On Not Naming Names
The reporter was given a choice: Identify his confidential sources or go to jail. He chose jail
- By Myron Farber
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
On that day, though, what mattered most to me was that I was released, the court having suspended the criminal contempt charge with Jascalevich's acquittal. I was free to go, and I was glad to go. I like to think I could have withstood much more than the 40 days I served—lasted however long it took—but I'll never know.
In 1980, after examining cases at other hospitals, the New Jersey Board of Medical Examiners found Jascalevich guilty of "gross malpractice or gross neglect and lack of good moral character" and revoked his license to practice medicine. He returned to Argentina, where he died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1984 at age 57.
In 1982, Gov. Brendan T. Byrne of New Jersey pardoned the Times and me of our convictions for criminal contempt and returned $101,000 of the $286,000 the Times had paid in fines. Our purpose, Byrne said, had not been "to insult or frustrate the judicial process, but to stand on a noble, if sometimes imperfect, principle."
This ordeal came back to me, of course, in July when Norman Pearlstine, editor in chief of Time Inc., turned over to the government Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper's confidential notes in a case involving the exposure of a CIA agent, Valerie Plame, after the Supreme Court had declined to hear Time's appeal. At that point, Pearlstine told reporters, he concluded that "we are not above the law and we have to behave the way ordinary citizens do." He also said he would have given up the Times' information in 1978.
I'm thankful that back then Pearlstine wasn't at the Times, where executive editor A. M. Rosenthal and publisher A. O. Sulzberger were as stalwart defenders of the First Amendment, and of their ink-stained wretches, as could be found in any newsroom. Sulzberger made a public statement of unequivocal support. And Rosenthal, who was profoundly concerned about a tremendous increase in subpoenas of reporters in the 1970s, told me not to give a moment's thought to the fines the newspaper was paying. "Every penny the Times has ever made, it has made because of the First Amendment," he said. "And if we have to, we'll spend every last penny for the First Amendment."
I believe I did the right thing in going to jail in 1978—for my own self-respect, for the finest traditions of the press and, most critically, for the public interest, which is best served when reporters are free to do their best work. I say this humbly. When I was a boy, I read a biography of Joe DiMaggio called Lucky to Be a Yankee. That's the way I felt: lucky to be a reporter for the New York Times. I worked hard to meet its standards, and I’m happy to be judged by the stories I wrote for the paper—on Riverdell or any other subject. It was inevitable that I would have to take information in confidence occasionally. Every experienced journalist knows that's the way it is, and that without such sources many stories could not be told, or told as well. Are there abuses by reporters? Sure, just as there are lapses in any human endeavor. They should be aired, and they can be minimized.
But having lived the life, I'm not willing to join the current chorus of press bashers. There's good reason why virtually every state today provides some protection for reporters, just as they and the federal judiciary accord testimonial privileges to spouses, lawyers, doctors, priests and others.
My case prompted a strengthening of the New Jersey shield law for journalists, and in 1980, the state Supreme Court held 6 to 1 that the Sixth Amendment could not override that law simply "upon a defendant's unsubstantiated assertion" that a reporter's information could help him. "To a confidential source, to all confidential sources," Chief Justice Robert N. Wilentz wrote, "the promise of silence is absolute, and any breach is a total one."
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Comments (3)
Character is not always written into a script. Bravo to these heroic reporters.
Mark Nejmeh
Posted by Mark Nejmeh on November 4,2011 | 11:10 AM
See http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Guy_W._Calissi for a newly-created bio on Wikipedia.
Posted by Alan Sohn on October 19,2009 | 11:38 AM
Is a bio of Guy W Calissi available.
Posted by John J Koch on August 19,2009 | 03:22 PM