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http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2924

Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR)
Action Alert

FEMA a Disaster for Freedom of the Press
Katrina victims “not allowed” to talk to media, reporter told

7/21/06

The Federal Emergency Management Agency prohibits journalists from having
unsupervised interviews with Hurricane Katrina victims who have been
relocated to FEMA trailer parks, according to a report in the Baton Rouge
Advocate (7/15/06).

“If a resident invites the media to the trailer, they have to be escorted
by a FEMA representative who sits in on the interview,” FEMA spokesperson
Rachel Rodi is quoted in the article. “That’s just a policy.”

The Advocate report, by reporter Sandy Davis, describes two separate
attempts to talk to people displaced by Katrina that were halted by the
intervention of a FEMA security guard. In the first incident, in a Morgan
City, Louisiana camp, an interview was interrupted by a guard who claimed
that residents of the camp are “not allowed” to talk to the media.

Dekotha Devall, whose New Orleans home was destroyed by the storm, was in
her FEMA-provided trailer telling the Advocate reporter of the hardships
of life in the camp when a security guard knocked on the door.

“You are not allowed to be here,” the guard is quoted as telling the
reporter. “Get out right now.” The guard reportedly called police to force
the journalist to leave the camp, and even prevented the reporter from
giving the interview subject a business card. “You will not give her a
business card,” the guard said. “She’s not allowed to have that.”

Later, at another FEMA camp in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, the reporter
attempted to talk to camp resident Pansy Ardeneaux through a chain link
fence when the same guard halted the interview. “You are not allowed to
talk to these people,” the guard told Ardeneaux. “Return to your trailer
now.” The reporter said she and an accompanying photographer were
“ordered...not to talk to anyone or take pictures.”

Earlier, an interview with displaced Katrina victims by Amy Goodman of
Democracy Now! (4/24/06) was halted by FEMA security guards.
Tape-recording the accounts of residents of the FEMA-run Renaissance
Village camp outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Goodman was approached by
FEMA-hired security guards from Corporate Security Solutions who told her
to “turn it off.” When Goodman explained that the resident had asked to be
interviewed, she was told, “He can't. That’s not his privilege.”

At first, the resident talking to Goodman was told by the guard, “You can
go get interviewed as long as it’s off post.” But when the resident
offered to continue the interview outside the camp, the guard said, “Yes,
you can be interviewed... if they had a FEMA representative with them, but
since they don’t and do not have an appointment....” Interviews are
allowed to proceed, the guard noted, when “they have the FEMA public
relations officer with them.”

In concluding the segment on her visit to the camp, Goodman reported, “As
we drove off of Renaissance Village, we were chased by the guards in golf
carts, who said they would be taking down our license plate and that we
couldn't return.”

Restrictions on the right of citizens to speak freely to the press without
government supervision are a clear violation of the 1st Amendment. “They
cannot deny media access,” Gregg Leslie, the legal defense director of the
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, told the Advocate, saying
that FEMA’s restrictions were “clearly unconstitutional … and definitely
not legal.” Referring to the requirement that interview subjects have a
FEMA escort, Leslie said, “That’s a standard for a prison, not a relief
park and a temporary shelter.”

Timothy Matte, the mayor of Morgan City, expressed surprise that FEMA was
enforcing limits on the free speech of disaster victims. “You would think
the people would have the same freedom there as everyone else has,” he
said.


ACTION: FEMA’s website urges citizens to report “allegations of civil
liberties or civil rights abuses” to the Department of Homeland Security’s
inspector general, who is Richard L. Skinner.


CONTACT:
Inspector General Richard L. Skinner
Department of Homeland Security
Washington, DC 20528
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

See Baton Rouge Advocate: “Hundreds of FEMA Trailers Stand Empty”
(7/15/06) by Sandy Dennis
http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/3360021.html

See Democracy Now!: “FEMA's Dirty Little Secret: A Rare Look Inside the
Renaissance Village Trailer Park, Home to Over 2,000 Hurricane Katrina
Evacuees” (4/24/06) by Amy Goodman
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/24/1346217

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