-Caveat Lector-

07/29/2001 - Updated 11:15 PM ET
Reporter's jailing by feds draws criticism
By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY


By Joe Jaszewski, AP/Houston Chronicle
Vanessa Leggett's case raises concerns that John Ashcroft may take
protections away from journalists.

The jailing of a Texas reporter who refused to give her research to U.S.
prosecutors has raised concerns that Attorney General John
  Ashcroft is reversing a policy that gives journalists wide latitude in
protecting
  confidential sources and unpublished information.
At the Justice Department's request, a federal judge jailed freelance
writer Vanessa Leggett on July 20 on contempt of court charges after
  she refused to turn over notes, tape recordings and other material she
collected
  while researching a book on the slaying of Doris Angleton in 1997.
Angleton
  was the wife of Robert Angleton, a millionaire ex-bookie who was
acquitted in
  1998 of hiring his brother to commit the murder.
The decision to jail Leggett, done at prosecutors' behest by an
unidentified judge in a closed court hearing in Houston, has drawn
criticism
  from press freedom groups and has become the latest curious twist in
the U.S.
  government's pursuit of the Angleton case. The focus of the federal
investigation
  is unclear.
The Justice Department last had a reporter jailed in 1991,
  when four South Carolina journalists were locked up for eight hours
when they refused to testify at the corruption trial of a state senator.
Since 1973, the U.S. attorney general has been required to approve
every federal subpoena issued
  to a reporter as well as every request by federal prosecutors to arrest a
reporter.
Justice Department spokesman Chris Watney declined to discuss
Leggett's case or whether Ashcroft was involved. Watney said that
under federal
  policy, Ashcroft's approval would not be needed in such a case if
prosecutors
  did not consider the person withholding material to be a journalist.
"This is a darn significant case," said Lucy Dalglish,
  executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the
Press. "It's
  either an important shift in policy or (prosecutors are) ignorant of a
Justice Department policy in effect since the Nixon administration."
Leggett, 33, a writing teacher at the University of Houston,
  does not have a contract for her book and has not published any
articles related
  to it. She has talked with several magazines about publishing a story
on the murder case, however.
Leggett has spent several years researching the slaying
  in April 1997 of Doris Angleton, whose husband, Robert, was acquitted
in a state
  court in August 1998.
Robert Angleton's brother, Roger Angleton, committed suicide
  in jail in February 1998, leaving a confession that said he had acted
alone.
  Leggett interviewed Roger Angleton before his suicide.
The U.S. government began investigating Robert Angleton
  after his acquittal.
Media attorneys say that if U.S. officials pushed to jail
  Leggett with the idea that federal protections for journalists did not
apply
  to her, the officials were in error.
"She stands in the same shoes as any television or newspaper
  reporter," says Robert Lystad, an attorney for the Society of
Professional Journalists who is not involved in Leggett's case. "She's
exactly the type of reporter or
  book author who shouldn't be harassed into turning over her notes."
Leggett's jailing also has been criticized because it was
  done secretly. The hearing was closed to the public at the
government's request.
  The transcript is sealed, and the judge's name was not released.
"It's one thing to incarcerate a member of the press for
  not doing what the government wants. But to do it in secret and
threaten to
  jail (her) lawyer for talking about the details is outrageous," said Mike
DeGuerin, Leggett's attorney.
The Angleton murder case has attracted considerable attention
  in Houston. The CBS show 48 Hours is preparing a report on it.
Ken Paulson, executive director of the First Amendment
  Center, said Leggett will have difficulty winning her appeal. Texas does
not
  have a "shield law" that lets reporters protect confidential sources and
research material.
Leggett can be held for up to 18 months on the contempt
  charges.



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