| For Journalists
AP encourages all news organizations to
fight for freedom of information.
Getting answers is the essential work of a
free press in a free society. As the trend toward government
secrecy trickles down to the smallest town office and police
department, the need for a free press and for telling the
whole story has never been stronger.
Hear
from Tom Curley.
As part of its news mission, AP works in three ways to assure
that journalists have access to events, proceedings and information.
1. We assert our rights under federal and
state constitutions and FOI laws to obtain access to news.
Often we go to court to enforce those rights.
AP journalists regularly file applications for disclosure
of documents covered by FOI laws. When applications are unlawfully
denied, we appeal, and in some cases we sue to enforce our
legal rights.
AP leads or joins efforts by news organizations to oppose
the unlawful sealing of court proceedings, evidence, transcripts
and court documents. Where AP isn’t part of the original
effort, we often join “friend of the court” briefs
in support of access efforts.
2. We monitor compliance by government agencies
and officials with FOI laws and report infractions and shortcomings.
Where AP stories include information obtained by application
under FOI laws, or where information for the story should
have been disclosed under FOI laws but was not, AP reports
this as part of the story.
AP participates in, and often leads, FOI Audit projects in
which official compliance with FOI laws is systematically
tested and the results reported in a package of stories published
statewide.
3. We defend the statutory and constitutional
rights of journalists to do their work free of government
interference or intrusion.
AP opposes any subpoena demand for evidence that goes beyond
material actually published or otherwise represents an unreasonable
burden or intrusion on news operations.
AP vigorously protects, sometimes with litigation, any action
by police or other news agencies in which reporters are unlawfully
detained or interfered with, or news materials are seized.
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