Posted on 03/01/2024 11:10:57 AM PST by Twotone
A federal judge held veteran investigative reporter Catherine Herridge in civil contempt of court on Thursday for upholding journalistic ethics and not revealing her confidential sources.
Federal district Judge Christopher Cooper ordered Herridge to pay a fine of $800 per day until she divulges the information the court wants.
Cooper wrote in his order:
The Court does not reach this result lightly. It recognizes the paramount importance of a free press in our society and the critical role that confidential sources play in the work of investigative journalists like Herridge. Yet the Court also has its own role to play in upholding the law and safeguarding judicial authority.
Fortunately, Cooper stayed the ruling for 30 days, giving Herridge ample time to appeal before she starts incurring daily fines.
The case stems from Herridge's tenure at Fox News. In 2017, she reported on a federal investigation into Chinese-American scientist Yanping Chen, whom the FBI once investigated over "suspicions of Chinese military ties and whether she had lied on U.S. immigration forms," the New York Times noted. The FBI never charged Chen.
In 2018, Chen sued the federal government, alleging that government employees had leaked her information to Herridge in violation of the Privacy Act.
Last year, Cooper ordered Herridge to reveal the sources of her information about Chen, but she refused, citing her First Amendment rights.
After Cooper's ruling on Thursday, Herridge's attorney, Patrick Philbin, said, "We disagree with the district court’s decision, and to protect Ms. Herridge's First Amendment rights, we intend to appeal."
Fox News, meanwhile, condemned Cooper's ruling for the "deeply chilling effect" that it will have on journalism and the First Amendment.
Advocacy groups concerned about the First Amendment and free press also condemned Cooper's decision, and the legacy media wrote stories about it. But there was an glaring lack of media outrage over Cooper's decision.
In fact, by Friday morning, CNN was the only cable or broadcast news network that had covered the story on TV — for a mere 13 seconds.
There is also a glaring lack of social media posts from virtue-signaling media pundits and news reporters decrying Cooper's decision and the threat it poses for journalism.
Perhaps the lack of outrage from Herridge's colleagues stems from the fact that Herridge, an award-winning reporter, often reported on topics the legacy media ignores, most recently covering allegations of Biden family corruption and the Hunter Biden saga before CBS News decided to terminate her employment.
ask judith miller
fun fact
only the Supreme Court was created by the Constitution
all others were created by Congress
We need to defund and trash every other Feral court attached to the United States. The only RAT court we need is SCOTUS. All the other do nothing but create misery and mischief for the American people. Nothing good comes out of feral courts. The crap feral courts in Hawaii would be the most sensible place to start defunding and shutting them down. Throw all of those black robed slobs back out onto the street with a tin cup where they came from. The most worthless humanoids on the planet.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.