HOUSE BILL REPORT
HB 2452
As Reported by House Committee On:
Judiciary
Title: An act relating to a privilege from compelled testimony for members of the news media.
Brief Description: Protecting the news media from being compelled to testify in legal proceedings.
Sponsors: Representatives Kessler, Armstrong, Clibborn, Priest, Nixon, Blake, Hunt, Morrell, Grant, Newhouse, Dickerson, Kagi, Ericksen, Ericks, Wood, Upthegrove, Ormsby, Roberts and O'Brien; by request of Attorney General.
Brief History:
Judiciary: 1/27/06, 2/2/06 [DPS].
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill |
|
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 9 members: Representatives Lantz, Chair; Williams, Vice Chair; Priest, Ranking Minority Member; Rodne, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Campbell, Kirby, Serben, Springer and Wood.
Minority Report: Without recommendation. Signed by 1 member: Representative Flannigan, Vice Chair.
Staff: Edie Adams (786-7180).
Background:
The judiciary has inherent power to compel witnesses to appear and testify in judicial
proceedings so that the court will receive all relevant evidence. However, the common law
and statutory law recognize exceptions to compelled testimony in some circumstances,
including testimonial or evidentiary privileges. Privileges are generally disfavored in the
common law because they impede the court's truth-finding function.
Privileges are recognized when certain classes of relationships or communications within
those relationships are deemed of such importance that they should be protected. Four
criteria must be satisfied to find a privilege under the common law: (1) the communication
must be made in confidence; (2) the element of confidentiality must be essential to the
relationship; (3) the relationship is one that should be sedulously fostered; and (4) the injury
of disclosing the communication must be greater than the benefit of disclosure.
Washington has not enacted a statutory reporter privilege, but the Washington Supreme Court
has recognized a common law qualified privilege for reporters against compelled disclosure
of confidential source information in both civil and criminal cases. To overcome the
privilege, a party must show that: (1) the claim is meritorious; (2) the information sought is
necessary or critical to the cause of action or defense pleaded; and (3) the party made a
reasonable effort to obtain the information by other means.
Thirty one states and the District of Columbia have enacted statutory reporter shield laws.
There is wide variation among these laws: some states provide protection only with respect
to confidential sources, either by providing a qualified or absolute privilege; some provide
qualified protection for both confidential sources and the reporter's work product; and some
provide an absolute privilege for both sources and work product. In addition, state laws vary
with respect to whether and how they apply the privilege in different types of proceedings
(e.g., civil versus criminal) and the showing that must be made to overcome the privilege
where it is qualified.
At the federal level, Congress has not adopted a reporter privilege law, although a number of
bills have been introduced on the subject. Most federal circuit courts, including the Ninth
Circuit, have recognized some form of qualified reporter privilege, either deriving from the
common law or the First Amendment.
Summary of Substitute Bill:
A privilege from compelled testimony or disclosure of information is established for
members of the news media. In addition, a privilege from compelled disclosure of certain
information is established for a non-news media party under certain circumstances.
The news media has an absolute privilege from being compelled to testify, produce, or
disclose the identity of a source of news or information, or any information that would tend to
identify the source, if the source has a reasonable expectation of confidentiality.
The news media has a qualified privilege from being compelled to testify, produce, or
disclose any news or information obtained or prepared in the course of gathering, receiving,
or processing news or information for potential communication to the public. This qualified
privilege does not apply to physical evidence of a crime. The qualified privilege may be
overcome if the court finds the following factors are present:
A non-news media party is protected from compelled disclosure of records, information, or
other communications relating to business transactions with the news media, where the
purpose of seeking the records is to discover the identity of a source or information protected
from disclosure under the news media privilege. The news media must be given prior notice
and an opportunity to be heard when records relating to a non-news media party's business
transactions with the news media are sought. Prior notice is not required where the news
media is the target of a criminal investigation and prior notice would pose a clear and
substantial threat to the investigation.
The news media privilege is not waived by the publication or dissemination by the news
media of the news or information or any portion of the news or information. The fact and
content of a publication may be established by judicial notice.
"News media" is defined to mean any of the following persons or entities:
"News media" does not include a governmental entity, or its officers or employees while engaged in official duties.
Substitute Bill Compared to Original Bill:
The original bill did not exclude physical evidence of a crime from the privilege and did not
contain the provision allowing a court to take judicial notice of the fact and content of a
publication. The original bill's definition of "news media" did not specifically reference the
Internet, did not include persons who are about to earn a substantial portion of their
livelihood in the news media, and did not specifically exclude governmental entities and their
officers and employees. In addition, the original bill contained a provision stating that
information protected by the privilege is inadmissible in a proceeding.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Not requested.
Effective Date of Substitute Bill: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: This is a timely and necessary bill to extend clear rights and protections to
the news media. The free flow of information and the functions of investigative journalism
are critical to our democracy and critical to the role that the press plays in keeping the
government and corporate power honest. This important role is deserving of the privilege
created in this bill.
The bill advances our case law by providing an absolute privilege for confidential sources.
We don't want to create a chilling effect on the ability of the press to obtain information for
the public through a fear of having to divulge confidential source information. A qualified
privilege creates an insufficient relationship to promote the free flow of information. The
news media are cautious right now in how they use confidential sources. We don't want the
lack of an absolute privilege to prevent people from coming forward with information that is
vital for the public to have.
This bill also protects a journalist's work product with a qualified privilege that may only be
overcome by a strict four-part test. The privilege for work product is important in preserving
the public's trust of the news media. The news media should not be in the position of being
perceived by the public as either a tool for private civil litigants or as an investigatory arm of
the police. That can happen if reporters are called in to testify in civil or criminal
proceedings. In addition, codifying a qualified work product privilege will enable the news
media, attorneys, and judges to more expeditiously deal with news media subpoenas without
the current time-consuming and expensive process of briefing the court.
This bill provides greater protections for the rights of the press and journalists than what they
have today. However, some sections of the bill are of concern and could be strengthened.
The work product protections in the bill are more ephemeral than real. The basic protection
the work product provision seeks to create is undone by the highly subjective test that applies
to it. Journalists need to have the ability to talk with and interact with individuals and groups
of people who need confidentiality without the fear that the journalist will be turned into a
government spy. Although the bill protects the identity of a source, notes might be seized
and the identity of the source penetrated. The parties aren't going to know whether the work
product will include highly relevant material until the court takes a look at them.
Testimony Against: There should not be an absolute privilege for confidential sources as
created in this bill. The privilege should be qualified so that the court can be the arbiter of
the necessary balancing of the interests involved. Privileges are not favored in the law
because they limit the information that gets to the fact finder and this impedes the search for
truth and the ability to get to justice. None of the federal courts, or the United States
Supreme Court, or the Washington Supreme Court has granted an absolute privilege. An
absolute privilege substitutes the journalist's opinion for that of the judge as to whether the
information is critical. The courts are entrusted to make these kinds of decisions all the time.
The work that journalists do is very important, but the privilege needs to be qualified so that
there is judicial oversight. There are two interests at stake: the interest of the public to know
what is going on; and the interest of protecting an innocent person from a wrongful
conviction. If the press has information that could exculpate a defendant, the accused has the
right to that information.
The bill should not create an absolute shield for matters involving the private sector. There
might be policy reasons for having an absolute privilege for sources in issues relating to the
public sector. There have been egregious violations involving disclosure of proprietary
personal and financial information from private companies, and this absolute privilege would
protect the persons who engaged in that behavior.
This bill doesn't meet the real needs of journalists. Journalists need legislation that provides
for the free flow of information. This bill isn't about protecting journalists, it is about
keeping the information to the public free and open. The bill's definition of "news media"
contains an income-based test that could put freelancers and part-time journalists at risk of
not being protected. Under this bill, journalists will still have to face substantial subpoena
risks and will still be drawn into court to defend themselves and their work product.
Confidential source issues are a small percentage of what journalists deal with on a daily
basis. The real concern is with a journalist's work product. Almost all of the requests for
information are for work product and in almost every case what the parties are seeking is
contained in the information that was published. Work product requests are just an attempt
to draw the news media into private litigation. A neutral press is vital to society and being
drawn into the legal disputes of others can seriously harm that neutrality.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative Kessler, prime sponsor; Mark Allen,
Washington State Association of Broadcasters; Bryan Johnson, KOMO Radio - TV; Don
Satterberg, King County Prosecuting Attorney; Rowland Thompson, Allied Daily
Newspaper; and Greg Overstreet, Office of the Attorney General.
(Opposed) Kirsten Kendrick, Marcus Donner, and Stacey Walters, Western Washington
Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists; Amy Muth, Washington Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers, Washington Defenders Association; William McCartney, United
States Automobile Association and Dave McEachran, Whatcom County Prosecuting
Attorney.