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ABFFE Seeks Bookstores to Host Reporters' Talks
November 01, 2005
The American Booksellers Foundation for Free
Expression (ABFFE) is organizing a series of bookstore programs to educate the
public about the importance of confidential sources for a free press. As part
of this effort, ABFFE is urging booksellers to open their stores to reporters
who want to speak about attempts to force them to reveal their confidential
sources.
"From Watergate and the Pentagon Papers
to Iran-Contra and Abu Ghraib, journalists have used information from confidential
sources to reveal illegal conduct by our government," ABFFE President Chris
Finan said. "It is vital to our democracy that we protect the people who
are the sources for the exposes that are reported in newspapers, magazines,
and books."
Bookstores interested in hosting an investigative
reporter should contact Finan, who is working with the MLRC Institute, a not-for-profit
educational organization focused on the media and the First Amendment, which has received
a grant from the McCormick Tribune Foundation to educate the public on this
issue. "The MLRC Institute will work hard to find someone for every store," noted Finan. "However, it may
take some time to identify the reporters, and it may not be possible to find
someone in every place."
In addition to discussing stories that could not have been
published without the use of confidential sources, the
reporter will distribute and discuss material about the history of the fight
over confidential sources, which dates back to efforts to imprison colonial
journalists John Peter Zenger and Benjamin Franklin's brother, James.
Finan noted that, although prosecutors and
journalists have long battled over the confidentiality of sources, there has been a large
increase in the number of subpoenas issued to reporters in recent years.
Booksellers who are interested in participating should contact Finan at chris@abffe.com
or (212) 587-4025.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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