Press outlets protest Manning trial secrecy
By JOSH GERSTEIN | 
9/4/12 7:39 PM EDT 
More than 30 news outlets and media organizations lodged an 
official protest Tuesday against secrecy in the court-martial of Pvt 
Bradley Manning, the Army intelligence analyst accusing of leaking 
hundreds of thousands of military reports and diplomatic cables to 
WikiLeaks.
The amicus brief filed with the military's highest court, the Court 
of Appeals of the Armed Forces, supports a request from the Center for 
Constitutional Rights to allow public access to motions, briefs, written 
rulings and the docket in Manning's court-martial.
While hearings in Manning's case have been in large part public, the 
motions and briefs the prosecution and defense are arguing about are not 
available from the court. So, those watching the arguments often have 
trouble understanding precisely what the lawyers are arguing about.
"This Court should find that such an arrangement is 
unconstitutional," lawyers Gregg Leslie and Kristen Rasmussen wrote in 
the brief, which was joined by POLITICO and parent company Allbritton 
Communications Co. "The inability to view court documents filed in 
connection with a particular judicial proceeding burdens the news 
media’s constitutionally protected right to collect and disseminate the 
news and severely curtails journalists’ ability to do their jobs 
effectively."
The brief (posted here) also notes that in a tough economic environment, 
documents may be 
essential to journalists' ability to report on the case, particularly 
one as drawn out as that of Manning, who was arrested in May 2010 and 
currently has a trial date in next January.
"Public court records, namely the various legal arguments and 
requests by parties and their counsel contained in the documents, enable 
journalists to tell the full story, despite the fact that deadline 
pressures or shrinking news staffs may drastically limit their ability 
to attend a lengthy judicial proceeding in its entirety," the media 
brief says.
Others signing onto the brief included The Associated Press, Atlantic Media, 
Dow Jones, Gannett, Hearst, CNN, McClatchy, The New York Times, 
The New York Daily News, Reuters, the Washington Post, The Tribune Co. 
and The Washington Post.
Military prosecutors have urged the court to reject the request for 
direct access to the court-martial filings. Prosecutors say the public 
can seek to access the records through the Freedom of Information Act, 
although that process is almost always untimely and the military has 
flatly rejected past request for Manning related records.
Manning's defense counsel David Coombs has published some filings on 
his blog, but the prosecution and the judge have forced him to delete 
the substance of the prosecution's argument along with the names of 
virtually all individuals other than Manning mentioned in the documents.
The brief also points out an odd irony: while legal filings in the 
miltiary commissions trying alleged Al Qaeda members are — after 
significant lobbying by the media — published on a military-run website, 
filings in the highly newsworthy court martial of an American soldier 
are unavailable to the press and public through official channels.
Court filings in federal civilian court cases are almost always 
immediately and directly available to the public and press through an 
electronic docketing system. The Supreme Court has found a common-law 
right of access to court records and many courts have found a First 
Amendment right to such records in most circumstances.
Military courts have recognized a defendant's constitutional right to a public 
court-martial since at least the 1980s, the media brief says. 
And the Army Court of Criminal Appeals found a "qualified" First 
Amendment right of access to court-martial exhibits in 1998.
In March, media groups sent Defense Department General Counsel Jeh 
Johnson a letter seeking access to the Manning court-martial filings. 
Johnson, who was instrumental in setting up online access to the 
Guantanamo military commission filings, has not responded to the letter.

http://www.politico.com/blogs/under-the-radar/2012/09/press-outlets-protest-manning-trial-secrecy-134398.html


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