SPIEGEL ONLINE - February 27, 2007, 02:02 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,468861,00.html
SEARCH OF MAGAZINE OFFICE JUDGED ILLEGAL
Top German Court Boosts Press Freedom

Germany's highest court has ruled that security services breached the
constitution by searching the offices of a magazine which had published
extracts from a confidential police report. Journalists have hailed the
ruling as strengthening the freedom of the press.

Germany's Federal Constitutional Court has rapped the security services
on the knuckles for searching the offices of a political magazine to
identify who leaked a confidential police report.

In what media are hailing as a significant reaffirmation of press
freedom in Germany, the court ruled that the search had breached the
constitution which enshrines the right of journalists to protect their
sources.

The monthly political magazine Cicero had published an article about
Islamic terrorist Abu Musab al Zarqawi in April 2005 in which it cited a
confidential leaked internal report of the Federal Criminal Police
Office or Bundeskriminalamt, Germany's version of the FBI.

Shortly afterwards the state prosecutors office in the city of Potsdam
near Berlin, where Cicero is based, launched an investigation into the
magazine's editor-in-chief Wolfram Weimer and the author of the article,
Bruno Schirra.

It obtained a search warrant for the editorial offices, where police
copied the hard drive of a PC, and for Schirra's private home. The case
was later closed after the magazine paid a fine of €1,000. The search
warrant was based on the assertion that the magazine had abetted the
betrayal of official secrets by publishing confidential material.

The government last November defended the search, declaring it wasn't an
unconstitutional breach of press freedom because press freedom no longer
applies when laws are being broken. Journalists don't have a privilege
to abet crimes, the government said.

Cicero's editor-in-chief Weimer had taken the case to the Constitutional
Court arguing that the search had been aimed not at gaining evidence
against the magazine but at identifying the agent who had passed on the
information. That had breached the journalist's right to protect his
sources, Weimer argued.

The court confirmed his view. "Searches and confiscations in an
investigation into members of the press are illegal if they exclusively
or predominantly serve the purpose of identifying an informant," said
Constitutional Court President Hans-Jürgen Papier in his ruling.

Weimer said he was relieved. "The Federal Constitutional Court has
defended and strengthened press freedom in Germany," he told reporters
in the southwestern city of Karlsruhe where he had attended the
announcement of the ruling.

The decision made the work of journalists in Germany "legally secure,"
he added.

The court's decision confirmed its decision in a similar case in 1966
affecting DER SPIEGEL magazine.

DER SPIEGEL had in 1962 cited confidential documents in an article about
the lack of military defense readiness of the West German army. The
magazine's offices were searched and the editor-in-chief at the time,
Rudolf Augstein, and several other journalists were arrested.

Augstein was held in investigative custody for more than three months.
He and the author of the article, Conrad Ahlers, were later acquitted of
the charge of betraying official secrets.

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