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Vanessa
Leggett:
Defying court subpoenas in the nameof
the First Amendment
Keeping tight-lipped
about confidential sources landed Vanessa Leggett six months in
jail

Courtesy of The Houston Chronicle
Vanessa Leggett during
an August 8, 2001 interview in the federal detention facility
in downtown Houston. She would be in prison for another
five months.
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By Sue Ellison
Vanessa Leggett had hoped to have a contract for her true-crime
book by the end of 2001. She had spent four years researching the
high-profile 1997 murder-for-hire of the wife of Houston millionaire
bookie Robert Angleton. Instead, the petite aspiring freelance true-crime
writer celebrated the New Year in an 8x10-foot federal detention
center cinderblock cell, in defiance of a federal grand jury subpoena
for all of her investigative research.
Released in early January, Leggett holds the dubious distinction
for the longest incarceration — 168 days — of writers
and reporters jailed in the United States while claiming the journalist’s
privilege of media confidentiality.
Although a Texas state jury acquitted Robert Angleton of the murder
in 1998, a federal grand jury investigating his activities wanted
all the information Leggett had gained about his wife’s murder.
When she was arrested in July, Leggett said from jail: “I
am not a martyr and I want to see justice done. But I am doing what
I must to protect the public’s interest in a free press.”
Although she was free, her ordeal had not ended.
A succeeding grand jury indicted Angleton for murder conspiracy,
and the government claimed Leggett as a witness. Vowing to maintain
her “journalist integrity,” Leggett said she’d
face further jail time rather than divulge confidential sources.
Unsuccessful in three lower federal court appeals to overturn her
contempt citation, she learned in mid-April that the U.S. Supreme
Court declined to hear her appeal.
Leggett’s defiance has drawn unprecedented support from journalists
around the world, who vociferously protested Leggett’s jailing
as a blatant disregard for the First Amendment and international
conventions for freedom of the press. They have appealed to the
U.S. Department of Justice, filed friend-of-the-court briefs and
announced their displeasure in countless media and Internet Web
sites.
How is it that the American government, whose successful function
relies in part on freedom of the press, not only allowed but participated
in this threat to a fundamental constitutional privilege? The threat
lies in the Justice Department’s formidable discretion in
determining which writers are journalists entitled to First Amendment
protections.
Leggett, 34, says she has always been fascinated with murder cases
and was once a licensed private investigator. Later, she taught
police courses at the University of Houston-Downtown and wrote a
chapter for an FBI Academy training manual.
In 1997, Leggett’s interest was diverted to the Angleton
murder. Doris Angleton, 46, was shot to death shortly after she
initiated divorce proceedings. According to Leggett, Doris threatened
to expose her husband’s questionably gained fortune. The state
charged Robert, 48, with hiring his brother, Roger Angleton, to
kill Doris.
In the ensuing four years, Leggett conducted interviews in six
states and taped more than 40 hours of conversations with Roger
in the Harris County, Texas, jail. Roger committed suicide in his
cell in February 1998 and left a note exonerating Robert. Despite
the note, Robert was still tried for the murder.
Leggett risked arrest by ignoring a subpoena to appear before the
state grand jury investigating the crime. But, after being advised
that Roger’s death erased her confidentiality agreement with
him, she negotiated a deal to loan tapes to the prosecution she
said clearly implicated Robert. Prosecutors did not introduce the
tapes as evidence, and Robert was acquitted. The Los Angeles Times
quoted prosecuting attorney Lyn McClellan as saying, “There
was nothing in them that was earth shattering.”
Never called to testify, Leggett admitted to being “stunned”
at Robert’s acquittal.
The Harris County district attorney referred the case to the FBI.
If that agency’s ensuing investigation of Robert — supposedly
for tax evasion and money laundering — could prove Angleton
crossed state lines to hire his brother, the federal government
could claim jurisdiction and retry him for the murder.
The FBI offered Leggett a confidential informant contract in November
2000 to buy her research and control its publication. She refused
on the basis of media confidentiality. The federal grand jury investigating
the case served her a subpoena. Leggett testified before the grand
jury in December, on the FBI’s promise she would not be asked
to reveal confidential sources.

Courtesy of www. cfif.org
While Legget was in
jail, the Center for Individual Freedom supported her defense
by selling bumpers stickers though its Web site.
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The grand jury issued another subpoena on June 18, 2001, ordering
Leggett to provide “Any and all taped recorded conversations,
originals and copies, of conversations (she) had with (34 people
listed) or any other recorded conversations with individuals associated
with the prosecution of Robert Angleton, either with or without
their consent ...”
The Southern District Court denied Leggett’s appeal to quash
the subpoena in a closed hearing on July 6, ruling that no qualified
reporter’s privilege exists in criminal cases. The contempt
order and court decision were sealed.
In an identical subpoena issued July 18, Judge Melinda Harmon ordered
Leggett to appear before the grand jury the following day. After
hiring Houston attorney Mike DeGuerin, she appeared as ordered but
refused to testify, claiming First and Fifth Amendment protections.
Clark offered Leggett what DeGuerin later called “a limited
offer of partial immunity.” When she declined, Judge Harmon
— without applying any First Amendment considerations for
media confidentiality — held Leggett in contempt as a recalcitrant
witness.
Leggett was arrested the next day and jailed without bail in the
Houston Federal Detention Center. DeGuerin immediately filed an
appeal to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing the lower
court abused its discretion when it failed to address reporter’s
privilege and approved an overly broad subpoena.
Four prominent journalism organizations, The Reporters Committee
for Freedom of the Press, the Society of Professional Journalists,
The American Society of Newspaper Editors and the Radio-Television
News Directors Association, joined in an amicus brief on Leggett’s
behalf. The brief argued that unrestrained subpoenas in disregard
of journalists’ constitutional qualified privilege amount
to press harassment and the use of journalists as private investigators
for the government.
Petitioning the court for permission to join the brief were more
than 20 news media and writer’s groups, including major television
networks, The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Associated
Press. The Reporters Committee, having secured DeGuerin’s
agreement, asked the court’s permission to participate in
oral arguments. The court denied both petitions and ordered the
Aug. 15 hearing closed.
The court also denied an emergency motion filed by news media asking
the 5th Circuit to reconsider closure on the basis that constitutional
interests demanded a public hearing. But the court rescinded that
decision the day of the hearing, after U.S. Rep Sheila Jackson Lee,
D-Texas, a member of the Committee on the Judiciary, publicly censured
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Reuters quoted the congresswoman on Aug. 14: “I believe the
Justice Department has not followed its own internal guidelines
(which) require an attorney general’s review.” Since
1973’s Watergate scandal, the U.S. attorney general must give
permission for a journalist’s subpoena. Justice’s guidelines
require the exhaustion of all alternative sources for subpoenas,
which must never be used to gain “peripheral, nonessential
or speculative information.”
The SPJ felt so strongly Leggett’s incarceration was an injustice
that, in August, its national board voted to contribute half of
her legal fees, which DeGuerin capped at $25,000, from its Legal
Defense Fund.
A three-judge panel heard Leggett’s appeal and, on Aug. 17,
released its unsigned opinion affirming the district court’s
judgment. While the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals recognized Leggett
as an “aspiring freelance writer,” it did not address
the qualified reporter’s privilege test established in 1972
in Branzburg v. Hayes.

Courtesy of Vanessa Leggett
After her release, Leggett
said, “... I am doing what I must to protect the public’s
interest in a free press.”
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In that case, the dissent of four Supreme Court justices combined
with the enigmatic opinion of concurring Justice Lewis Powell to
establish a balancing test for consideration of qualified privilege
in criminal cases. The three-part test asks if reasonable grounds
exist that the reporter has information relevant to the grand jury’s
investigation; if the government can show a compelling need for
the information; and if the information is unavailable from other
sources.
Neither did the court address Leggett’s journalist status
as defined In re Madden (3rd in Circuit, 1998). The case recognized
a journalist as one engaged in investigative reporting to gather
news for public dissemination.
While Leggett’s appeal argued that both precedents applied,
the court defined reporter’s privilege as “ineffectual
against a grand jury subpoena absent of governmental harassment
or oppression.” That is exactly what the government was doing
— harassing Leggett — argued DeGuerin. The subpoena
was overly broad and a government “fishing expedition.”
Some of those sources listed in the subpoena, according to Leggett,
include FBI agents and Houston detectives involved in the Angleton
case.
However, the court ruled that the subpoena was “not so overly
broad as to be oppressive.”
Lucy Dalglish, Reporters Committee executive director, publicly
noted that prosecutors might be less aggressive if dealing with
a major news publication journalist. (CBS was also investigating
the Angleton murder case and aired its 48 Hours program shortly
after Leggett’s release.)
In an Aug. 16 PBS NewsHour interview, Dalglish commented that the
secret nature of the contempt order and closed court hearings could
have buried Leggett’s case in obscurity. “Had (Leggett)
not sought help from journalism organizations prior to being sentenced
for contempt,” Dalglish said, “she would have been secretly
jailed as well.”
The Reporters Committee has kept track of reporters and writers
jailed for contempt in America since 1984. Of 17 jailed, only one
was a freelance book writer. Chris Van Ness spent several hours
in jail before giving up a taped interview with a suspect in the
1984 drug overdose death of John Belushi. Until Leggett’s
incarceration, the longest-jailed journalist was Los Angeles Herald
Examiner reporter William Farr, who spent 46 days behind bars in
1972 for protecting the source of leaked documents pertaining to
the Charles Manson trial. The last time the Justice Department effected
the jailing of a journalist was in 1991, when four South Carolina
reporters spent eight hours in jail for refusing to testify about
unpublished conversations with a state senator on trial for corruption.
SPJ honored Leggett’s self-conviction at its October 2001
National Convention in Seattle. SPJ hoped to present a videotaped
interview with her at its award ceremony. But the detention center
warden denied the interview, saying that SPJ — publisher of
the magazine Quill — is not considered a news media representative.
Officials of the U.S. Justice Department, in response to questions
and criticism about the department’s handling of the case,
say that its guidelines were fully considered and no legal reason
existed to negate Leggett’s incarceration.
USA Today opined that Ashcroft’s disengagement in the case
“is reversing a policy that gives journalists wide latitude
in protecting confidential sources ...”
On Sept. 10, Leggett appealed again to the 5th Circuit, asking
for bond and a hearing before the entire 14-judge court. Lacking
a response, her attorney asked for bond again in early November.
DeGuerin said in a subsequent interview, “The press should
be the watchdog of the police, not their lapdog.”
When, on Nov. 13, the court rejected the appeal, DeGuerin announced
Leggett’s appeal to the Supreme Court.
In an interview with SPJ Legal Defense Fund chair Christine Tatum,
DeGuerin raised a question disquieting to journalists’ responsibility
to the public. While Leggett denied the government access to her
investigative research, DeGuerin said, “I wonder how many
other journalists didn’t tell them no.”
By refusing to hear Leggett’s appeal, the Supreme Court’s
decision could have disastrous ramifications. But it also would
have been determental if it had heard the case and re-affirmed the
lower court decisions.
Under threat of compelled disclosure, journalists may lose the
incentive to gather news for later dissemination, to the detriment
of the public and historical record. A journalist subject to a government’s
subpoena of work products loses objective reporting ability and
becomes an ex officio arm of the government, negating public government
officials’ accountability. Investigative reporters could lose
the trust of sources and frighten away potential ones. Fighting
subpoenas is costly to both the journalist and the government.
More frightening is the prospect that state and federal judges
can decide whether a journalist’s work product qualifies for
First Amendment protections and can arbitrarily pass judgment, bypassing
constitutional balancing tests.
Espousing international human rights, the United States is attacking
its own credibility. The free flow of information — endorsed
by the U.S. Constitution and demanded globally by the American government
— is in jeopardy, especially in countries where it is newly
emerging from historical repression.
Notable is the fact that the only person sentenced to jail time
in the murder case was in no way involved in the crime. Greta Van
Susteren, in an Aug. 17 CNN Flashpoint interview, reflected the
cynicism of some who felt Leggett held out only to advance the value
of her book.
“This is not a writer’s publicity stunt,” Leggett
answered. “I did not choose to put myself here. The only beneficiary
is not me or an agent or a publisher ... it’s the American
people.”
Leggett answered the hundreds of letters she received in jail,
mindful that her jailors read each inbound and outbound letter.
She wrote supporters their letters were lights “at the end
of the tunnel” of her struggle to hold fast to the government’s
promise of a free press.
She may yet need their support, as she has said she will return
to jail rather than break her promises of media confidentiality.
Under scrutiny by journalist and federal prosecutors alike, Leggett
is still surprisingly calm, still articulate and still focused on
her book. (She landed an estimated $600,000 contract with Crown
Publishing, a division of Random House, in May.) But she worries
the merits of the book will be buried under the sensationalism of
her own highly publicized experience.
The 1735 John Peter Zenger case established that no government
agency has jurisdiction over the truth, and truth is what American
democracy, through a free press, purports to uphold.
The Supreme Court’s decision (without explanation) to deny
Leggett’s media confidentiality appeal leaves open the question
of the means by which journalists can match Zenger’s principles.
Leggett’s stance may be a lost cause for this generation of
journalists.
Or, it may be a standard for future generations to demand truths
untainted by federal intervention.
Sue
Ellison is a 2001 graduate of the UM School of Journalism. She was
an associate editor and advertising manager for the 2001 Journalism
Review.
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