% is commonly given, as that's the number of people who are either just getting into the workforce (ie. high school graduates), or who have been laid off in less than six months.

      Gasoline is nearly back to $2 a gallon.

      In Texas, perhaps. But not in the rest of the country. I drove from NYC to Detroit and back a week ago. Gas prices ranged from $3.25 a gallon in Michigan to as high as $4.50/gallon in rural Ohio and Pennsylvania. I think the lowest I saw was about $2.75, and that was near Detroit.

      Home ownership is among the highest (possibly THE highest) in the entire world.

      America has experienced a housing bubble over the past decade. Yes, many new houses have been built, and many people have begun living in them. But those people don't actually own their homes. Many such buyers have had to take on a 35 to 40 year mortgage. Some are even at the point where they have to go into massive credit card debt to cover their non-mortgage living expenses. Just because lending institutions have been very willing to give out mortgages recently it does not mean that a larger portion of the population are actually home owners. There only ownership in such a situation is that of a bank or other financial institution owning large amounts of homebuyer debt.

      Americans can go to school, work hard, become successful, more readily than anywhere else in the world.

      That's not really the case. Higher education is far too expensive for most Americans. Coming out of a 4-year college program with $160,000 in debt, even after scholarships and bursaries, tends to put people in a pretty terrible position. Compare that to places like Canada, Australia, the UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and even Russia. Students coming out of universities in those countries are just as capable as American graduates, but face nowhere near the financial burden (both before attending and after).

      My god people...what the fuck do you want?

      I think they may want people like you to take a look at the facts. Yes, CNN and FOX News will tell you again and again that the economy is doing great, unemployment is low, and every other country is a shithole compared to the US. But that just isn't the case. It's not reality.

    9. Re:*choke* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A job at Walmart in America leaves you better off than most jobs in many countries. Even the poorest in America enjoy a very high standard of living.

      Yeah, it doesn't matter if we go backwards, as long as we have a slightly higher level of wealth than Somalia, we're doing great!

      Can you say 'hyperbole'? America has never been better off. Ever.

      CHOKE. We are living off debt, engaging in ridiculous wars, have lost any kind of real value to life apart from money, are dying from pollution and junk food, we are losing our cultural and intellectual leadership, and you think we have never been better? That's some serious crack-addicted nonsense right there.

    10. Re:*choke* by Apocalypse111 · · Score: 3, Funny

      The rest of your statement aside, I agree that too many Americans are spouting off about how they live in the greatest country on earth, especially since so few of them have actually left the country! Lewis Black had a great piece on this very issue, so I'll paraphrase him.

      If you've never been to any other country, how do you know the one you're in is the greatest? Other countries could be giving shit away every day! Canada is one of those countries. You know what they give away? HEALTH INSURANCE!!!
      How do you think the rest of the world feels about us constantly claiming we're the best? It'd be like if every day you went to work, someone there shouted, "I'm the best sunuvabitch in here, and the rests of you sniveling shits would DIE without me! MUAHAHAHA!!!" I can guarantee you that if you had that happen to you every day, by the end of the week you would have killed him. And eaten him, just to try to possess his power.

      --
      There is no mod option "-1: Disagree" for a reason. "Overrated" is not an acceptable substitute. Post something instead.
  9. Not correct by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Josh has not refused to turn over the tape. Josh has demonstrated a citizen's concern over whom the tape be turned over to. Think rationally: Why is it so darned important for the US attorney to have the tape? What's wrong with allowing the judge to review it and then let the judge decide who gets it?

    --
    the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
  10. eyes and ears by untorqued · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think Josh Wolf's refusal to testify is important for a couple reasons: 1) You wouldn't know it from mainstream media these days, but journalists have the opportunity to be important counterbalances to unchecked government power via investigating and bringing otherwise obscure activities into the light for public discussion and, perhaps, correction. 2) One important tool in a journalist's arsenal that enables them to do the above is their ability to collect news without being seen as tools/agents of the government. Think of Bob Woodward and Deep Throat (aka Mark Felt) - Woodward went 3 decades refusing to name Felt because he'd promised him confidentiality. If journalists can be compelled to testify about what they've done and seen in the course of doing their jobs, people around them are less likely to be interested in being filmed, interviewed, etc. This is the reason many states have shield laws, which protect journalists' sources and unpublished work. The US attorney in Josh Wolf's case had to go through acrobatics to bring this case in federal court, because California has a shield law - the only reason it's in federal court is because a San Francisco police car that sustained a broken taillight during the protest in question was paid for partially by federal money - that's the only federal link here!

  11. Debate strategy by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What we're seeing here is an overzealous US attorney who wants to be able to show fragments of the tape to the grand jury, while suppressing other segments, in order to selectively support only his side of the argument. Don't forget that the courtroom is not about justice. It's about two teams, with money and careers to maintain, who need to create legal briefs which will ultimately give them the win.

    Josh and his attorney want the tape to be shown to the judge first presumably so that the judge can see the _entire_ situation. The US attorney wants the tape for himself so that he can show only what he deems fit to the grand jury.

    It's very likely that the tape contains evidence which would show an escalation of events--unnecessary force or police brutality which initiated the subsequent violence. The US attorney, of course, would only show the subsequent violence.

    Duh.

    --
    the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
    1. Re:Debate strategy by tpv · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Josh and his attorney want the tape to be shown to the judge first presumably so that the judge can see the _entire_ situation
      My reading is that part of Josh's contention is that the tape contains information unrelated to the crime in question, and that the US attorney should not be entitled to those parts of the video.

      Specifically, it has not been established that mere attendance at the protest constituted a crime, so the US attorney is not entitled to information about who was there.

      --
      Read more of this story at Slashdot.Read more of this story at Slashdot.Read more of this story at Slashdot.
  12. I'm actually quite surprised by nightfire-unique · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know I read the article before the comments, and I'm quite surprised to see how many comments here are dissing this guy and supporting "the man" on this one.

    You guys are living in very scary times right now: illegal wiretaps, perpetual warfare, a criminal executive branch passing no-bid military contracts to stakeholders in the very same government... And it's a well observed phenomenon that journalism is under fire in the US.

    What he did was certainly not in his own best interest, for sure. But I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss his patriotism. He is making the tough calls at a time many journalists are asleep at the wheel.

    --
    A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
  13. Frightening reasons by Excelcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If this were a state supoena investigating the attack on a police officer, I would agree that he should have showed up. If it were a genuine investigation of an inury offense, it would be carried out by state law enforcement and involve a state grand jury. The fact that it's a federal investigation by a terrorism task force investigating a civil demonstration - that is frightening. Eevn more frightening considering the stretch the government used to call it federal.

    What he is fighting for is to change exactly the sort of mentality people have that says when the government comes calling, the automatic answer is to give them what they want.

    I thank God daily that I am not American. Please understand, I don't intend to bash Americans, but I am scared to death of the police state that is forming. Gitmo makes the Japanese internment camps of WWII look like quilting bees. It frightens me so much that I'd even move out of Canada just to get further away from that, except for people like Josh Wolf. He's being asked for the wrong information by the wrong authorities and he's standing up and saying no, this isn't right. People like him are the only thing that gives me any hope that maybe Canada can win the fight to keep this from spreading North.

    1. Re:Frightening reasons by Excelcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You make some statements that I would question. I don't agree that the United States is the most free nation in the world. First of all, having 5% of the world's population, they incarcerate 25% of the world's prisoners. If I lived in the United States, I would have a 1 in 14 chance of spending time behind bars in my lifetime.

      Let's address your "anarchist retards" who were "breaking shit". If the investigation was really into people who were "breaking shit", it would be carried out by state law enforcement. A federal government anti-terrorism task force is claiming federal laws were broken because they give extra grants to police for anti-terrorism training, which makes the potential damage of a police cruiser a federal jurisdiction matter. The jailed journalist offered the requested information for an in camera (private) review by the judge to determine if it merited turning over as evidence of the alleged crimes. I can't think anywhere (else) in the world where this wouldn't be good enough.

      The United States is only the "most free nation on earth" on paper. The constitution is, unfortunately, vague and in areas where it does speak, the government is taking pains to erode it further. Let me give an example: habeas corpus. The constitution says that habeas corpus can only be suspended at time of war. Right now, the United States federal government is alleging that because the constitution doesn't explicitely say that habeas corpus is a right the rest of the time, that it isn't.

      Yes, that is the boogeyman. This keeps me awake at nights precisely because I do worry about losing rights in my own borders. Canada is under enormous pressure to cave into things like DMCA. Yes, let's in one law criminalize law using technical means to protect the fair use that another law expressly allows. I've published articles on how to rip and transcode DVD's onto Pocket PCs, and host the software for doing that. If I own a DVD, that is perfectly legal in Canada, yet if I travel to the United States, I can get arrested for making software to let me watch the video from my own DVD on a different device. You call that the most free nation on earth? Don't even get me started on the Patriot Act.

    2. Re:Frightening reasons by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Mod parent up! Virtually all of the slashdot posts seem to be ignoring the two main points made in the interview:
      1. This is not properly a federal matter, and there is no reason for a federal grand jury to be messing with it.
      2. The issue isn't the video. The issue is that they're trying to get him to name everyone in the video, so they can then subpoena those people and get them to name names, and so on.
      Plenty of people are saying he's an idiot for ignoring a federal subpoena. No, he knew exactly what he was doing. He just isn't willing to comply, and is willing to sit in jail for a year or two on the strength of his convictions. I wish more people had his courage; you don't have to agree with his political opinions to respect his moral strength. This guy has everything to lose and nothing to gain, and he's doing this as a matter of principle.
    3. Re:Frightening reasons by grimwell · · Score: 4, Informative

      Where do you get these silly ideas? Police state? The US is still THE most free nation in the world.


      The US is currently ranked 53rd in the world for Freedom of the Press. Mozambique rates higher than the US. Source

      The US was tied with Greece for 31st in 2003. Source

      You don't give a shit about losing rights within your own borders because you're too worried about the boogyman to our south.


      It could be said the US people are also too afraid of the terrorist boogyman to give a shit about losing their rights.

      And Canadians aren't the only ones uneasy with the US.

      MUNICH, Feb. 10 -- Russian President Vladimir Putin, in some of his harshest criticism of the United States since he took office seven years ago, said Saturday that Washington's unilateral, militaristic approach had made the world a more dangerous place than at any time during the Cold War. Source

       

      I can be arrested simply for voicing unpopular views or beliefs

      Happens in the US, too.

      People lacking tolerance tend to want to silence their critics and views they disagree with or don't understand. It just happens to be easier to do if you're in a position of power.

      --
      If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy
  14. Re:From his jail cell?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Are prisoners in USA allowed phones in their cells? I thought smuggling phones into jails was a big problem. The phones aren't the problem. The problem is the linemen installing service. Their ladders provide an escape route.
  15. Re:From his jail cell?? by TSAG · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Parent is insightful? Whether Josh was talking from his cell or from the phone in the hall or from an interrogation chamber is moot. While I'd like to give props to our system that at least lets the incarcerated communicate with the rest of is . . . I'll also have to condemn the same system for jailing Mr. Wolf in the first place. I think it would be nice if we could retain the ability to criticize other countries (China? Cuba?) for suppressing free speech while staying far from hypocrisy. As long as we have political prisoners behind bars we tarnish our much touted reputation for freedom and liberty.

    As stated in TFA by Mr. Wolf's lawyer, our courts are for investigating innocence and guilt in committed crimes . . . not for finding out if a crime was committed in the first place.

    Mod me down for ranting. Mod parent off-topic (or funny, I suppose) please.

    --
    "If you're not having fun right now, you're wasting your time."
  16. YRO should be renamed URF (you are fucked) by 80+85+83+83+89+33 · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...it does not bode well for the future of citizen journalism.


    pretty much nothing ever posted in YRO bodes well for the future of anything.

    --
    i disable sigs
  17. Re:The fact that he's a blogger is beside the poin by Miguelito · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What I don't understand is that the article says he's imprisoned for "protecting a source" which is the situation in the Judith Miller case. But from reading the article.. they want the video to basically help identify people that might've broken the law. They aren't "sources", they're part of what was happening in public while he was filming. If there are more private interviews on there that he's hoping to keep out of the courts, you'd think he could give all the unedited footage filmed outside, but I don't see any talk of such.

    This seems more like a situation like a news crew doing a story and an accident happening behind them, then refusing to turn over that tape to help prove who (if anyone) was at fault.

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    - My favorite error message: xscreensaver, running on an old Sparc 5 w/ 8bit color: bsod: Couldn't allocate color Blue
  18. Re:From his jail cell?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    our courts are for investigating innocence and guilt in committed crimes . . . not for finding out if a crime was committed in the first place.

    Of course they are. A primary function of the courts is to interpret the law. In other words, the law says X, the person did A as established by the evidence at hand, does A actually fit X or not? Since laws are written in human language they are ambiguous and it's the job of the courts to figure out if the actual situation fits the law or not.

    A grand jury, part of the court system, exists solely to gather evidence and determine if it was likely that a crime was committed.

    You seem to be under the impression that in a trial the facts of the crime are fixed and the only question is the identity of the criminal. This is not how the system actually works.

  19. Speaking of questionable grounds... by LandruBek · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What you both are overlooking is that the assault on the police officer is a California crime, not a federal crime. As I've argued above, I can't think of any federal crime at all that Wolf's video might have shown -- although the assault apparently is being labeled as terrorism. Which is absurd. Wolf doesn't want these people he might know to be disappeared off to Gitmo, deprived of their rights, and driven out of their minds, which is apparently what the feds do to suspected terrorists. (Never mind the "Oh, that was months ago! We are so over that now!") I think Wolf is the one with a decent justification for keeping mum, and it's the feds who are behaving unreasonably. If I were in his shoes I would be leery of even meeting with the federal judge.

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    $META_SIG_JOKE
  20. Simple..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    #1 - Someone who observes a crime = Witness
    #1 - Videotape = Evidence.
    #2 - Videotape in his possesion = Evidence in his possession.
    #3 - Subpoena = Court Order
    #4 - Disregarding Court Order = Contempt Of Court.
    #5 - Contempt Of Court = Jail/The Big House/The Can/ The Clink/Up State/Up The River/The Pen/All-expenses paid vacation at the Fed Hotel

    Add all the points together and you get:

    (Jail) for (contempt of court) by (refusing a court order) to turn over (evidence of a crime) that (is in his possession) that (he witnessed).

    What's so hard to figure out? The guy had evidence of a possible crime by either the police or protesters. Technically, he has evidence of a possible crime that the Feds want to investigate, like any law enforcement agency should be doing.

    So what. Journalists are not above the law, and certainly not above the law when it comes to witholding evidence. He deserves to be in prison just as much as anybody else who 1) withold evidence of a crime from Authorites, and 2) Refuses to comply with the law.

    He is in jail for violating the law. A violation of journalistic ethics? Pfff. Unfortunately for him, 'Journalistic Ethics' is NOT the law and does not dictate such. Freedom of the press means you can print whatever you want as long it is consistent with free speech and does not violate the law (You can't incite riots, print slanderous articles, or print nudity in a newspaper, etc.). He is not publishing anything - that is not the issue. He can publish whatever he wants.....nobody is arguaing against that and that is not why he is being jailed. It has NOTHING to do with publishing. The issue is that he is in possesion of a videotape that may contain evidence of the commission of crimes. Therefore, the judge has every right and obligtion, both ethically and legally, to force Mr. Wolf to turn over the videotape in question. And, by refusing to obey the order, Mr. Wolf he BROKE THE LAW.

    So what the hell is he complaining about? It was completely his choice. 'Journalists Ethics' - Pfff. Is it ethical for a journalist to refuse to turn over evidence of a crime? Nope. Is it ethical for a judge to tell him to turn over the tape to the police for investigation of a crime? Yes. The government is trying to do its job the way it should be. It is being responsible. The police are trying to do their job. They are being responsible. The Feds are trying to do their job. Mr. Wolf is not doing his job by refusing the court order. His job is a journalist, and refusing to comply with the law is not a demonstration of 'Journalistic Ethics'. I don't think that selectively complying with the law to suit your beliefs is a demonstration of 'Journalistic Ethics', and I'm pretty sure it violates it. Ask Mr. Wolf if witholding evidence, contempt of court, obstruction of justice, and hindering an investigation are part of 'Journalistic Ethics'. Also, ask him if it is 'Journalistically Ethical' to selectively comply with the law.

    He says that it is a violation of the Freedom Of The Press, yet he is violating the law by witholding evidence. Well, he is not publishing anything. He is witholding evidence. Since this isn't about something he published, it's not a violation of press freedom. He is the only one breaking the law. The Feds made the proper request, and a judge found that the request was legitimate and founded, and therefore signed it, and issued the supoena for the evidence. Unless there is a paperwork or procedural error, then he has no right to complain for being punished for not complying with the law. This isn't a case of the "Government is out to silence dissent and eliminate press freedom.". If it was, then we would all be in jail and not speaking freely in the papers or on the Internet. The vst majority of journalists comply with the law, yet *DON'T* wind up in prison. Hmmmmm.....

    Lets give an analogy: You are at a protest. I beat you up. Someone videotapes the entire scene - protest and beating. The person videotapig it then sells footage of the pro

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    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
  21. Re:The fact that he's a blogger is beside the poin by grimwell · · Score: 4, Informative

    >> Two words: Judith Miller
    >>
    >
    >well.... yeah.... same situation, basically. Like the OP says: when the judge says
    >"show up and testify", you show up and testify. Refusing to show up gets you jail
    >time.


    Not even close!

    Judith Miler is unique, the first American ever to be sent to jail based on facts she never saw and a federal appellate opinion she was not permitted to read.

    Testimonial privileges require a court to weigh the government's evidence as to why they need her testimony. Yet Judith Miller was tried, convicted and sentenced to prison based exclusively upon written evidence from witnesses whose identities and testimony were kept secret from her and her lawyers. They were given no opportunity to defend her against, question, or rebut the secret evidence the courts relied upon exclusively in convicting her. Indeed, a full eight pages of the D.C. Court of Appeals decision discussing and analyzing this secret evidence was redacted from the published opinion.
    Source


    Some Follow-up

    Feb. 7, 2006 Significant sections of a previously redacted judicial opinion were released Friday after an appellate court ruled that certain information about grand jury testimony in the CIA leak investigation is no longer secret.

    Dow Jones Inc. had filed a motion asking the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., to release eight redacted pages from Judge David S. Tatel's concurring opinion in a February 2005 court ruling that then-New York Times reporter Judith Miller and Time magazine's Matt Cooper must testify before a grand jury that was investigating who leaked the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame to the press.

    Judge Tatel, in one of three concurring opinions written by the three-judge panel, found that there is a common law privilege but that special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald had overcome it. Tatel explained how Miller's testimony was critical to the investigation, how the grand jury had exhausted all other available resources, and that the public interest favored compelling her testimony. In doing so, eight pages of his decision were sealed from the public to preserve grand jury secrecy and to protect classified information.

    The same three judges replied to Dow Jones' motion Friday and allowed large sections of Tatel's decision to be released, stating, in a decision written by the court as a whole, "we are satisfied here that there is no longer any need to keep significant portions of the eight pages under seal. Libby's indictment, now part of the public record, reveals some grand jury matters, and we see little purpose in protecting the secrecy of grand jury proceedings that are no longer secret."


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    If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy