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Information about our staff

 

STEERING COMMITTEE

• DAN ABRAMS

MSNBC

• SCOTT APPLEWHITE

The Associated Press

• CHIP BOK

Akron Beacon Journal

• EARL CALDWELL

Pacifica Radio

• REBECCA CARR

Cox Newspapers

• WALTER CRONKITE

CBS News

• RICHARD S. DUNHAM

Houston Chronicle

• ASHLEA EBELING

Forbes Magazine

• STEPHEN GEIMANN

Bloomberg News

• FRED GRAHAM

Court TV

• STEPHEN HENDERSON

Detroit Free Press

• JOHN C. HENRY

The Associated Press

• NAT HENTOFF

The Village Voice

• EDWARD H. KOHN

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

• STEPHEN LABATON

The New York Times

• NEIL LEWIS

The New York Times

• TONY MAURO

Legal Times

• DOYLE MCMANUS

Los Angeles Times

• WILSON F. MINOR

Factual Reporting Service

• SANDRA PEDDIE

Newsday

• DANA PRIEST

The Washington Post

• DAN RATHER

HDNet

• CRISTINE RUSSELL

Freelance

• TIM RUSSERT

NBC News

• BOB SCHIEFFER

CBS News

• GERALD F. SEIB

The Wall Street Journal

• SAUNDRA TORRY

USA Today

• VICKIE WALTON-JAMES

Tribune Publishing

• JUDY WOODRUFF

PBS/The NewsHour

 

Affiliations appear only for
purposes of identification.

The Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press:
A short history

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press was created in 1970 at a time when the nation's news media faced a wave of government subpoenas asking reporters to name confidential sources.

One case particularly galvanized American journalists. New York Times reporter Earl Caldwell was ordered to reveal to a federal grand jury his sources in the Black Panther organization, threatening his independence as a newsgatherer.

Caldwell's dilemma prompted a meeting at Georgetown University to discuss the need to provide legal assistance to journalists when their First Amendment rights come under fire. Among those present, or involved soon afterwards, were J. Anthony Lukas, Murray Fromson, Fred Graham, Jack Nelson, Ben Bradlee, Eileen Shanahan, Mike Wallace, Robert Maynard and Tom Wicker.

They formed a committee that operated part-time and on a shoestring (its first "office" was a desk in the press room at the U.S. Supreme Court). With support from foundations and news organizations, the founders built a staff and began recruiting attorneys to donate their services.

An early member of the Steering Committee -- Jack C. Landau -- was a reporter- lawyer who covered the Supreme Court. In his spare time, Landau started the First Amendment Hotline -- the first cost-free 24/7 legal guidance service for journalists involved in First Amendment and freedom of information issues -- and also located cost-free lawyers to the press aided by Steering Committee member Fred P. Graham, a reporter-lawyer at the Supreme Court.

In those early volunteer days, Landau also started several other legal defense and research projects that remain key parts of the Committee's activities today. Among these projects were the first magazine for the press devoted to collecting, indexing and reporting news media law developments and the first service center offering free help to the press on federal and all state public records, aided by Philadelphia Inquirer Editor Gene Roberts. The Committee also launched as an independent but affiliated project, the Student Press Law Center, the first center offering cost-free legal help to high school and college, aided by Steering Committee member Jack Nelson. Landau eventually became the Committee's full-time executive director.

The Committee was a plaintiff in several early test-case law suits relying on volunteer lawyers from major Washington D.C. firms. They included suits for access to 41 million White House documents and tapes held by former President Nixon; to former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's official telephone transcripts; to FBI arrest records; and also an effort to block telephone companies from giving secret access to media telephone records.

Attorney (and former journalist) Jane E. Kirtley replaced Landau as executive director in 1985. Kirtley was determined to provide top-quality, reliable resources to help journalists know the legal protections and pitfalls as they did their jobs. During her tenure, the Committee began to produce comprehensive guides for reporters, including a 50-state compendium of state open government laws, now known as "The Open Government Guide." "The First Amendment Handbook" provides basic information about media law for newsrooms and "Agents of Discovery" surveyed the incidence of subpoenas served on America's newsrooms.

Kirtley also began a popular legal fellowship program for young attorneys breaking into media law. It was during these years that the Committee also became more financially stable, beginning an endowment that now totals more than $2.5 million.

By the time executive director Lucy A. Dalglish took over in 2000, the Committee was poised to build on its considerable reputation. After the terror attacks on September 11, 2001, the Committee became the nation's leading authority on efforts to prevent important information from reaching the public. Its "Homefront Confidential" reports and "Behind the Homefront" weblog are authoritative summaries of what has happened to the public's right to know in the post-9/11 world.

In recent years, the Committee has taken the lead in building coalitions with other media-related organizations to protect reporters' rights to keep sources confidential and to keep an eye on legislative efforts that impact the public's right to know. It also has aggressively sought opportunities to speak out nationwide through amicus curiae briefs filed on behalf of journalists.

In the last four decades the Committee has played a role in virtually every significant press freedom case that has come before the Supreme Court -- from Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart to U.S. v. Moussaoui -- as well as in hundreds of cases in federal and state courts.

The Committee has also emerged as a major national -- and international -- resource in free speech issues, disseminating information in a variety of forms, including a quarterly legal review, a bi-weekly newsletter, a 24-hour hotline, and various handbooks on media law issues.

Academicians, state and federal agencies, and Congress regularly call on the Committee for advice and expertise, and it has become the leading advocate for reporters' interest in cyberspace.

Important as these activities are, the Committee's primary mission remains serving working journalists -- 2,000 of them every year. And since its founding, no reporter has ever paid for the Committee's help in defending First Amendment rights. This is the incarnation of the founders' vision and the Committee's proudest achievement.

For more information about The Reporters Committee, write to rcfp @ rcfp.org or The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, 1101 Wilson Blvd., Suite 1100, Arlington, VA 22209.

More on the history of the Reporters Committee:



Contributing to the Reporters Committee

The Reporters Committee is a nonprofit organization that operates solely on donations and the sale of publications.

Although the materials on this site are available to you at no charge, we encourage you to purchase the print versions through our online order form. This ensures that you'll always have the text handy, and it helps the Committee continue to create new publications and update our current ones.

In addition, we encourage you to support the Committee directly with a donation. To make a pledge, see the donation section of the order form.


LEGAL DEFENSE HOTLINE

1-800-336-4243

Note: The Hotline is available 24 hours for journalists and media lawyers. However, non-emergency requests will be answered more promptly during normal office hours -- 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern time. For non-emergency calls or questions about our services and publications, please call (703) 807-2100. Student journalists with questions about scholastic media should call the Student Press Law Center, (703) 807-1904.


The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
1101 Wilson Blvd., Suite 1100, Arlington, VA 22209
rcfp@rcfp.org