The Press, the Government, and the War over Anonymous Sources
by Norman Pearlstine
When Norman Pearlstineas editor in chief of Time Inc.agreed to give prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald a reporters notes of a conversation with a confidential source, he was vilified for betraying the freedom of the press. But in this hard-hitting inside story, Pearlstine shows that Plamegate was not the clear case it seemed to beand that confidentiality has become a weapon in the White Houses war on the press, a war fought with the unwitting complicity of the press itself.
Watergate and the publication of the Pentagon Papers are the benchmark incidents of government malfeasance exposed by a fearless press. But as Pearlstine explains with great clarity and brio, the presss hunger for a new Watergate has made reporters vulnerable to officials who use confidentiality to get their message out, even if it means leaking state secrets and breaking the law. Prosecutors appointed to investigate the government have investigated the press instead; news organizations such as The New York Times have defended the principle of confidentiality at all costsimplicitly putting themselves above the law. Meanwhile, the use of unnamed sources has become common in everything from celebrity weeklies to the so-called papers of record.
What is to be done? Pearlstine calls on Congress to pass a federal shield law protecting journalists from the needless intrusions of government; at the same time, he calls on the press to name its sources whenever possible. Off the Record is a powerful argument with the vividness and narrative drive of the best long-form journalism; it is sure to spark controversy among the people who run the governmentand among the people who tell their stories.
"Readers already persuaded of Pearlstine's pusillanimity may find his lawyerly self-justifications less than convincing. " - PW
"Norman Pearlstine pulls no punches on either journalism or law in this fascinating book. He tells us what really happened in the Valerie Plame-Scooter Libby imbroglio, and the lessons for freedom of the press." Anthony Lewis, longtime New York Times columnist and author of Gideon's Trumpet.
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