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First Amendment

Journalism Is Not a Crime, Even When It Offends the Government

Julian Assange and Priscilla Villarreal were both arrested for publishing information that government officials wanted to conceal.

Jacob Sullum | 5.1.2024 12:01 AM

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Julian Assange and Priscilla Villarreal | Victoria Jones/Zuma Press/Newscom; Saenz Photography/FIRE
Julian Assange and Priscilla Villarreal (Victoria Jones/Zuma Press/Newscom; Saenz Photography/FIRE)

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been imprisoned in London for five years, while Texas journalist Priscilla Villarreal was only briefly detained at the Webb County Jail. But both were arrested for publishing information that government officials wanted to conceal.

Assange and Villarreal argue that criminalizing such conduct violates the First Amendment. In both cases, the merits of that claim have been obscured by the constitutionally irrelevant question of who qualifies as a "real" journalist.

Assange, an Australian citizen, is fighting extradition to the United States based on a federal indictment that charges him with violating the Espionage Act by obtaining and publishing classified documents that former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning leaked in 2010. He has already spent about as much time behind bars as federal prosecutors say he would be likely to serve if convicted.

President Joe Biden says he is "considering" the Australian government's request to drop the case against Assange. But mollifying a U.S. ally is not the only reason to reconsider this prosecution, which poses a grave threat to freedom of the press by treating common journalistic practices as crimes.

All but one of the 17 charges against Assange relate to obtaining or disclosing "national defense information," which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Yet all the news organizations that published stories based on the confidential State Department cables and military files that Manning leaked are guilty of the same crimes.

More generally, obtaining and publishing classified information is the bread and butter of reporters who cover national security. John Demers, then head of the Justice Department's National Security Division, implicitly acknowledged that reality in 2019, when he assured reporters they needn't worry about the precedent set by this case because Assange is "no journalist."

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit took a similarly dim view of Villarreal in January, when it dismissed her lawsuit against the Laredo prosecutors and police officers who engineered her 2017 arrest. They claimed she had violated Section 39.06(c) of the Texas Penal Code, an obscure law that makes it a felony to solicit or obtain nonpublic information from a government official with "intent to obtain a benefit."

The cops said Villarreal committed that crime by asking Laredo police officer Barbara Goodman to confirm information about a public suicide and a fatal car crash. As interpreted by the Laredo Police Department, Section 39.06(c) sweeps even more broadly than the Espionage Act, making a felon out of any reporter who seeks information that is deemed exempt from disclosure under the Texas Public Information Act.

Gliding over the alarming implications of making it a crime for reporters to ask questions, the 5th Circuit dismissed the idea that Villarreal is "a martyr for the sake of journalism." The majority opinion by Judge Edith Jones dripped with contempt for Villarreal, an independent, uncredentialed journalist who posts her unfiltered reports on Facebook instead of publishing vetted and edited stories in a "mainstream, legitimate" news outlet.

Seemingly oblivious to what quotidian news reporting across the country entails, Jones faulted Villarreal for relying on a "backchannel source" and for "capitaliz[ing] on others' tragedies to propel her reputation and career." But like the judgment that Assange is "no journalist," such criticism fundamentally misconstrues freedom of the press, which applies to anyone who engages in mass communication.

The 5th Circuit's decision provoked four dissents authored or joined by seven judges, and it is not hard to see why. "If the First Amendment means anything," Judge James C. Ho wrote, "surely it means that citizens have the right to question or criticize public officials without fear of imprisonment."

In a petition it filed on Villarreal's behalf last week, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression urges the U.S. Supreme Court to vindicate that right. "Villarreal went to jail for basic journalism," it notes. "Whatever one may make of Villarreal's journalistic ethics, they are of no constitutional significance."

© Copyright 2024 by Creators Syndicate Inc.

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NEXT: Alabama Woman Arrested for Refusing To Give a Cop Her I.D.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

First AmendmentFree PressFree SpeechJournalismMediaJulian AssangeEspionage ActDepartment of JusticeProsecutorsGovernment secrecyCriminal JusticePolice AbuseTexasSupreme CourtFoundation for Individual Rights and ExpressionCivil Liberties
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  1. mad.casual   1 year ago

    OK, this stupid trolling is getting to be retarded.

    Assange disclosed information from the military about its own actions. Villarreal disclosed information about other people that the police department wasn’t at liberty to disclose. There’s a case to be had that Villarreal shouldn’t be as guilty as the officer that made the disclosure, but the comparison to Assange is effectively saying “If it’s OK for Assange to doxx military personnel then it’s OK for Villarreal to doxx whomever the police want doxxed.”

    To say nothing of the retardation that keeps getting skipped over about how she’s innocent because the law is unduly vague but the officers enforcing the law are civilly liable because the law is plainly and clear and they deliberately misinterpreted it.

    The fact that Reason does these one-sided promotion of FIRE/ACLU 2.0 activist litigation du jour pieces repeatedly across all kinds of criminal and free speech cases just continues to corrode libertarianism, reason, and Reason [drink] and ultimately, any recognizable notion of justice or free speech that any/all of the above claim to support.

    1. mad.casual   1 year ago

      Laredo police officer Barbara Goodman to confirm information about a public suicide and a fatal car crash

      And, true to dishonest social journalist activist form, Reason/FIRE change the story from “just asking *a* question” to asking for confirmation on two separate issues, which not only doesn’t make sense (How/why was Villarreal confirming information she didn’t have and/or wouldn’t know the police would have unless she was a witness and/or materially involved?) but also refutes the previous "*a* question" story.

      Villarreal was only briefly detained at the Webb County Jail.
      …
      We’re not talking about whistleblower stuff or private details about investigations.

      And there you have it. Once again, by Reason and FIRE’s own terms. We’re talking about trivial amounts of detention for a law that actually was vague and that Villarreal and FIRE are trying to spin up into a 1A crisis for a payout from taxpayers and Reason is trying to spin as libertarianism.

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        At some point you're just going to have to accept that Reason has realized that we will never build a party of individual liberty by trying to please Republicans. As much as you want to the party to be an auxiliary to the Republican Party that hasn't gotten us anywhere for 5 decades. So now the articles are going for the moderate Democrats that aren't on board with extreme leftism.

        Sure, to someone slightly to the right of Ghengis Khan these articles seem to go too far to the left. So what? I've got no fucks to give. My fucks have all fucked off. They've fucking fled for fucking parts unknown. So keep crying that the Libertarian Party no longer panders to right wing ideology.

        1. Sevo   1 year ago

          Here's a list of Libertarian Party achievements:
          -
          -
          -
          -
          -
          -
          They stopped getting my money years ago when it became obvious that the money was used to fund get-togethers.

          1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

            That's because we've been trying to recruit from the right. That is obviously not working so why not try to recruit from the left? They already agree on drug legalization, abortion rights and sexual liberty. We've tried for 5 decades to get Republicans to agree to those three things with zero progress. Time to try something different.

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      The fact that Reason does these one-sided promotion of FIRE/ACLU 2.0

      While ignoring other more clear violations of DoJ targeting journalists such as J6 journalists, PV journalists, Catherine Herrige, etc.

      1. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

        Do the people you listed promote the narrative of the marxist revolution? If not, why would the writers at Reason care.

      2. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        Jesus Fucking Christ on a God Damed Pogo Stick. Can you get over the January 6th bullshit. It was a peaceful protest of right wing folks sticking to the first Amendment.

        UNTIL some asshat got his picture taken in Nancy Peloisi's fucking chair! That isn't peaceful protesting and it doesn't matter if the doors were opened for them and the gawd damned FBI conned them into going inside. Anyone with an IQ higher than their fucking shoe size should know doing that is the stupidest thing they could do.

        Those morons fucked EVERYTHING up. They are morons who let the fucking FBI lead them around like fucking show dogs. Get. The. Fuck. Over. It.

        1. Sevo   1 year ago

          "...UNTIL some asshat got his picture taken in Nancy Peloisi’s fucking chair!..."

          Oh NOOOOS!
          Was he *violently* sitting in that chair?
          Get fucked with a barb-wire wrapped broomstick, slaver.

          1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

            Sure, every American has the right to walk unescorted nto any federal building while yelling slogans. You should try it yourself. Just walk right into the White House and have it out with Biden. It must be legal since there is no reason to charge the Jan 6th people with any crimes.

    3. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      Not to mention the fact that Villarreal is suing the government for damages, not fighting extradition on criminal charges. The cases are vaguely related. Must be a slow news day?

  2. Minadin   1 year ago

    The major crime in journalism here is . . .

    1. mad.casual   1 year ago

      Yeah, three administrations have been pursuing a non-citizen abroad for reporting (already publicly available) information attained from the government about its own actions, effectively if not literally imprisoning him for years; but the real threat to journalism and Western democracy is a Facebook-famous muckraker from Bordertown, TX who was briefly detained because she was colluding with an officer and might not get a payout for doxxing suicide and crime victims before police could notify their family.

      1. rloquitur   1 year ago

        Rights are rights. Hers were violated.

        1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

          Oh fucking Right Wingers love the fucking cops and can never see them in a bad light. They only believe in a limited number of rights and all of them go away when a cop shows up. I'd a cop raped one of their significant others they'd be proud a cop chose their loved one for such an honor.

          1. Sevo   1 year ago

            Care to render that in English?

            1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

              How about fuck you. Was that clear enough?

  3. AT   1 year ago

    lmao, you seriously did not just compare Julian Assange to Facebook Karen.

    1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      Lots of shit can be compared to lots of other shit, in a free nation.

      For example, AT and Adolf Hitler both breathed oxygen! And wrote and said similar shit ass well!

      1. AT   1 year ago

        SQURL and Adolf did too! Oh my!

      2. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        You're not wrong. Hitler loved dogs and small children. I'm pretty sure AT loves him some doggies. It may be the one thing he disapproves of cops killing. Thus, Hitler.

        1. Minadin   1 year ago

          Biden loves small children . . .

          1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

            At least our Governor shot her dog proving she doesn't have anything in common with Hitler.

            1. AT   1 year ago

              I think that's my favorite story of the year.

              What a fake she is. And how revealing it is of the image they stereotype the right with. This is why I loathe the Trump/MAGA bloc. They are such con artists.

              The only difference between them and the left, to be sure - is that the right tries to fleece everyone about it. Leftists, otoh, tend to be flat out proudly and unapologetically evil.

  4. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    That’s about enough with this self righteous bitch.

    1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      If ONLY she would openly admire and worshit Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer, then she would NOT be a self-righteous bitch!

    2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

      She is the poster child for “Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair!”

      She might be Tony.

  5. JeremyR   1 year ago

    The problem is, what is journalism? Is it stealing government files (or encouraging them to be stolen) and publishing them, causing damage to national security and getting spies killed? Especially while hiding in a foreign enemy's land?

    Is it doxing random citizens that the journalist doesn't like?

    Journalists would publish the government's actions, but not expose any data that would put people at risk

    1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

      Are you sure of that? I assume Washington Post is considered "press" by most inside the beltway.

      And that's just the first example that came to mind.

      Press are petty tyrants, they spin stories to what they want them to be, they muckrack, and they always have.

    2. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

      A government with that many secrets, and an obsession with protecting them, is a government you can't trust.

  6. Stuck in California   1 year ago

    Have I been shadowbanned?

    My comment wasn't posted. Long one, too. And I swear, not once did I say pigfucker in front of Jesus.

    Oh well. Just pretend it was the most insightful thing ever. I'm not gonna' rewrite it.

    1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

      Guess not. Still posting.

    2. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      The simple fix to glitchy software is to write your comment on your PC (use Win-Word, Notebook, etc.) where YOU have it saved, THEN post it to the application such as Reason.com!

      Or AT LEAST simply copy it to your paste buffer before you post!!!

      But YOU are SUCH a Fart Smeller that you can NOT learn from people smarter and-or more self-disciplined than you, because you have them muted! Arrogant self-righteous cuntsorevaturd, just like the udder cuntsorevaturds!

  7. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

    It's journalism for a foreign national to aid and abet a traitor in obtaining and disseminating classified materials?

    Fuck Assange and fuck Manning.

    1. Sevo   1 year ago

      "It’s journalism for a foreign national to aid and abet a traitor..."

      Please define "traitor".

      1. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

        Bradley Manning, stealing classified materials with the aid of, and for the purpose of giving it to, a foreign party.

        Simple.

  8. Number 2   1 year ago

    “President Joe Biden says he is “considering” the Australian government’s request to drop the case against Assange.”

    Excuse me, but is this the same Australia that, according to a recent Reason article, wants to censor the Internet worldwide?

    It would be fitting if Biden told them to take a hike.

    1. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

      What would be fitting is if Australia has teams of politically embarrassing private communications reported by a journalist with a leaker from No Such Agency and demand they do nothing about it.

  9. Real American   1 year ago

    it was Assange's efforts to obtain the documents which is why he was indicted. He wasn't merely the recipient of the information like other journalists who published the same info. He actively assisted the theft, which is why the government is trying to hold him criminally liable.

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      ...Is the right answer.

      Assange made his own bed, and he sure made it good. Self-imprisoning himself for seven years, then being held in jail for five more while challenging extradition, simply because he "feared" being given the death penalty in the US.

      That will never happen, and it was never going to happen; it was just the excuse he used to justify (to himself/to the world) hiding from justice. The only charge likely to stick is the computer hacking charge--and he's already imprisoned himself longer than the expected sentence for that crime. Considering the circumstances, he really shouldn't get credit for "time served", but he probably will, and a deal will be offered.

      Assange will be free to "do journalism" once again, real soon. I can't wait.

      1. Sevo   1 year ago

        Fuck off and die, slaver.

        1. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

          Bradley/Chelsea, is that you? You got off easy. Should have been a firing squad.

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