A
reporter for a cable-access show in Chicago was ordered by a federal
magistrate judge last week to hand over every video recording he made
documenting anti-war protests from 2003 to 2005.
The
reporter, Martin Conlisk, was subpoenaed by the city of Chicago during
the course of its defense of a civil rights lawsuit filed by a local
man who was arrested during a March 2005 anti-war protest. The
protester, Andy Thayer, sued the city in 2007, alleging that his
constitutional rights were violated by the arrest and claiming that the
city’s policy of sending cops in riot gear to protests was a means to
suppress speech.
Conlisk
had been on the street corner filming the day Thayer was arrested and
had testified in the man's disorderly conduct criminal trial.
But
in the lawsuit, the city’s subpoena requested much more than the video
from the day of Thayer’s arrest. It ordered Conlisk to hand over all
tapes and material that documented the planning and implementation of
all anti-war protests in the city from March 2003 to the present,
including everything on his computer hard drive. It also ordered him to
testify about those videos.
In
the April 30 ruling, the magistrate judge, Arlander Keys, refused to
apply a reporter’s privilege, holding that courts in the Seventh
Circuit have “rejected the notion of a federal reporter’s privilege.”
He
wrote further that neither the First Amendment nor the Federal Rules of
Evidence supported any privilege. He also refused to apply Illinois'
shield law because the case was brought in federal court.
The
court analyzed the subpoena under general procedural rules that allow
the quashing of all subpoenas if they are found to be burdensome,
irrelevant, unnecessary or overbroad.
The
court disagreed with Conlisk’s arguments that the subpoena was
burdensome because it was an intrusion into his work product that would
impinge upon his credibility as a reporter.
“Absent
a showing of actual burden, the Court is not inclined to allow Mr.
Conlisk to avoid enforcement of the subpoena with a backdoor attempt to
impose a privilege,” Keys wrote.
Additionally,
the subpoena was deemed relevant to a determination about the city’s
policy of sending police officers to protests, since Conlisk has
documented many of the city’s protests over the years.
The
court did, however, find the subpoena slightly overbroad and limited
what Conlisk had to turn over. Instead of providing everything he
gathered in the last six years, the court ordered the reporter to turn
over his tapes from 2003 up until the day Thayer was arrested in 2005.
Additionally, the court said Conlisk did not have to turn over his hard
drive.
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